Imagined Romes: The Ancient City and Its Stories in Middle English Poetry

Author:   C. David Benson (Emeritus, University of Connecticut)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271083216


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   20 August 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Imagined Romes: The Ancient City and Its Stories in Middle English Poetry


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Author:   C. David Benson (Emeritus, University of Connecticut)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.376kg
ISBN:  

9780271083216


ISBN 10:   0271083212
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   20 August 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments Note on Spelling Introduction Part 1: Ancient Rome and Its Objects 1 The Relics of Rome: Christian Mercy and the Stacions of Rome 2 The Ruins of Rome: Pagan Marvels and the Metrical Mirabilia Part 2: Narratives of Ancient Romans 3 Civic Romans in Gower’s Confessio Amantis 4 Heroic (Women) Romans in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and the Legend of Good Women 5 Virtuous Romans in Piers Plowman 6 Tragic Romans in Lydgate’s Fall of Princes Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

As with [the author's] book about medieval Troy stories, Imagined Romes may well become a standard undergraduate source. The book conveniently maps out a set of instances in which some medieval writers represented Rome or responded to various definitions of Romanness. -Sylvia Federico, Speculum The relation of medieval cultures to Rome is creatively conflicted: early Christianity defines itself against everything that 'Rome' stands for, while the Papacy models itself as a new empire. David Benson's Imagined Romes takes us into the medieval city and trains us to understand how late medieval English readers of and visitors to the eternal city imagined its republican and imperial past. The resultant book-ever lucid and engaging-is full of illuminating surprises. -James Simpson, author of Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition David Benson has written a book that was much needed not only by students of medieval English literature but by all those who are interested in pagan and Christian Rome and her image after the fall of the empire. Imagined Romes is a work of intelligence and love, full of the surprises that only a great scholar can set up and rewarding throughout. -Piero Boitani, author of The Gospel According to Shakespeare Benson's lyrical book about English writers' recovery of ancient Rome allows us to see how profoundly ideas about Rome shaped the later Middle Ages. Imagined Romes offers a delightful tour of an ancient city that existed only in the memories of Middle English poets. Despite being a fantasy, this Rome shaped conceptions of power, truth, justice, mercy, love, tragedy, and literature for generations. Benson's book will appeal to literary scholars, medievalists, and any reader who has fallen in love with a place found only in a book. -Rebecca Krug, author of Reading Families: Women's Literate Practice in Late Medieval England The originality and critical acumen of this work are well represented in its title: the reader can expect to discover a multitude of Romes, as Benson highlights the plurality of cities that, under the name of Rome, were built in the imagination of Middle English poets. -Giulia Boitani, Medium Aevum Imagined Romes resounds with evocative and theologically rich tales of Rome and Romans in Middle English poetry, and will captivate a contemporary literate audience with the marvels of the eternal city, in an analogous fashion to those wondrous bells ringing-out from the Capitoline hill. -Sean Michael Ryan, Reading Religion This study ably fills a startling gap that I, for one, had not previously thought to consider. The interpretative consequences are estimable, for Benson's focus through the lens of Rome eloquently illuminates significant aspects of all four Middle English poets he considers. -Karla Taylor, Studies in the Age of Chaucer


Benson's lyrical book about English writers' recovery of ancient Rome allows us to see how profoundly ideas about Rome shaped the later Middle Ages. Imagined Romes offers a delightful tour of an ancient city that existed only in the memories of Middle English poets. Despite being a fantasy, this Rome shaped conceptions of power, truth, justice, mercy, love, tragedy, and literature for generations. Benson's book will appeal to literary scholars, medievalists, and any reader who has fallen in love with a place found only in a book. -Rebecca Krug, author of Reading Families: Women's Literate Practice in Late Medieval England David Benson has written a book that was much needed not only by students of medieval English literature but by all those who are interested in pagan and Christian Rome and her image after the fall of the empire. Imagined Romes is a work of intelligence and love, full of the surprises that only a great scholar can set up and rewarding throughout. -Piero Boitani, author of The Gospel According to Shakespeare The relation of medieval cultures to Rome is creatively conflicted: early Christianity defines itself against everything that 'Rome' stands for, while the Papacy models itself as a new empire. David Benson's Imagined Romes takes us into the medieval city and trains us to understand how late medieval English readers of and visitors to the eternal city imagined its republican and imperial past. The resultant book-ever lucid and engaging-is full of illuminating surprises. -James Simpson, author of Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition


“As with [the author’s] book about medieval Troy stories, Imagined Romes may well become a standard undergraduate source. The book conveniently maps out a set of instances in which some medieval writers represented Rome or responded to various definitions of Romanness.” —Sylvia Federico Speculum “The relation of medieval cultures to Rome is creatively conflicted: early Christianity defines itself against everything that ‘Rome’ stands for, while the Papacy models itself as a new empire. David Benson’s Imagined Romes takes us into the medieval city and trains us to understand how late medieval English readers of and visitors to the eternal city imagined its republican and imperial past. The resultant book—ever lucid and engaging—is full of illuminating surprises.” —James Simpson, author of Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition “David Benson has written a book that was much needed not only by students of medieval English literature but by all those who are interested in pagan and Christian Rome and her image after the fall of the empire. Imagined Romes is a work of intelligence and love, full of the surprises that only a great scholar can set up and rewarding throughout.” —Piero Boitani, author of The Gospel According to Shakespeare “Benson’s lyrical book about English writers’ recovery of ancient Rome allows us to see how profoundly ideas about Rome shaped the later Middle Ages. Imagined Romes offers a delightful tour of an ancient city that existed only in the memories of Middle English poets. Despite being a fantasy, this Rome shaped conceptions of power, truth, justice, mercy, love, tragedy, and literature for generations. Benson’s book will appeal to literary scholars, medievalists, and any reader who has fallen in love with a place found only in a book.” —Rebecca Krug, author of Reading Families: Women's Literate Practice in Late Medieval England “The originality and critical acumen of this work are well represented in its title: the reader can expect to discover a multitude of Romes, as Benson highlights the plurality of cities that, under the name of Rome, were built in the imagination of Middle English poets.” —Giulia Boitani Medium Aevum “Imagined Romes resounds with evocative and theologically rich tales of Rome and Romans in Middle English poetry, and will captivate a contemporary literate audience with the marvels of the eternal city, in an analogous fashion to those wondrous bells ringing-out from the Capitoline hill.” —Sean Michael Ryan Reading Religion “This study ably fills a startling gap that I, for one, had not previously thought to consider. The interpretative consequences are estimable, for Benson’s focus through the lens of Rome eloquently illuminates significant aspects of all four Middle English poets he considers.” —Karla Taylor Studies in the Age of Chaucer


Benson's lyrical book about English writers' recovery of ancient Rome allows us to see how profoundly ideas about Rome shaped the later Middle Ages. Imagined Romes offers a delightful tour of an ancient city that existed only in the memories of Middle English poets. Despite being a fantasy, this Rome shaped conceptions of power, truth, justice, mercy, love, tragedy, and literature for generations. Benson's book will appeal to literary scholars, medievalists, and any reader who has fallen in love with a place found only in a book. -Rebecca Krug, author of Reading Families: Women's Literate Practice in Late Medieval England David Benson has written a book that was much needed not only by students of medieval English literature but by all those who are interested in pagan and Christian Rome and her image after the fall of the empire. Imagined Romes is a work of intelligence and love, full of the surprises that only a great scholar can set up and rewarding throughout. -Piero Boitani, author of The Gospel According to Shakespeare The relation of medieval cultures to Rome is creatively conflicted: early Christianity defines itself against everything that 'Rome' stands for, while the Papacy models itself as a new empire. David Benson's Imagined Romes takes us into the medieval city and trains us to understand how late medieval English readers of and visitors to the eternal city imagined its republican and imperial past. The resultant book-ever lucid and engaging-is full of illuminating surprises. -James Simpson, author of Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition As with [the author's] book about medieval Troy stories, Imagined Romes may well become a standard undergraduate source. The book conveniently maps out a set of instances in which some medieval writers represented Rome or responded to various definitions of Romanness. -Sylvia Federico, Speculum


The originality and critical acumen of this work are well represented in its title: the reader can expect to discover a multitude of Romes, as Benson highlights the plurality of cities that, under the name of Rome, were built in the imagination of Middle English poets. -Giulia Boitani, Medium Aevum Benson's lyrical book about English writers' recovery of ancient Rome allows us to see how profoundly ideas about Rome shaped the later Middle Ages. Imagined Romes offers a delightful tour of an ancient city that existed only in the memories of Middle English poets. Despite being a fantasy, this Rome shaped conceptions of power, truth, justice, mercy, love, tragedy, and literature for generations. Benson's book will appeal to literary scholars, medievalists, and any reader who has fallen in love with a place found only in a book. -Rebecca Krug, author of Reading Families: Women's Literate Practice in Late Medieval England David Benson has written a book that was much needed not only by students of medieval English literature but by all those who are interested in pagan and Christian Rome and her image after the fall of the empire. Imagined Romes is a work of intelligence and love, full of the surprises that only a great scholar can set up and rewarding throughout. -Piero Boitani, author of The Gospel According to Shakespeare The relation of medieval cultures to Rome is creatively conflicted: early Christianity defines itself against everything that 'Rome' stands for, while the Papacy models itself as a new empire. David Benson's Imagined Romes takes us into the medieval city and trains us to understand how late medieval English readers of and visitors to the eternal city imagined its republican and imperial past. The resultant book-ever lucid and engaging-is full of illuminating surprises. -James Simpson, author of Under the Hammer: Iconoclasm in the Anglo-American Tradition As with [the author's] book about medieval Troy stories, Imagined Romes may well become a standard undergraduate source. The book conveniently maps out a set of instances in which some medieval writers represented Rome or responded to various definitions of Romanness. -Sylvia Federico, Speculum


Author Information

C. David Benson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English and Medieval Studies at the University of Connecticut. He is the author of Public Piers Plowman: Modern Scholarship and Late Medieval English Culture, also published by Penn State University Press.

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