Descripción
Pages: 295 p. NEW. Hardback. Illustrations:4 b/w, 5 col. Language(s):English, Old French, Middle High German. Brepols, Publication Year:2022 - SUMMARY This book explores for the first time the moral education of the Western European nobility in the high Middle Ages. The medieval nobility created and utilized values and ideals such as chivalry and courtliness to legitimize their exalted position in society, and these values were largely the same across Europe. Noble codes of conduct communicated these ideals in everyday interactions and symbolic acts at court that formed the basis of European courtly society. This book asks how noble men and women were taught about morality and good conduct and how the values of their society were disseminated. While a major part of moral education took place in person, this period also produced a growing corpus of writing on the subject, in both Latin and the vernacular languages, addressing audiences that encompassed the lay elites from kings to the knightly class, men as well as women. Participation in this teaching became a distinguishing feature of the nobility, who actively promoted their moral superiority through their self-fashioning as they evolved into a social class. This book brings together analyses of several major European didactic texts and miscellanies, examining the way nobles learned about norms and values. Investigating the didactic writings of the Middle Ages helps us to better understand the role of moral education in the formation of class, gender, and social identities, and its long-term contribution to a shared European aristocratic culture. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Nobility and Morality in the High Middle Ages Socio-Cultural Shifts in the High Middle Ages Learned Discourses of Virtues and Values in the West Moral Discourse in the Vernacular Languages Research into Medieval Aristocratic Ethics The Contribution of this Book Chapter 1. Teaching Morality Teaching the Noble Child Lifelong Learning Didactic Communities Conclusion Chapter 2. Models of Authority Teaching and Authority Letters Letter Books Treatises Dialogues and Monologues Conclusion Chapter 3. The Courtly Cosmos The Court Criticized The Court Idealized? The Court as a Formative Environment The Court as a Communicative System Conclusion Chapter 4. Communities of Values Aims of Instruction Ideals of Medieval Aristocrats Nobility in the Order of the World Conclusion Chapter 5. Organizing Knowledge The Primacy of Poetry and the Truth of Prose Structuring Knowledge: From Florilegium to Encyclopaedia The Codex Speaks Conclusion Conclusion Bibliography Index. N° de ref. del artículo 00657
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