Focusing on one of the most influential poems in the European literary tradition, this collection brings together specialised chapters on medieval intellectual history, legal history, psychology, ethics, and logic. Re-evaluates the significance of the Roman de la Rose: indispensable reading for literary specialists and intellectual historians.
Focusing on one of the most influential poems in the European literary tradition, this collection brings together specialised chapters on medieval intellectual history, legal history, psychology, ethics, and logic. Re-evaluates the significance of the Roman de la Rose: indispensable reading for literary specialists and intellectual historians.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Part I. Epistemology and Language: 1. The mechanisms of belief: Jean de Meun's implicit epistemology Christophe Grellard (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 2. Visual experiences and allegorical fiction: the lexis and paradigm of fantasie in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Fabienne Pomel (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 3. Imposition, equivocation, and intention: language and signification in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose and thirteenth-century grammar and logic Marco Nievergelt; 4. Sophisms and sophistry in the Roman de la Rose Jonathan Morton; Part II. Natural Law, Politics, and Society: 5. The personal and the political: love and society in the Roman de la Rose Juhana Toivanen; 6. Human nature and the natural law in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Philip Knox; 7. A politico-communal re-reading of the Rose: the Fiore Attributed to Dante Alighieri Antonio Montefusco (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); Part III. Unfinished Business: Forms of Writing, Forms of Knowledge: 8. Jean de Meun, Boethius, and thirteenth-century philosophy John Marenbon; 9. The romance of the non-rose: echoes and subversions of negative theology in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Alice Lamy (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 10. Metalepsis and allegory: the unity of the Roman de la Rose Luciano Rossi (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt).
Part I. Epistemology and Language: 1. The mechanisms of belief: Jean de Meun's implicit epistemology Christophe Grellard (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 2. Visual experiences and allegorical fiction: the lexis and paradigm of fantasie in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Fabienne Pomel (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 3. Imposition, equivocation, and intention: language and signification in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose and thirteenth-century grammar and logic Marco Nievergelt; 4. Sophisms and sophistry in the Roman de la Rose Jonathan Morton; Part II. Natural Law, Politics, and Society: 5. The personal and the political: love and society in the Roman de la Rose Juhana Toivanen; 6. Human nature and the natural law in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Philip Knox; 7. A politico-communal re-reading of the Rose: the Fiore Attributed to Dante Alighieri Antonio Montefusco (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); Part III. Unfinished Business: Forms of Writing, Forms of Knowledge: 8. Jean de Meun, Boethius, and thirteenth-century philosophy John Marenbon; 9. The romance of the non-rose: echoes and subversions of negative theology in Jean de Meun's Roman de la Rose Alice Lamy (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt); 10. Metalepsis and allegory: the unity of the Roman de la Rose Luciano Rossi (translated by Jonathan Morton and Marco Nievergelt).
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