Arts of Dying: Literature and Finitude in Medieval England

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People in the Middle Ages had chantry chapels, mortuary rolls, the daily observance of the Office of the Dead, and even purgatory—but they were still unable to talk about death. Their inability wasn’t due to religion, but philosophy: saying someone is dead is nonsense, as the person no longer is. The one thing that can talk about something that is not, as D. Vance Smith shows in this innovative, provocative book, is literature.

Covering the emergence of English literature from the Old English to the late medieval periods,
Arts of Dying argues that the problem of how to designate death produced a long tradition of literature about dying, which continues in the work of Heidegger, Blanchot, and Gillian Rose. Philosophy’s attempt to designate death’s impossibility is part of a literature that imagines a relationship with death, a literature that intensively and self-reflexively supposes that its very terms might solve the problem of the termination of life. A lyrical and elegiac exploration that combines medieval work on the philosophy of language with contemporary theorizing on death and dying, Arts of Dying is an important contribution to medieval studies, literary criticism, phenomenology, and continental philosophy.

Author(s): D. Vance Smith
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 309
City: Chicago

Contents
Preface
Introduction: Literature and Death
I. Soul
1. Out of Death, Art of Dying
2. The Old English Grammar of the Soul
3. The Tremulous Soul: The Worcester Fragments
II. Crypt
4. Unearthly Earth: Mortuary Lyric
5. “Alway deynge and be not ded”: The Book of the Duchess and “The Pardoner’s Tale”
6. Dying and the Tragedy of Occupation: “The Knight’s Tale”
7. The “Deth-dyinge” of Will: Piers Plowman
8. The Physics of Elegy: Pearl
9. Death, Terminable and Interminable: St. Erkenwald
III. Archive
10. Lydgate’s Exquisite Corpus
11. “Dyynge and talking”: Hoccleve’s Loquacious Archive
12. The Care of the Archive: John Audelay’s Three Dead Kings
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index