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MIDDLE ENGLISH

MIDDLE ENGLISH. 1100 - 1500 AD. Onward to Middle English (1100-1500). A Major New Subject A Major New Genre Key Dates / Events / Trends The “Triumph of English” (ca. 1350-1400). Big New Literary Subject . male - female relations esp. “courtly love” as part of noble life

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MIDDLE ENGLISH

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  1. MIDDLE ENGLISH 1100 - 1500 AD

  2. Onward to Middle English (1100-1500) • A Major New Subject • A Major New Genre • Key Dates / Events / Trends • The “Triumph of English” (ca. 1350-1400)

  3. Big New Literary Subject • male - female relations • esp. “courtly love” as part of noble life • literature of elite/ruling class mainly (as in OE) • old subjects remain too • negative male - female interactions another aspect • other new subjects too

  4. Major New Literary Form • “from epic to romance” • epic: definition • romance: definition • many older forms remain too • dream vision, history, saints’ lives, sermons....

  5. Dates / Events / Trends: Skeleton History II • variety and force of cultural models • events: • Political • Social • Literary/Linguistic • P/S/L forces interact, lead to “triumph of English” (culture, language, literature...) • other models still have lots of influence

  6. Pearl : Formal Aspects • Genre -- Dream Vision (definition) • Poet • anonymous, northwest Midlands dialect • learned in both theology and court life • Verse Form • alliteration + rhyme (definitions) (English origin + French origin)

  7. Formal Aspects, cont’d. • Alliterative Revival -- definition • very complex rhyme scheme: • 12-line stanzas rhyming abab abab bcbc • 5- (and one 6-) stanza sections linked by c-rhymes • c-rhyme words repeated in line 1 of next stanza (“concatenation”) • Numerological Elements: 5, 12, 101, 1212…. • return to beginning = perfection

  8. Pearl : Content and Structure Analysis as Guide to Meaning • Sections: • Heart/Emotion (Section I) • Eye/Sight (II-IV) • Ear/Mind/Word (V-XVI) • Eye/Sight (XVII-XIX) • Heart/Emotion (XX)

  9. Frame and Vision Sections • I: Grief in the Garden Grove • II-IV: Vision of Land of Marvels • bejeweled landscape, daughter as jewel • cf. jewel/jeweler metaphor (V) -- “pearl of great price” in Bible (Matt. 13:44-46) • (V-XVI) • XVII-XIX: Vision of New Jerusalem • XX: Rapid re-entry to earthly life

  10. Lessons from the Pearl-Maiden • Sections V-XVI • seeing vs. believing • arrogance • communal courtesy of Heaven vs. power hierarchies of Earth • class, gender, age, experience • finite (“zero-sum”) vs. infinite thinking • earthly materialism vs. “heavenly commerce” • Need to recognize higher planes of reality!!

  11. Esthetic Unity of Poem • partly from structural patterning • numbers, symmetries, internal linkings, sheer complexity • partly from repetition and interlinking of (emotional powerful) imagery • organic & food images, precious jewel/metal images, commercial & social metaphors • related to repeated & interrelated themes: • innocence, mercy, grace, courtesy, redemption

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