Medieval Arts Doctrines on Ambiguity and Their Place in Langland's Poetics by John Chamberlin

Medieval Arts Doctrines on Ambiguity and Their Place in Langland's Poetics Helps readers of Piers Plowman understand some of the most characteristic and inventive elements of Langland's work. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the author brings together an examination of Langland's poetic practices, and some broad considerations of the implications of these doctrines for language theory.

In "Medieval Arts Doctrines on Ambiguity and Their Place in Langland's Poetics", John Chamberlin helps readers of Piers Plowman understand some of the most characteristic and inventive elements of Langland's work. Using an interdisciplinary approach, Chamberlin brings together an examination of Langland's poetic practices, a discussion of the historical development of the arts of discourse doctrines they derive from, and some broad considerations of the implications of these doctrines for language theory. Chamberlin's focal point for this synthesis is the concept of ambiguity, which has played an important role in the liberal arts tradition and in medieval discourses regarding reading and preaching - discourses that are fundamental to Langland's poetic ways with words. His work takes its place among other recent attempts to retrieve medieval literary theory, making it possible for it to inform the reading of medieval literature, but places this theory within a particularly wide context. Chamberlin claims that the excess of meaning ambiguity gives language is at least as important to the understanding of Piers Plowman and other medieval texts as is allegory. He deals with lexical ambiguity and the ambiguity of words-as-words - in which words themselves are taken as objects - offering linguistic, philosophical, and historical perspectives on these subjects. How ambiguity works in Langland's poetry is explained in close analysis of a number of passages from the poem. Chamberlin's overview of the historical development of the concept of ambiguity pays special attention to the doctrines of Augustine and the twelfth-century masters. He elucidates these by reference to similar ideas from Romantic and twentieth-century theorists, providing a coherent view of language that stands as an alternative to structuralist and post-structuralist views.
Author(s) : John Chamberlin Format : Hardback Book
ISBN-10 : 0773520732 ISBN-13 : 9780773520738
RRP : £61.00 Best available price : £ / $
Prices as of : BST check live prices   
store stock level item price inc. delivery
AbeBooksUK

Not available

 

 

Amazon

Not available

 

 

BiblioUK

Not available

 

 

Blackwells

Not available

 

 

BookFellas

Not available

 

 

HMV

Not available

 

 

Play

Not available

 

 

TheHut

Not available

 

 

Waterstones

Not available

 

 

WHSmiths

Not available

 

 

AmazonUS

Not available

 

 

Delivery prices - shown in this table - are for the cost of a domestic delivery, as given by the company.

Product Details:

Country Publication : Canada

Publication Date : 11/07/2000

Publisher : McGill-Queen's University Press

Page Length : 176mm

Page Size : 238mm