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E-book: Representing War and Violence, 1250-1600

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  • Format: 232 pages
  • Pub. Date: 16-Sep-2016
  • Publisher: The Boydell Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782048367
  • Format - PDF+DRM
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  • Format: 232 pages
  • Pub. Date: 16-Sep-2016
  • Publisher: The Boydell Press
  • Language: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781782048367

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An examination of written and other responses to conflict in a variety of forms and genres, from the thirteenth to the seventeenth century.

War and violence took many forms in medieval and early modern Europe, from political and territorial conflict to judicial and social spectacle; from religious persecution and crusade to self-mortification and martyrdom; from comedic brutality to civil and domestic aggression. Various cultural frameworks conditioned both the acceptance of these forms of violence, and the protest that they met with: the elusive concept of chivalry, Christianity and just wartheory, political ambition and the machinery of propaganda, literary genres and the expectations they generated and challenged. The essays here, from the disciplines of history, art history and literature, explore how violence and conflict were documented, depicted, narrated and debated during this period. They consider manuals created for and addressed directly to kings and aristocratic patrons; romances whose affective treatments of violence invitedprofoundly empathetic, even troublingly pleasurable, responses; diaries and "autobiographies" compiled on the field and redacted for publication and self-promotion. The ethics and aesthetics of representation, as much as the violence being represented, emerge as a profound and constant theme for writers and artists grappling with this most fundamental and difficult topic of human experience.

JOANNA BELLIS is the Fitzjames Research Fellow in Oldand Middle English at Merton College, Oxford; LAURA SLATER holds a Postdoctoral Fellowship from The Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art in London.

Contributors: Anne Baden-Daintree, Anne Curry, David Grummitt, Richard W. Kaeuper, Andrew Lynch, Christina Normore, Laura Slater, Sara V. Torres, Matthew Woodcock,

Reviews

Representing War and Violence is a valuable and enjoyable read. The editors are to be commended for bringing together such a variety of innovative material and for synthesizing these pieces in a clear and cohesive dialogue. They have provided an admirable model for future collections of interdisciplinary research across the field of medieval studies. * LEFT HISTORY *

List of Illustrations
vi
Acknowledgements vii
List of Contributors
viii
Introduction: `Representation' and Medieval Mediations of Violence 1(22)
Joanna Bellis
Laura Slater
Part I The Ethics and Aesthetics of Depicting War and Violence
1 Medieval Warfare --- Representation Then and Now
23(16)
Richard W. Kaeuper
2 Depicting Defeat in the Grandes Chroniques de France
39(17)
Christina Normore
3 Visualising War: the Aesthetics of Violence in the Alliterative Morte Arthure
56(23)
Anne Baden-Daintree
Part II Debating and Narrating Violence
4 `With face pale': Melancholy Violence in John Lydgate's Troy and Thebes
79(16)
Andrew Lynch
5 `In Praise of Peace' in Late Medieval England
95(21)
Sara V. Torres
6 Representing Political Violence in La Estoire de Seint Aedward le Rei
116(23)
Laura Slater
Part III Experiencing, Representing and Remembering Violence
7 Representing War and Conquest, 1415--1429: the Evidence of College of Arms Manuscript M9
139(20)
Anne Curry
8 Tudor Soldier-Authors and the Art of Military Autobiography
159(19)
Matthew Woodcock
9 Three Narratives of the Fall of Calais in 1558: Explaining Defeat in Tudor England
178(13)
David Grummitt
Bibliography 191(19)
Index 210
Anne Curry is Emeritus Professor of Medieval History at the University of Southampton, and author of many works on the Hundred Years War, particularly on the battle of Agincourt. She also edited the 1422-53 section of the Parliament Rolls of Medieval England.