Resistance to Love in Medieval English Romance

Negotiating Consent, Gender, and Desire

Hannah Piercy author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Published:7th Nov '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Resistance to Love in Medieval English Romance cover

This book explores resistance as a widespread motif in medieval romance to consider themes of consent, gender, and desire. JOINT WINNER: 2024 Swiss Association of Medieval and Early Modern Studies Book Prize. Medieval romance is usually considered a genre that celebrates love, desire, and sexuality within marriage. However, moments of resistance within it offer a point of tension, where normative scripts and expectations are exposed and opened up to challenge. This book explores such resistance as a widespread motif in the genre, tracing the subversive possibilities it presents, and through them uncovering how romance constitutes particular kinds of love as desirable, shaped by intersecting factors, including gender, status, race, religion, and morality. Drawing upon contemporary work on consent, the politics of desire, and asexuality, it examines how resistance is often transformed into acceptance, through consensual negotiation or coercive force: the romances discussed here demonstrate that a certain level of force, pressure, and persuasion is accepted as a means of forming relationships within the genre, but this reliance on coercion reveals the effort to which romances must go to uphold normative structures of desire. Considering a variety of works, from Marie de France's twelfth-century Guigemar to Thomas Malory's Morte Darthur, Geoffrey Chaucer's Franklin's Tale to William Caxton's fifteenth-century prose romances, this book argues that romance teaches its readers what and whom to desire, as well as how to behave when negotiating their desires, and explores the wider implications for understanding consent, gender, and desire in medieval England. This book is available as an Open Access ebook under the Creative-Commons License CC-BY-NC-ND

Piercy's book makes an important contribution to recent studies of consent in medieval literature (particularly in romances, lyrics, and other secular genres) by moving beyond discrete moments in which consent might either be given or withheld to examine the broader structures of coercion within the genre that lead the protagonists toward a heteronormative conclusion, which usually includes love, marriage, and sex. This excellent monograph will appeal to students of medieval literature and culture as well as those interested in the history of consent and the ways in which medieval rape culture relates to modern rape culture. * MEDIEVAL FEMINIST FORUM *
Resistance to Love in Middle English Romance is an ambitious book, both in its scope and in its aims, but Piercy delivers in her ability to argue for the possibilities of romance and the varied ways the genre operates. In the moments that Piercy's voice comes forward this book truly finds its power. * COMITATUS *
Piercy's analysis, informed by modern theories, provides exciting infights to the field. The book certainly contributes a new dimension to the scholarship of romance and brings the texts in the past closer to modern readers. * JOURNAL OF THE SPANISH SOCIETY FOR MEDIEVAL ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE (SELIM) *
Piercy's prose throughout the book is clear and energetic, moving with ease between close readings of neglected romances while always keeping an eye on the much wider (often transhistorical) picture. In so doing, she has written an essential book for scholars of consent-medieval and modern-and, of course, for those studying medieval romance. * ARTHURIANA *

ISBN: 9781843846727

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 437g

290 pages