This dissertation examines the late medieval self as a conjoined construction of socially negotiated identity and privately differentiated subjectivity; in so doing, it calls attention to the complex, emphatic, deeply defined subjectivity that emerges in the Book of Margery Kempe. This consideration of Kempe\u27s Book is informed by study of late medieval works that feature self-construction in parallel modes to Kempe\u27s: testing in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, pilgrimage in The Canterbury Tales (most particularly The Wife of Bath\u27s Prologue ), and mystical visions in Julian of Norwich\u27s Shewings. In these texts, identity emerges as a social negotiation and subjectivity as a site of inaccessibility. But, none of these sel...
In this study, I read late medieval vernacular texts of Mandeville’s Travels, Chaucer’s Wife of Bath...
The Book of Margery Kempe tells the apparently true story of a medieval wife and mother of fourteen ...
This dissertation argues that important modes of self-definition in the Renaissance draw on the ling...
This dissertation examines the late medieval self as a conjoined construction of socially negotiated...
Encountering The Book of Margery Kempe illuminates the capaciousness of Margery Kempe studies in the...
In a debate significant for both its stakes and longevity, medievalists and early modernists have en...
This project is devoted to the exploration of a contemporary philosophical concept – the human self,...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
This thesis explores the ideological significance of immaturity to several late medieval texts that ...
This dissertation argues that in the transition from medieval to early modern literature there is a ...
In the Book of Margery Kempe, Margery Kempe, a fifteenth-century lay mystic, recorded her spiritual ...
This dissertation is a critical analysis of identity in literature within the historical context of ...
This thesis examines Margery Kempe's construction of her 'maner of leuyng', as it shifts back and fo...
The Book of Margery Kempe has been variously described as a mystical treatise, an autobiography, and...
This thesis explores the complexities in the mysticism and literary authority of Margery Kempe as th...
In this study, I read late medieval vernacular texts of Mandeville’s Travels, Chaucer’s Wife of Bath...
The Book of Margery Kempe tells the apparently true story of a medieval wife and mother of fourteen ...
This dissertation argues that important modes of self-definition in the Renaissance draw on the ling...
This dissertation examines the late medieval self as a conjoined construction of socially negotiated...
Encountering The Book of Margery Kempe illuminates the capaciousness of Margery Kempe studies in the...
In a debate significant for both its stakes and longevity, medievalists and early modernists have en...
This project is devoted to the exploration of a contemporary philosophical concept – the human self,...
Movement in literature is a technique used by authors to uncover richer and deeper meaning which can...
This thesis explores the ideological significance of immaturity to several late medieval texts that ...
This dissertation argues that in the transition from medieval to early modern literature there is a ...
In the Book of Margery Kempe, Margery Kempe, a fifteenth-century lay mystic, recorded her spiritual ...
This dissertation is a critical analysis of identity in literature within the historical context of ...
This thesis examines Margery Kempe's construction of her 'maner of leuyng', as it shifts back and fo...
The Book of Margery Kempe has been variously described as a mystical treatise, an autobiography, and...
This thesis explores the complexities in the mysticism and literary authority of Margery Kempe as th...
In this study, I read late medieval vernacular texts of Mandeville’s Travels, Chaucer’s Wife of Bath...
The Book of Margery Kempe tells the apparently true story of a medieval wife and mother of fourteen ...
This dissertation argues that important modes of self-definition in the Renaissance draw on the ling...