An innovative reading of John Gower’s work and an exciting new approach to medieval vernacular texts. “Moral Gower” he was called by friend and sometime rival Geoffrey Chaucer, and his Confessio Amantis has been viewed as an uncomplicated analysis of the universe, combining erotic narratives with ethical guidance and political commentary. Diane Watt offers the first sustained reading of John Gower’s Confessio to argue that this early vernacular text offers no real solutions to the ethical problems it raises—and in fact actively encourages “perverse” readings. Drawing on a combination of queer and feminist theory, ethical criticism, and psychoanalytic, historicist, and textual criticism, Watt focuses on the language, sex, and politics in Gow...
In the Mirour de l’Omme John Gower describes the allegorical Sins as both deceitful and "hermaphrodi...
Surviving in more than 50 manuscript witnesses, John Gower’s Confessio amantis poses significant cha...
John Gower, writing in England during the fourteenth century, composed poetry in Latin, French, and ...
An innovative reading of John Gower’s work and an exciting new approach to medieval vernacular texts...
“Moral Gower” he was called by friend and sometime rival Geoffrey Chaucer, and his “Confessio Amanti...
Many critics have seen Confessio Amantis as a work of reformist rhetoric that, drawing deeply on med...
An introduction to Gower and his work, focusing on his sources, historical context and literary trad...
<p>This dissertation examines the use of personae, the rhetorical artifices by which an author creat...
The aim of this study is to demonstrate that John Gower's Confessio Amantis is a work of great philo...
In this article Diane Watt and I focus on a number of manuscript glosses accompanying the tale of Co...
Essays from this work are concerned with the Middle English writer John Gower\u27s politics (of gen...
Includes bibliographical references.In order to establish the arguments found within this paper, I r...
In the Introduction to the Man of Law’s Tale, the pilgrim implicitly compares favourably the poet Ch...
Gower\u27s Queer Poetics in the Mirour de l\u27Omme In the Mirour de l’Omme John Gower describes the...
This thesis examines the poetics and politics of ‘olde bokes’ (Legend of Good Women, G, 25) in selec...
In the Mirour de l’Omme John Gower describes the allegorical Sins as both deceitful and "hermaphrodi...
Surviving in more than 50 manuscript witnesses, John Gower’s Confessio amantis poses significant cha...
John Gower, writing in England during the fourteenth century, composed poetry in Latin, French, and ...
An innovative reading of John Gower’s work and an exciting new approach to medieval vernacular texts...
“Moral Gower” he was called by friend and sometime rival Geoffrey Chaucer, and his “Confessio Amanti...
Many critics have seen Confessio Amantis as a work of reformist rhetoric that, drawing deeply on med...
An introduction to Gower and his work, focusing on his sources, historical context and literary trad...
<p>This dissertation examines the use of personae, the rhetorical artifices by which an author creat...
The aim of this study is to demonstrate that John Gower's Confessio Amantis is a work of great philo...
In this article Diane Watt and I focus on a number of manuscript glosses accompanying the tale of Co...
Essays from this work are concerned with the Middle English writer John Gower\u27s politics (of gen...
Includes bibliographical references.In order to establish the arguments found within this paper, I r...
In the Introduction to the Man of Law’s Tale, the pilgrim implicitly compares favourably the poet Ch...
Gower\u27s Queer Poetics in the Mirour de l\u27Omme In the Mirour de l’Omme John Gower describes the...
This thesis examines the poetics and politics of ‘olde bokes’ (Legend of Good Women, G, 25) in selec...
In the Mirour de l’Omme John Gower describes the allegorical Sins as both deceitful and "hermaphrodi...
Surviving in more than 50 manuscript witnesses, John Gower’s Confessio amantis poses significant cha...
John Gower, writing in England during the fourteenth century, composed poetry in Latin, French, and ...