Home | Best Seller | FAQ | Contact Us
Browse
Art & Photography
Biographies & Autobiography
Body,Mind & Health
Business & Economics
Children's Book
Computers & Internet
Cooking
Crafts,Hobbies & Gardening
Entertainment
Family & Parenting
History
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Detective
Nonfiction
Professional & Technology
Reference
Religion
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports & Outdoors
Travel & Geography
   Book Info

enlarge picture

Public Piers Plowman: Modern Scholarship and Late Medieval English Culture  
Author: C. David Benson
ISBN: 0271024755
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review
Public Piers Plowman: Modern Scholarship and Late Medieval English Culture

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The fourteenth-century alliterative poem Piers Plowman was widely popular in its own day. The number of its surviving manuscripts ranks just below that of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Although the poem has been the subject of important recent studies, it continues to be marginalized by many medievalists and non-medievalists alike. According to C. David Benson, this is because the tendency of modern criticism has been to read Piers as an autobiography mired in the singular intellectual obsessions of its author or as a recondite exploration of theological and political issues. In Public Piers Plowman, Benson returns the poem to the center of late medieval English culture by treating it as a public rather than a personal or elite work.

Public Piers Plowman is divided into two parts. The first is an extended essay on what Benson calls the "Langland myth." He traces the evolution of Piers scholarship and demonstrates the limitations of treating Piers as a direct expression of the poet's experience and intellectual views. Well over a century after its creation, the Langland myth remairs dominant in studies of the poem, blocking other potentially fruitful approaches. In the second part Benson offers an alternative history for the poem. Although Piers is usually compared with high art and thought, such as that of Chaucer or scholasticism, Benson approaches it from a broader public context, using representative examples from vernacular writing, parish art, and civic practices. He argues that Piers reached a wide contemporary audience because, far from being an account only of the author's own life and opinions, it was securely rooted in the common culture of its time and place. Public Piers Plowman is an ambitious work that dares to confront a true literary masterpiece. In the process, it makes this great poem more accessible, exciting, and necessary to modern readers.

     



Home | Private Policy | Contact Us
@copyright 2001-2005 ReadingBee.com