The Mester de Clerecía: Intellectuals and Ideologies in Thirteenth-Century Castile (Monografías A)
Description:
In the thirteenth century, profound changes in Spanish society drove the invention of fresh poetic forms by the new clerical class. The term mester de clereca (clerical ministry or service) applies to a group of narrative poems (epics, hagiography, romances) composed by university-trained clerics for the edification and entertainment of the predominantly illiterate laity. These clerics, like Gonzalo de Berceo, understood themselves as cultural intermediaries, transmitting wisdom and values from the past; at the same time, they were deeply involved in some of the most contentious and far-reaching changes in lay piety, and in economic and social structures. The author challenges the predominantly didactic approach to the verse, in an attempt to historicize the category of the intellectual, as someone caught in the duality of the worlds of contingency and absolute values.
The book will have a broad appeal to medievalists, in part because of the topics covered (feudalism, gender, nationhood, and religion), in part because many poems are either adaptations from French and Latin or have counterparts in other literatures (e.g., the romances or Alexander and Apollonius, the miracles of the Virgin Mary).
JULIAN WEISS is Professor of Medieval and Early Modern Spanish at King's College London.
Table of Contents
Introduction - Julian Weiss
Pollution and Perception in Gonzalo de Berceo's Milagros de Nuestra Seora - Julian Weiss
Female Associations: Three Encounters with Holy Women - Julian Weiss
Dreaming of Empire in El libro de Alexandre - Julian Weiss
The Birth of a Nation: Feudal Fictions in El poema de Fernn Gonzlez - Julian Weiss
The Cleric, In Between - Julian Weiss