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Termes Of Phisik Reading Between Literary And Medical Discourses In Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales And John Lydgates Dietary Thesis Jake Walsh Morrissey

  • SKU: BELL-6618432
Termes Of Phisik Reading Between Literary And Medical Discourses In Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales And John Lydgates Dietary Thesis Jake Walsh Morrissey
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Termes Of Phisik Reading Between Literary And Medical Discourses In Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales And John Lydgates Dietary Thesis Jake Walsh Morrissey instant download after payment.

Publisher: McGill University
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.72 MB
Pages: 358
Author: Jake Walsh Morrissey
ISBN: 9780494775691, 0494775696
Language: English
Year: 2011

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Termes Of Phisik Reading Between Literary And Medical Discourses In Geoffrey Chaucers Canterbury Tales And John Lydgates Dietary Thesis Jake Walsh Morrissey by Jake Walsh Morrissey 9780494775691, 0494775696 instant download after payment.

This dissertation demonstrates that the poetry of Geoffrey Chaucer and John Lydgate joined nonliterary medical texts in transporting medical discourse into the English language and culture. In the later-fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, the production of Middle English medical and literary texts increased dramatically. These categories overlapped at the site of medical verse. I show that authors of imaginative fiction also wrote what is in effect medical verse by employing medical discourse in stand-alone poems and in passages embedded in longer works. As Chaucer and Lydgate became central in an emergent national literary canon, their texts––and the medical content they contained––enjoyed an especially broad circulation. Thus Chaucer and Lydgate participated in the Englishing and popularization of medical discourse.
In the General Prologue and linking narratives of the Canterbury Tales, Chaucer satirizes academic medicine by means of its own discourse––what he calls the “termes of phisik”––and in the context of a larger thematic exploration of healing and illness in post- Black Death England. In the Knight’s tale, Chaucer includes a miniature verse treatise on lovesickness (amor hereos), which, despite its brevity and satiric quality, draws learnedly from contemporary medical theory, in effect constituting one of the best-known technical works on the subject in Middle English. Lydgate’s Dietary, a verse regimen of physical, spiritual, and social health, was one of the most widely circulated Middle English poems. It has been overlooked and misunderstood by scholars, however, because they have neglected to consider the poem’s complex relationship with its sources and analogues and often refer to a highly unrepresentative edition of the text. By locating Chaucer’s and Lydgate’s creative uses of medical discourse within their textual and historical contexts, I offer new readings of their poems and reconstruct their respective roles in English medical history.

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