Jul

05

2023

Representing the Dead Epitaph Fictions in Late-Medieval France

kenn 5 Jul 2023 10:19 LEARNING » e-book

Representing the Dead Epitaph Fictions in Late-Medieval France
Free Download Helen J. Swift, "Representing the Dead: Epitaph Fictions in Late-Medieval France "
English | ISBN: 1843844362 | 2016 | 354 pages | PDF | 27 MB
An examination of how the dead were memorialised in late medieval French literature.

Awarded a commendation in the Society for French Studies R. Gapper Book Prize for the best book published in 2016 by a scholar working in French studies in Britain or Ireland.
Who am I when I am dead? Several late-medieval French writers used literary representation of the dead as a springboard for exploring the nature of human being. Death is a critical moment for identity definition: one is remembered, forgotten or, worse, misremembered. Works in prose and verse by authors from Alain Chartier to Jean Bouchet record characters' deaths, but what distinguishes them as epitaph fictions is not their commemoration of the deceased, so much as their interrogation of how, by whom, and to what purpose posthumous identity is constituted. Far from rigidly memorialising the dead, they exhibit a productive messiness in the processes by which identity is composed in the moment of its decomposition as a complex interplay between body, voice and text. The cemeteries, hospitals, temples and testaments of fifteenth- and early-sixteenth-century literature, from the "Belle Dame sans mercy" querelle to Le Jugement poetic de l'honneur femenin, present a wealth of ambulant corpses, disembodied voices, animated effigies, martyrs for love and material echoes of the past which invite readers to approach epitaphic identity as a challenging question: here lies who, exactly? In its broadest context, this study casts fresh light on ideas of selfhood in medieval culture as well as on contemporary conceptions of the capacities and purposes of literary representation itself.
Helen Swift is Associate Professor of Medieval French at St Hilda's College, Oxford.
Read more


Buy Premium From My Links To Get Resumable Support and Max Speed


Links are Interchangeable - Single Extraction

Dead Link Contact: [email protected]

High Speed Download

Add Comment

  • People and smileys emojis
    Animals and nature emojis
    Food and drinks emojis
    Activities emojis
    Travelling and places emojis
    Objects emojis
    Symbols emojis
    Flags emojis