Textile logics of late medieval romance

This essay examines some of the threads linking textiles, late medieval vernacular romance, and the manuscripts in which they survive. The metaphor of the fabric fold or gathering for the composition of romance evokes the shared Latin etymology of text and textile so familiar to medieval writers. Wh...

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Main Author: White, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Routledge 2016
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author White, T
author_facet White, T
author_sort White, T
collection OXFORD
description This essay examines some of the threads linking textiles, late medieval vernacular romance, and the manuscripts in which they survive. The metaphor of the fabric fold or gathering for the composition of romance evokes the shared Latin etymology of text and textile so familiar to medieval writers. What I here call the “textile logic” of romance opens out onto two further, related considerations. First, romances are themselves replete with textile objects (gloves, cloths, clothing) that form an important part of their fabric of reality. The fourteenth-century romances Sir Degaré, Sir Degrevant, and Emaré all exemplify the importance of various textile objects in romance networks of agency. Second, in the various forms of stitching and fabric required to produce and maintain a manuscript, these objects emerge as “systems of fabric” in both material and figurative senses. I argue, therefore, for the importance of understanding romance textuality as fabricated or woven in a number of senses. The work of Bruno Latour, Michel Serres, and Tim Ingold — replete with recourse to textile figures and metaphors — forms a central theoretical thread for the discussion.
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spelling oxford-uuid:702207eb-7ca5-4f11-9288-d012be6754d72022-03-26T19:35:07ZTextile logics of late medieval romanceJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:702207eb-7ca5-4f11-9288-d012be6754d7Symplectic Elements at OxfordRoutledge2016White, TThis essay examines some of the threads linking textiles, late medieval vernacular romance, and the manuscripts in which they survive. The metaphor of the fabric fold or gathering for the composition of romance evokes the shared Latin etymology of text and textile so familiar to medieval writers. What I here call the “textile logic” of romance opens out onto two further, related considerations. First, romances are themselves replete with textile objects (gloves, cloths, clothing) that form an important part of their fabric of reality. The fourteenth-century romances Sir Degaré, Sir Degrevant, and Emaré all exemplify the importance of various textile objects in romance networks of agency. Second, in the various forms of stitching and fabric required to produce and maintain a manuscript, these objects emerge as “systems of fabric” in both material and figurative senses. I argue, therefore, for the importance of understanding romance textuality as fabricated or woven in a number of senses. The work of Bruno Latour, Michel Serres, and Tim Ingold — replete with recourse to textile figures and metaphors — forms a central theoretical thread for the discussion.
spellingShingle White, T
Textile logics of late medieval romance
title Textile logics of late medieval romance
title_full Textile logics of late medieval romance
title_fullStr Textile logics of late medieval romance
title_full_unstemmed Textile logics of late medieval romance
title_short Textile logics of late medieval romance
title_sort textile logics of late medieval romance
work_keys_str_mv AT whitet textilelogicsoflatemedievalromance