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Pursuing Middle English Manuscripts and their Texts: Essays in Honour of Ralph Hanna [Hardback]

Edited by (Professor of English Language and Literature University of Oxford), Edited by
  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width x depth: 239x163x23 mm, weight: 635 g, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Brepols N.V.
  • ISBN-10: 2503566707
  • ISBN-13: 9782503566702
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width x depth: 239x163x23 mm, weight: 635 g, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Nov-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Brepols N.V.
  • ISBN-10: 2503566707
  • ISBN-13: 9782503566702
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This volume brings together essays by leading authorities on the production, reception, and editing of medieval English manuscripts in honour of Ralph Hanna, on the occasion of his retirement as Professor of Palaeography at the University of Oxford. Ralph Hanna has made an enormous contribution to the study of Middle English manuscripts; his numerous essays and books have discussed the development of London literature, alliterative poetry (especially Piers Plowman), regionalism, and the production and circulation of manuscripts. The essays included in this volume are arranged into four major sections corresponding to Ralph Hanna's core areas of interest: Manuscript production; Dialect; Regionalism; Reading and Editing manuscripts. These essays, written by leading scholars in their fields, offer new insights into the manuscripts of major Middle English writers and on scribal practice, as well as studies of individual codices. Essays cover a wide regional and chronological range, stretching from the beginnings of London literature traced in the works of Peter of Cornwall to the circulation of John Lydgate's Troy Book, and encompassing manuscripts and texts composed and circulated outside the capital. Dialectal studies offer reconsiderations of the evidence for a Wycliffite orthography, the dialect of William Langland, and the vocabulary of the alliterative Morte Arthure. A final section on reading and editing investigates the structure and divisions in the manuscripts of the A Version of Piers Plowman, and examines specific readings in the Prick of Conscience and the Canterbury Tales. The volume also includes a tribute to Ralph Hanna and a list of his extensive publications.
List of Illustrations
vii
Foreword xi
Vincent Gillespie
Introduction xix
Simon Horobin
Aditinafde
The Tribulations of Scribes
1(18)
Derek Pearsall
A Scribe of Lydgate's Troy Book and London Book Production in the First Half of the Fifteenth Century
19(24)
Linne R. Mooney
The Vocabulary of the Alliterative Morte Arthure
43(20)
Thorlac Turville-Petre
Langland's Dialect Reconsidered
63(14)
Simon Horobin
Observations on the `Wycliffite Orthography'
77(22)
Anne Hudson
Cambridge University Library, MS Ll.1.18: A Southwell Miscellany
99(14)
Richard Beadle
The Migration of a Fifteenth-Century Miscellany
113(12)
A.I. Doyle
T Saw a Dead Man Won the Field': The Genesis of The Battle of Otterburn
125(32)
Richard Firth Green
The Prick of Conscience and the Imagination of Paradise
157(20)
Alastair Minnis
Peter of Cornwall's Booktongue and the Invention of London Literature
177(22)
Andrew Galloway
The Prologues and Ends of Piers Plowman A
199(26)
Anne Middleton
Three Troublesome Lines in Chaucer's General Prologue: 11 (So priketh hem nature), 176 (The space), 739 (Crist spak himself ful brode)
225(16)
Traugott Lawler
Ralph Hanna's Publications 241(10)
Index 251(12)
Tabula Gratulatoria 263