Literature and heresy in the age of Chaucer / Andrew Cole
Material type:
- 9780521887915
- 0521887917
- ARCH YNDC 820.9 C689L 22
- PR255 .C65 2008
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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SAIACS Archives Room | Yandell Collection | ARCH YNDC 820.9 C689L (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 064828 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-285) and indexes
The invention of heresy. The Blackfriars Council, London, 1382 -- The late fourteenth century: canonizing Wycliffism. The invention of "lollardy": William Langland ; The reinvention of "lollardy": William Langland and his contemporaries ; Intermezzo: Wycliffism is not "lollardy" ; Geoffrey Chaucer's Wycliffite text -- The early fifteenth century: heretics and eucharists. Thomas Hoccleve's heretics ; John Lydgate's eucharists -- Feeling Wycliffite. Margery Kempe's "lollard" shame -- Epilogue. Heresy, Wycliffism, and English literary history
After the late 14th century, English literature was fundamentally shaped by the heresy of John Wyclif and his followers. This study demonstrates how Chaucer, Langland, John Clanvowe, Margery Kempe, Thomas Hoccleve and John Lydgate, far from eschewing Wycliffism, viewed it as a distinctly new intellectual resource
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