Documentary Culture and
the Making of Medieval English Literature. By Emily Steiner. Cambridge
Studies in Medieval Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2003. Pp. xvi + 266; 11 Illustrations. $60.00
In this revision of her 1999 Yale dissertation, Emily Steiner proposes
that "documentary culture was shaped, in part, by the formal, ethical,
spiritual, and political aspirations of late medieval English writers
" and that this "documentary culture " (which she associates primarily
with the law) "helped shape an identity for English literature: the work
it performs, the stories it tells, and the authority that it claims for
itself " (p. 10). The latter is her more central and the more interesting
claim, but it depends on inferences about the dynamic forces "at the intersection
between documentary culture and late medieval literature " (p. 10) that
prove difficult to support with persuasive evidence or convincing logic.
Her intuitions about the important, even at times definitive, relations
between law and literatureÊof which she shows herself a maturing studentÊmay
well prove right, but this book's repeated assertion about decisive relations
between them reveal stronger conviction than persuasive argument.
Míceál F. Vaughan
University of Washington, Seattle |
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