Telling Tales: Sources and Narration in Late Medieval England

Author:   Joel T. Rosenthal (Distinguished Professor of History, Stony Brook University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
ISBN:  

9780271058481


Pages:   248
Publication Date:   15 October 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Telling Tales: Sources and Narration in Late Medieval England


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Overview

One of the great challenges facing historians of any era is to make the strangeness of the past comprehensible in the present. This task is especially difficult for scholars of the Middle Ages, a period that can seem particularly alien to modern sensibilities. In Telling Tales, Joel Rosenthal takes us on a journey through some familiar sources from fourteenth- and fifteenth-century England to show how memories and recollections can be used to build a compelling portrait of daily life in the late Middle Ages. Rosenthal is a senior medievalist whose work over the years has spanned several related areas, including family history, women's history, the life cycle, and memory and testimony. In Telling Tales, he brings all of these interests to bear on three seemingly disparate bodies of sources: the letters of Margaret Paston, depositions from a dispute between the Scropes and Grosvenors over a contested coat of arms, and Proof of Age proceedings, whereby the legal majority of an heir was established. In Rosenthal's hands these familiar sources all speak to questions of testimony, memory, and narrative at a time when written records were just becoming widespread. In Margaret Paston, we see a woman who helped hold family and family business together as she mastered the arduous and complex task of letter writing. In the knights whose tales were elicited for the Scrope and Grosvenor case, we witness the bonding of men-at-arms in the Hundred Years War. From the Proofs of Age, we have brief tales that are rich in the give-and-take of daily life in the village-memories of baptisms, burials, a trip to market, a fall from a roof, or marriage to another juror's sister. From a historian at the top of his craft, Telling Tales shows how medievalists can turn scraps of recollection into a synthetic story, one that enables us to recapture the strange and lost country of the European Middle Ages.

Full Product Details

Author:   Joel T. Rosenthal (Distinguished Professor of History, Stony Brook University)
Publisher:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:   Pennsylvania State University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.386kg
ISBN:  

9780271058481


ISBN 10:   027105848
Pages:   248
Publication Date:   15 October 2012
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

Contents List of Figures and Tables Preface Introduction: Telling Tales in a Social Context 1. Proofs of Age: A Rich Fabric of Thin Threads The World of Jurors and Testimony The Mechanics of Recollection Jurors’ Life Cycles and Life-Cycle Memories Ecclesiastical Memories Memories of the Secular World Communities Large and Small The Construction of Memory in the Proofs 2. Sir Richard Scrope and the Scrope and Grosvenor Depositions Recollection Re-creates Fellowship Cognition and Recollection Tales of the Scropes: Battles and Banners 3. Margaret Paston: The Lady and the Letters Letters as Artifacts Constructing the Letters: How to Tell It Like It Is First Stuck at Home and Then Mostly Alone Conclusion: Some Final Reflections Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

Joel T. Rosenthal, a specialist if ever there was one, shows how meaning and interest can be squeezed out of the most unpromising sources. --Ad Putter, Times Literary Supplement Telling Tales is interesting and lively reading for specialist and general audiences alike. It certainly demonstrates that the documents generated by fairly restricted groups in medieval society (a single family, the landed elite) can be deposed so as to reveal the history of other, more broadly based social groups. --Sherri Olson, Journal of English and Germanic Philology In this insightful, closely argued, richly detailed, and very engaging book, Joel T. Rosenthal brings his full attention and considerable intellectual skills to bear on three types of 'so-called lesser sources.' --Mark C. Amodio, The Medieval Review Rosenthal's goal in examining Proof of Age proceedings, depositions in the Scrope/Grosvenor controversy (1386), and Margaret Paston's letters is to 'illuminate the social context whence these snippets of memory and communication emanated.' He also analyzes types of memory and the means by which testators and letter writers gained information. Modes of cognition in Proof of Age depositions and the Scrope testimony are similar: personal knowledge, hearsay, and common fame. Much the same applies to Margaret's letters. Many Proof of Age witnesses either saw or participated in communal events (e.g., baptism) that helped establish an heir or heiress's age. If this suggests a bond between the manor house and prominent villages, the Scrope depositions illustrate a strong unity existing among the Scrope men at arms against an adversary. This 'us versus them' sentiment is forcefully present in Margaret's letters, from which we also learn of her duties as mistress of her household and of the responsibilities forced on her by her husband's frequent absences. In addition, Rosenthal (SUNY Stony Brook) offers an interesting section on the mechanics of composing Margaret's letters and the means of delivering them. --C.L. Hamilton, Choice There has been a virtual cottage industry of studies based on the Paston letters, but no one approaches them quite the way Joel Rosenthal does in Telling Tales. With originality and erudition he examines the letters, alongside other key late medieval English texts, and in the process he offers fresh insight into the 'small narratives' of ordinary life in late medieval England. --L. R. Poos, The Catholic University of America


There has been a virtual cottage industry of studies based on the Paston letters, but no one approaches them quite the way Joel Rosenthal does in Telling Tales. With originality and erudition he examines the letters, alongside other key late medieval English texts, and in the process he offers fresh insight into the 'small narratives' of ordinary life in late medieval England. --L. R. Poos, The Catholic University of America Telling Tales is interesting and lively reading for specialist and general audiences alike. It certainly demonstrates that the documents generated by fairly restricted groups in medieval society (a single family, the landed elite) can be deposed so as to reveal the history of other, more broadly based social groups. --Sherri Olson, Journal of English and Germanic Philology In this insightful, closely argued, richly detailed, and very engaging book, Joel T. Rosenthal brings his full attention and considerable intellectual skills to bear on three types of 'so-called lesser sources.' --Mark C. Amodio, The Medieval Review Joel T. Rosenthal, a specialist if ever there was one, shows how meaning and interest can be squeezed out of the most unpromising sources. --Ad Putter, Times Literary Supplement Rosenthal's goal in examining Proof of Age proceedings, depositions in the Scrope/Grosvenor controversy (1386), and Margaret Paston's letters is to 'illuminate the social context whence these snippets of memory and communication emanated.' He also analyzes types of memory and the means by which testators and letter writers gained information. Modes of cognition in Proof of Age depositions and the Scrope testimony are similar: personal knowledge, hearsay, and common fame. Much the same applies to Margaret's letters. Many Proof of Age witnesses either saw or participated in communal events (e.g., baptism) that helped establish an heir or heiress's age. If this suggests a bond between the manor house and prominent villages, the Scrope depositions illustrate a strong unity existing among the Scrope men at arms against an adversary. This 'us versus them' sentiment is forcefully present in Margaret's letters, from which we also learn of her duties as mistress of her household and of the responsibilities forced on her by her husband's frequent absences. In addition, Rosenthal (SUNY Stony Brook) offers an interesting section on the mechanics of composing Margaret's letters and the means of delivering them. --C.L. Hamilton, Choice


Telling Tales is interesting and lively reading for specialist and general audiences alike. It certainly demonstrates that the documents generated by fairly restricted groups in medieval society (a single family, the landed elite) can be deposed so as to reveal the history of other, more broadly based social groups. --Sherri Olson, Journal of English and Germanic Philology In this insightful, closely argued, richly detailed, and very engaging book, Joel T. Rosenthal brings his full attention and considerable intellectual skills to bear on three types of 'so-called lesser sources.' --Mark C. Amodio, The Medieval Review Joel T. Rosenthal, a specialist if ever there was one, shows how meaning and interest can be squeezed out of the most unpromising sources. --Ad Putter, Times Literary Supplement There has been a virtual cottage industry of studies based on the Paston letters, but no one approaches them quite the way Joel Rosenthal does in Telling Tales. With originality and erudition he examines the letters, alongside other key late medieval English texts, and in the process he offers fresh insight into the 'small narratives' of ordinary life in late medieval England. --L. R. Poos, The Catholic University of America Rosenthal's goal in examining Proof of Age proceedings, depositions in the Scrope/Grosvenor controversy (1386), and Margaret Paston's letters is to 'illuminate the social context whence these snippets of memory and communication emanated.' He also analyzes types of memory and the means by which testators and letter writers gained information. Modes of cognition in Proof of Age depositions and the Scrope testimony are similar: personal knowledge, hearsay, and common fame. Much the same applies to Margaret's letters. Many Proof of Age witnesses either saw or participated in communal events (e.g., baptism) that helped establish an heir or heiress's age. If this suggests a bond between the manor house and prominent villages, the Scrope depositions illustrate a strong unity existing among the Scrope men at arms against an adversary. This 'us versus them' sentiment is forcefully present in Margaret's letters, from which we also learn of her duties as mistress of her household and of the responsibilities forced on her by her husband's frequent absences. In addition, Rosenthal (SUNY Stony Brook) offers an interesting section on the mechanics of composing Margaret's letters and the means of delivering them. --C.L. Hamilton, Choice


Telling Tales is interesting and lively reading for specialist and general audiences alike. It certainly demonstrates that the documents generated by fairly restricted groups in medieval society (a single family, the landed elite) can be deposed so as to reveal the history of other, more broadly based social groups. --Sherri Olson, Journal of English and Germanic Philology


Joel T. Rosenthal, a specialist if ever there was one, shows how meaning and interest can be squeezed out of the most unpromising sources. --Ad Putter, Times Literary Supplement


Author Information

Joel T. Rosenthal is Distinguished Professor of History at SUNY, Stony Brook. His previous books include Patriarchy and Families of Privilege in Late Medieval England (1990).

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