Laughter and Awkwardness in Late Medieval England

Social Discomfort in the Literature of the Middle Ages

David Watt author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:21st Sep '23

£85.00

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

Laughter and Awkwardness in Late Medieval England cover

This book explores laughter and awkwardness in late-medieval English literature.

'We live,’ according to Adam Kotsko, ‘in an awkward age.’ While this condition may present some challenges, it may also help us to be more attuned to awkwardness in other ages. This book pairs medieval texts with twenty-first century films or television programmes to explore what the resonance between them can tell us about living together in an awkward age. In this nuanced and engaging study, David Watt focuses especially, but not exclusively, on the 15th century, which seems to intervene awkwardly in the literary trajectory between Chaucer and the Renaissance. This book’s hypothesis is that the social discomfort depicted and engendered by writers as diverse as Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, and Sir Thomas Malory is a feature rather than a flaw. Laughter and Awkwardness in Late Medieval England explains that these authors have a great deal in common with other fifteenth-century authors, who generated embodied experiences of social discomfort in a range of genres by adopting and adapting literary techniques used by their predecessors and successors in slightly different ways. Like the twenty-first century texts with which they are paired, the late-medieval texts that feature in this book use the relationship between laughter and awkwardness to ask what it means to live with each other and how we can learn to live with ourselves.

[David] Watt does an excellent job of demonstrating how productive the concept of awkwardness is in both medieval and modern works. -- Mary C. Flanner * The Times Literary Supplement *

ISBN: 9781788314305

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

208 pages