"Piers Plowman"
An Introduction to the B-Text
James Simpson(Author)
Longman (Publisher)
Published on 19. March 1990
Book
Hardback
292 pages
978-0-582-01392-6 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
The main aim of this book is to convince the reader of Piers Plowman's centrality in any account of the literary and cultural history of the later Middle Ages. It tries to demonstrate how the poem, despite being deeply anchored in a conservative literary, ecclesiastical and social culture, in fact questions that culture in moving towards positions of doubt and dissent, and in reimagining social and religious institutions. The author argues that Langland consistently develops one theme throughout the poem, that of the relations between justice and mercy. In following this theme, certain psychological, institutional, and literary changes become necessary: broadly speaking, the poem moves away from rational to an affective approach to problems; from a hierarchical to a more horizontal sense of ecclesiastical and social institutions; and from authoritarian, "closed" literary forms to more exploratory and open ended procedures. Simpson takes into account Langland's theology, his idea of the Church as an institution and in a broad sense, his politics. He also tries to show how ecclesiastical and political attachments are written into the formal choices Langland makes.
Throughout the poem he considers such questions as what genre is being practised here?, what claims to authority does such a genre make?, what aspect of the self does it appeal to?, what social or ecclesiastical institution is it produced by and does it support? and finally, in what ways are authoritative genres found by Langland to be inadequate. The author aims to address the argument to readers who might have no previous experience of medieval culture; a secondary function of the book is therefore to provide brief expositions of any relevant backgrounds which need to be understood before an understanding of Langland's enterprise is possible.
Throughout the poem he considers such questions as what genre is being practised here?, what claims to authority does such a genre make?, what aspect of the self does it appeal to?, what social or ecclesiastical institution is it produced by and does it support? and finally, in what ways are authoritative genres found by Langland to be inadequate. The author aims to address the argument to readers who might have no previous experience of medieval culture; a secondary function of the book is therefore to provide brief expositions of any relevant backgrounds which need to be understood before an understanding of Langland's enterprise is possible.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Harlow
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Pearson Education Limited
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
bibliography, index
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Weight
486 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-582-01392-6 (9780582013926)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions
Book
07/1990
Longman
€18.59
Article is exhausted; no reprint
Content
Introduction: the poem and its author; Langland's immediate poetic context; "Discourse"; schematic structure of the poem. Part 1 The first vision - prologue and passus I: literary "Truthe"; theological "Truthe"; social "Truthe". Part 2 The first vision - passus II-IV: personification allegory; mede and social "Truthe"; mede and legal "Truthe". Part 3 The second vision: passus V-VII: ecclesiastical satire; theological themes - the reward of works, a wage or a gift?; conclusion - the crisis of justice. Part 4 The third vision - passus VIII-XII: structure as determined by psychology; style; theme; the inner dream - fortune, lewtee, scripture, Trajan; deconstruction; imaginatyf. Part 5 The fourth vision - passus XIII-XIV: educational transitions; poetic transitions; social transitions. Part 6 The fifth vision - passus XV-XVIII: Anima - the whole soul; Anima and the Church; Anima and charity - Langland's historical sense of the self and of charity; the inner dream. Part 7 Visions six, seven, and eight - passus XVIII-XX: the sixth vision, passus XVIII; the seventh vision, passus XIX - Will's Biblical "Reading" and the liturgy, the Apostolic Church and its crafts; the eighth vision, passus XX.