
Men and Masculinities in Chaucer's "Troilus and Criseyde"
Author(s): Tison Pugh (Editor), Marcia Smith Marzec
- Publisher: D.S.Brewer
- Publication Date: 17 April 2008
- Language: English
- Print length: 212 pages
- ISBN-10: 9781843841609
- ISBN-13: 1843841606
Book Description
Issues relating to the male characters and the construction of masculinities in Chaucer’s masterpiece of love found and love lost are explored here. Collectively the essays address the question of what it means to be a man in the Middle Ages, what constitutes masculinity in this era, and how such masculinities are culturally constructed; they seek to advance scholarly understanding of the themes, characters, and actions of Troilus and Criseyde through the hermeneutics of medieval and modern concepts of manliness. Throughout, they argue that Troilus and the other characters, including Criseyde, are subject to multiple and conflicting interpretations, especially in regard to the intersections of their genders with their sexual performances and their conflicted relationships to generic expectations for gendered conduct.
Contributors: JOHN M. BOWERS, MICHAEL CALABRESE, HOLLY A. CROCKER, KATE KOPPELMAN, MOLLY MARTIN, MARCIA SMITH MARZEC, GRETCHEN MIESZKOWSKI, JAMES J. PAXSON, TISON PUGH, R. ALLEN SHOAF, ROBERT S. STURGES, ANGELA JANE WEISL, RICHARD ZEIKOWITZ
Editorial Reviews
Review
An important contribution to Chaucer studies, medieval studies, and indeed to gender studies most broadly conceived. JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND GERMANIC PHILOLOGY
Succeeds in making a significant contribution to the field of Chaucerian gender studies in that it demonstrates the sheer multiplicity of relevant topics contained in Troilus and Criseyde. SIXTEENTH CENTURY JOURNAL
The twelve essays in this volume cover a significant range of theoretical approaches in addition to masculinity, rendering a multivalent reading of gender and embodiment. THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW
Succeeds in making a significant contribution to the field of Chaucerian gender studies in that it demonstrates the sheer multiplicity of relevant topics contained in Troilus and Criseyde. SIXTEENTH CENTURY JOURNAL
The twelve essays in this volume cover a significant range of theoretical approaches in addition to masculinity, rendering a multivalent reading of gender and embodiment. THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW
About the Author
ANGELA JANE WEISL is Professor of English and Chair of the English Department at Seton Hall University.
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