Reconstructing Alliterative Verse: The Pursuit of a Medieval Meter (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature)
Cambridge University Press, 7/20/2017
EAN 9781107154100, ISBN10: 1107154103
Hardcover, 234 pages, 23.5 x 15.8 x 1.8 cm
Language: English
The poetry we call 'alliterative' is recorded in English from the seventh century until the sixteenth, and includes Caedmon's 'Hymn', Beowulf, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Piers Plowman. These are some of the most admired works of medieval English literature, and also among the most enigmatic. The formal practice of alliterative poets exceeded the conceptual grasp of medieval literary theory; theorists are still playing catch-up today. This book explains the distinctive nature of alliterative meter, explores its differences from subsequent accentual-syllabic forms, and advances a reformed understanding of medieval English literary history. The startling formal variety of Piers Plowman and other Middle English alliterative poems comes into sharper focus when viewed in diachronic perspective: the meter was in transition; to understand it, we need to know where it came from and where it was headed at the moment it died out.
Introduction
what was alliterative poetry?
1. An unwritten medieval treatise
2. The accentual paradigm in early English metrics
3. The origins of the alliterative revival
4. The fourteenth-century meter
5. The end of alliterative verse
Epilogue
Edmund Spenser's poetry lesson.