A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald
St. Erkenwald is an alliterative Middle English poem thought to have been composed toward the end of the fourteenth century. Among modern critics of Middle English literature the poem has been generally regarded as an inferior work or has been relegated to relative obscurity as a second-rate work of...
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ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-284512018-01-05T17:44:39Z A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald Park, Laureen Diane St. Erkenwald is an alliterative Middle English poem thought to have been composed toward the end of the fourteenth century. Among modern critics of Middle English literature the poem has been generally regarded as an inferior work or has been relegated to relative obscurity as a second-rate work of the Gawain-poet. One possible reason for the indifferent reception St. Erkenwald has received from scholars may be due to the seeming difficulties which beset the poem, of which the most important is the lack of an appropriate generic context. If the poem lacks a suitable generic identity, part of the problem may lie in the way in which genre has been previously defined by modern critics. The solution proposed in this study is to redefine the concept of genre in terms of the reception-aesthetics of Hans Robert Jauss, that is, in terms of the expectations of the medieval audience. Chapter One of this study examines the problems facing the modern reader of St. Erkenwald as they have been identified by Erkenwald scholars. The aim of Chapter Two is to redefine the concept of genre and explore the theories of Jauss's Rezeptionsasthetik which can then be applied to the poem. The types of possible expectations are reconstructed in Chapter Three by examining roughly contemporaneous works which the audience could reasonably be expected to know. In Chapter Four St. Erkenwald is re-evaluated in terms of the reconstructed expectations in order to determine in what ways these expectations are fulfilled, changed, or subverted, thereby providing the means to evaluate the generic identity of the poem. Arts, Faculty of English, Department of Graduate 2010-09-12T17:16:52Z 2010-09-12T17:16:52Z 1989 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/28451 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia |
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NDLTD |
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English |
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NDLTD |
description |
St. Erkenwald is an alliterative Middle English poem thought to have been composed toward the end of the fourteenth century. Among modern critics of Middle English literature the poem has been generally regarded as an inferior work or has been relegated to relative obscurity as a second-rate work of the Gawain-poet. One possible reason for the indifferent reception St. Erkenwald has received from scholars may be due to the seeming difficulties which beset the poem, of which the most important is the lack of an appropriate generic context. If the poem lacks a suitable generic identity, part of the problem may lie in the way in which genre has been previously defined by modern critics. The solution proposed in this study is to redefine the concept of genre in terms of the reception-aesthetics of Hans Robert Jauss, that is, in terms of the expectations of the medieval audience.
Chapter One of this study examines the problems facing the modern reader of St. Erkenwald as they have been identified by Erkenwald scholars. The aim of Chapter Two is to redefine the concept of genre and explore the theories of Jauss's Rezeptionsasthetik which can then be applied to the poem. The types of possible expectations are reconstructed in Chapter Three by examining roughly contemporaneous works which the audience could reasonably be expected to know. In Chapter Four St. Erkenwald is re-evaluated in terms of the reconstructed expectations in order to determine in what ways these expectations are fulfilled, changed, or subverted, thereby providing the means to evaluate the generic identity of the poem. === Arts, Faculty of === English, Department of === Graduate |
author |
Park, Laureen Diane |
spellingShingle |
Park, Laureen Diane A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
author_facet |
Park, Laureen Diane |
author_sort |
Park, Laureen Diane |
title |
A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
title_short |
A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
title_full |
A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
title_fullStr |
A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
title_full_unstemmed |
A study of audience expectations and genre in St. Erkenwald |
title_sort |
study of audience expectations and genre in st. erkenwald |
publisher |
University of British Columbia |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2429/28451 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT parklaureendiane astudyofaudienceexpectationsandgenreinsterkenwald AT parklaureendiane studyofaudienceexpectationsandgenreinsterkenwald |
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