Writing the Oral Tradition

Regular price €26.50
A01=Mark C. Amodio
Anglo Saxon
Author_Mark C. Amodio
Category=DSBB
Category=DSC
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fifteenth Century
Fifth Century
lexemes
Literary Studies
Medieval
metrical arrangements
Middle Ages
Middle English poetry
post Conquest
thematics
Thirteenth Century
Twelfth Century

Product details

  • ISBN 9780268020248
  • Weight: 429g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2004
  • Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Mark Amodio's book focuses on the influence of the oral tradition on written vernacular verse produced in England from the fifth to the fifteenth century. His primary aim is to explore how a living tradition articulated only through the public, performance voices of pre-literate singers came to find expression through the pens of private, literate authors. Amodio argues that the expressive economy of oral poetics survives in written texts because, throughout the Middle Ages, literacy and orality were interdependent, not competing, cultural forces.

After delving into the background of the medieval oral-literate matrix, Writing the Oral Tradition develops a model of non-performative oral poetics that is a central, perhaps defining, component of Old English vernacular verse. Following the Norman Conquest, oral poetics lost its central position and became one of many ways to articulate poetry. Contrary to many scholars, Amodio argues that oral poetics did not disappear but survived well into the post-Conquest period. It influenced the composition of Middle English verse texts produced from the twelfth to the fourteenth century because it offered poets an affectively powerful and economical way to articulate traditional meanings. Indeed, fragments of oral poetics are discoverable in contemporary prose, poetics, and film as they continue to faithfully emit their traditional meanings.

Writing the Oral Tradition will appeal to specialists and students interested in medieval literature, medieval cultural studies, and oral theory.

Mark C. Amodio is professor of English at Vassar College.