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Lay Writers and the Politics of Theology in Medieval England From the Twelfth to Fifteenth Centuries

Mattord, Carola Louise
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Abstract

This dissertation is a critical analysis of identity in literature within the historical context of the theopolitical climate in England between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries. The narratives under consideration are the Lais of Marie de France, The Canterbury Tales, and The Book of Margery Kempe. A focus on the business of theology and the Church’s political influence on identity will highlight these lay writers’ artistic shaping of theopolitical ideas into literature. Conducting a literary analysis on the application of theopolitical ideas by these lay writers encourages movement beyond the traditional exegetical interpretation of their narratives and furthers our determination of lay intellectual attitudes toward theology and its political purposes in the development of identity and society.

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4/20/2009
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Keywords
medieval literature, Geoffrey Chaucer, Marie de France, Margery Kempe, medieval romance, devotional literature, Medieval theology
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