Invention and Authorship in Medieval England
Half Title Page
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
RECOVERING MEDIEVAL AUTHORSHIP
AUTHORSHIP AND LITERARY HISTORY
PART 1: Inventions
PRELUDE: Bede and the Denial of Authorship
CHAPTER 1: Walter Map: Authorship and Counter-Authorship
“NUDUS PUGIL ET INERMIS”: MAP’S COUNTER-AUTHORSHIP
“FRIUOLA NARRACIO”: THE MARGINS OF DISCOURSE
MAP’S READERS
ALLEGORIES OF AUTHORSHIP
CHAPTER 2: Marie de France: Signature and Invention
“BONE MATEIRE” AND THE FRAMES OF AUTHORSHIP
“LE LIVRE OVIDE”
“MUT FU DELITUSE LA VIE”
IMPOSSIBLE DESIRE
PART 2: Authorship Direct and Oblique
CHAPTER 3: John Gower: Scriptor, Compositor, Auctor
MIROUR DE L’OMME
VOX CLAMANTIS
CONFESSIO AMANTIS
GOWER’S PARATEXTS
GOWER’S SECOND CURSUS
CHAPTER 4: Geoffrey Chaucer: Imitation and Refusal
CONTEMPORARY RECEPTION
AUTHORIAL CATALOGUES
AUCTOURS AND AUCTORITEE
AUTHORSHIP AND VERNACULAR IMITATION
“OLDE STORIES”: AUTHORSHIP AND WRITING ANTIQUITY
“I SPEKE HIR WORDES PROPRELY”: THE CANTERBURY TALES
PART 3: Constructing a Canon
CHAPTER 5: Simulating Authorship: Thomas Hoccleve and John Lydgate
FICTIONS OF PATRONAGE
CHAPTER 6: Thomas Hoccleve: “Sum of the doctrine”
CHAPTER 7: John Lydgate and the “Stile Counterfet”
AFTERWORD: The Afterlife of Medieval Authorship
PRIMARY SOURCES
SECONDARY SOURCES
INDEX
INTERVENTIONS: NEW STUDIES IN MEDIEVAL CULTURE: Ethan Knapp, Series Editor