World of Echo

Regular price €56.99
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A01=Adin E. Lears
Age Group_Uncategorized
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and Margery Kempe
Author_Adin E. Lears
automatic-update
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DSBB
Category=NHDJ
Chaucer
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
Epistemology
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Langland
Language_English
Medieval thinking
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Price_€50 to €100
PS=Active
Richard Rolle
softlaunch
sound and sense

Product details

  • ISBN 9781501749605
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 2020
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Between late antiquity and the fifteenth century, theologians, philosophers, and poets struggled to articulate the correct relationship between sound and sense, creating taxonomies of sounds based on their capacity to carry meaning. In World of Echo, Adin E. Lears traces how medieval thinkers adopted the concept of noise as a mode of lay understanding grounded in the body and the senses.

With a broadly interdisciplinary approach, Lears examines a range of literary genres to highlight the poetic and social effects of this vibrant discourse, offering close readings of works by Geoffrey Chaucer and William Langland, as well as the mystics Richard Rolle and Margery Kempe. Each of these writers embraced an embodied experience of language resistant to clear articulation, even as their work reflects inherited anxieties about the appeal of such sensations. A preoccupation with the sound of language emerged in the form of poetic soundplay at the same time that mysticism and other forms of lay piety began to flower in England. As Lears shows, the presence of such emphatic aural texture amplified the cognitive importance of feeling in conjunction with reason and was a means for the laity—including lay women—to cultivate embodied forms of knowledge on their own terms, in precarious relation to existing clerical models of instruction. World of Echo offers a deep history of the cultural and social hierarchies that coalesce around aesthetic experience and gives voice to alternate ways of knowing.

Adin E. Lears is Assistant Professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University.

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