Life in Words

Essays on Chaucer, the Gawain-Poet, and Malory

Table of contents

Author’s Preface

A Note on References

List of Essays, with Places of Original Publication

Editor’s Introduction, “Jill Mann’s Patience”

1. Troilus’s Swoon

2. Shakespeare and Chaucer: “What is Criseyde Worth?”

3. Chance and Destiny in Troilus and Criseyde and the Knight’s Tale

4. Chaucerian Themes and Style in the Franklin’s Tale

5. Anger and “Glosynge” in the Canterbury Tales

6. The Authority of the Audience in Chaucer

7. Parents and Children in the Canterbury Tales

8. Satisfaction and Payment in Middle English Literature

9. Price and Value in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

10. Courtly Aesthetics and Courtly Ethics in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

11. Sir Gawain and the Romance Hero

12. Knightly Combat in Malory’s Morte Darthur

13. “Taking the Adventure”: Malory and the Suite du Merlin

14. The Narrative of Distance, The Distance of Narrative in Malory’s Morte Darthur

15. Malory and the Grail Legend

Bibliography

Index

Description

This volume collects fifteen landmark essays published over the last three decades by the distinguished medievalist Jill Mann. Bringing together her essays on Chaucer, the Gawain-poet, and Malory, the collection foregrounds the common interest in the semantic implications of key vocabulary such as “authority,” “adventure,” and “price” that links them together.

Mann, one of the finest critics of Middle English literature in her generation, uses the concepts suggested by the language of medieval literature itself as a way into the masterpieces of Middle English, including The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and the Morte Darthur.

An extended introduction by Mark Rasmussen brings out the nature of the themes that run through the collection, analyses the critical methods in play, and assesses their significance in the context of Middle English studies over the last thirty years.

Reviews

‘Each essay testifies to Mann’s incomparable close reading skills and enviable erudition, reflecting a careful attention to French and Latin sources over a lifetime of thinking about medieval English literature and language.’

- T.S. Miller

Life in Words is a well-rounded look into Jill Mann’s catalogue… It provides unique and novel arguments to century-old discussions.’

- Caitlin Santavenere