ebook img

Romance Logic: The Argument of Vernacular Verse in the Scholastic Middle Ages [PhD thesis] PDF

510 Pages·2009·1.86 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Romance Logic: The Argument of Vernacular Verse in the Scholastic Middle Ages [PhD thesis]

ROMANCE LOGIC The Argument of Vernacular Verse in the Scholastic Middle Ages Wesley Chihyung Yu A DISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE FACULTY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY RECOMMENDED FOR ACCEPTANCE BY THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH Advisers: Kathleen Davis, John V. Fleming, D. Vance Smith April 2009 UMI Number: 3350843 Copyright 2009 by Yu, Wesley Chihyung All rights reserved INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed-through, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ______________________________________________________________ UMI Microform 3350843 Copyright 2009 by ProQuest LLC All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. _______________________________________________________________ ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 © Copyright by Wesley Chihyung Yu, 2009. All rights reserved. iii Abstract Courtly literature is a surprising index of language’s changing theorization during an important period for developments in Western logic. This dissertation characterizes the changing functions of rhetoric and poesy vis-à-vis the arc of dialectic’s fortunes between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries. Romance Logic discusses not only how vernacular romance in the medieval tradition utilized and coincided with the logic of its contemporary moment, but also argues that romance helped shape logic’s transformation through the Middle Ages. Focusing largely on oddities of narrative construction, this project investigates the properties of reasoning that are evident in vernacular verse and rhetorical arrangement over the long period from dialectic’s reign as the principal logic of the early Middle Ages to the emergent new logic in later Scholasticism. Part I, “The Idea of Logic,” deals with the implications of dialectic as the basis of early logic. Chapter 1 discusses the centrality of the Aristotelian syllogism in early medieval thought, while Chapter 2 accounts for rhetoric’s accommodation of aspects of signification that escaped dialectic. In Part II, “Logic and the Enchanting World,” the tradition of vernacular romance gives a shape to the flexibilities of reasoning that could not be categorically systematized under dialectic alone. Chapters 3, 4, and 5 center on Wace’s Roman de Rou, and Chrétien de Troyes’ Erec et Enide and Yvain. Here, romance features as a realm for imagining and assuaging various problems incurred by metaphysics and language philosophy of the period, dramatizing and thereby actively preserving narrative complexity. Seeing in rhetoric and poetry critical elements of rational thought, romance argues the need for a metaphysical logic that can also accept complex and circumstantial information. Part III, “Escaping Logic,” thus examines forms of narrative reasoning in later Scholasticism that coincided with the transition to the era of the New Logic. These chapters explore poetic iv composition vis-à-vis the emerging logic of consequences that absorbed narrative contingencies into its framework as dialectic’s ambivalent status in later Scholasticism led to dialectic’s identification with rhetoric. Chapter 6 pursues the alternately dialectical and rhetorical lives of transsumptio, and finds transsumptio to be an expression of both logical change and narrative reasoning in the poetic manuals of Matthew of Vendôme and Geoffrey of Vinsauf. Chapter 7 recovers Chaucer’s attention to the propositional logic of the fourteenth century, showing how his ironic poesy recognized contemporary changes in logic in order to build upon the foundation of philosophical thought that had been prevalent in an earlier tradition of romance. v Acknowledgments The most difficult debt to pay must be the one that can be remitted only with gratitude. While trying to finish this dissertation, I have indebted myself a hundred times over in this meager currency, having so copiously received far profounder things as kindness, patience, enthusiasm, time, and inspiration from family, friends, and teachers. I can’t see how these could possibly be repaid in either a few or many words, but I make a humble start here. If we are drawn to those in whom we see the hope of our becoming better than we are, then there seems little question as to why my choice of teachers has been what it has been. Thanks must go to my advisers for their virtuously long fuse, and for directing me where I have so desperately needed to go. Kathleen Davis, who drew me into the orbit of the early Middle Ages, also drew me into wider academic circles to help facilitate my professional growth. An incisive reader, an exciting thinker, and a wise counselor, she is above all brilliantly humane. I could thank John Fleming for the conversations over lunch, for his gentle support, for going to Kalamazoo when he could so easily have refused, and for prevailing upon me to remember the unique work of poems. But chiefly, I thank him for considering me a student of his. D. Vance Smith has an enormous capacity to guide students into new realms of thought just by the touch and go of a conversation. I found a way to medieval logic in his seminars, and in the midst of preparing job talks and finishing this dissertation, I realized that I’d embarked unknowingly on this course of research in order to feel at home in Vance’s books. Without a course on premodern rhetoric under the frenetic, expansive, and awe-inspiring tutelage of Rita Copeland, I would have missed out on a massive and daunting arena of exploration. Her course, her scholarship, and her conversation have provided me access to a world of texts I thought I was too old ever to embark upon. Diana Fuss offered not only good professional advice over the years, but also much food for thought on those liminal rides on the NJ Transit. I’m reminded by her example what value there is in remaining curious, and am encouraged to remember the strength there is in asking questions. I started on a mind- bending, dissertation adventure because of Steven Goldsmith at Berkeley—a brief but life- altering chat some time in 1995 did the trick. And I am supremely grateful, as they so well know, to Bruce Holsinger and Elizabeth Robertson for ushering me into the world of medieval ideas. My thanks to other professors and administrators who generously answered questions, read papers, wrote letters, allowed me to sit in on their classes, assiduously approved documents, shared wisdom, and let me bask in their comforts over coffee, vittles, or second- hand smoke: April Alliston, Oliver Arnold, Dan Blanton, Jeremy Braddock, Marina Brownlee, Patricia Dailey, Jeff Dolven, Craig Dworkin, Jane Garrity, Bill Gleason, Pat Guglielmi, Jeremy Green, Daniel Heller-Roazen, Robert Hollander, Kelly Hurley, William Jordan, Sarah Kay, Stacy Klein, John Logan, Karen Mink, Hal Momma, Jeff Nunokawa, Calvin Normore, Sally Poor, Peggy Reilly, Jim Richardson, Marcia Rosh, Don Skemer, Nigel Smith, Susan Stewart, Benj Widiss, and Susan Wolfson. My good friends and colleagues made it so much easier to pass the years of writing with their great intellectual support and wonderful friendship: J. K. Barrett, Roger Bellin, Hall Bjørnstad, Tom Boeve, Sara Brooks, Katherine Brown, John Bugg, James Byrne, Sarah Chartock, Leo Coleman, Josh Derman, Nadia Ellis, Jamie Fumo, Alberto Galindo, Shellie Garceau, Guy Geltner, Erica Gilles, Josh Gold, Asya Graf, Rex Hatfield, Abby Heald, Ingrid Horrocks, Aaron Hostetter, Jennifer Houle, Andrew Hui, Reggie Jackson, Jennifer Jahner, Hannah and Eric Johnson, Ena Jung, David and Lisa Koo, Gina Kwun, Jennifer W. Leung, vi Jenni Lim, Jana Mathews, Dan Moss, Alex Neel, Mary Noble, Juliet O’Brien, Rebecca Rainof, Harold Ramdass, Erwin Rosinberg, Stephen Russell, Surbhi Sharma-Martin, Jacqueline Shin, Nicole Smith, Kimberly Stern, Yael Sternhell, Jamie Taylor, Natasha Tessone, Dave Urban, Stefan Vander Elst, Sonia Velazquez, Keri Walsh, Eric Yellin, and Laura Zawadski. Wherever there was an adventure to be had and an idea to be turned over in its midst, Gerard Passannante has been a most rare and well-loved fellow traveller. In his kinship of imagination, I have found unspeakable enlightenment through many a mishap. Whether under layers of antiquity in a Roman basilica, or on the road somewhere northward, surprisingly the frontiers keep opening out in front of us. Thank you, Charles, for being a source of such deep, childhood comfort, and for being a remarkably capable reader of my work. In so many ways do our divergent paths seem consistently to meet in the same vision of the world. Two notable events in my family’s history will always remain with me as I think about how this dissertation came to a close: the unfortunate passing of our 고모 in the fall of 2008, and the imminent arrival of a niece in the spring. I dedicate this dissertation to my beloved, hard-working parents, Henry and Pearl. vii Table of Contents Abstract iii Acknowledgments v Introduction 1 Part I. THE IDEA OF LOGIC Chapter One The Speculations of Grammar: Term Logic, Etymology, and Grammatical Humanism in the Middle Ages 21 Chapter Two Outside the Syllogism: Problems in Medieval Argumentation 84 Part II. LOGIC AND THE ENCHANTING WORLD Chapter Three Frontier of Non-Sense: Discovery and the Limits of Procession in Wace’s Roman de Rou 160 Chapter Four The Recalcitrance of Enide: Topical Invention and the Macrobian Arts of Description 228 Chapter Five A Game of Predicables: Toward a Semantical Poetics in Yvain 281 Part III. ESCAPING LOGIC Chapter Six Transumptive Space: Old Words Rendered New 351 Chapter Seven The Consequences of Romance: Modal Circles and Chaucerian Style 412 Conclusion The Dimensions of Rhetoric: Literary Form and the Anticipation of Analytic 469 Abbreviations 485 Bibliography 486 1 Introduction “There are many resources in an Aristotelian tradition: when an object escapes knowledge, dialectic remains.” —Paul Vignaux, Philosophy in the Middle Ages “Qu’est-ce donc pour moi, la Sémiologie? C’est une aventure, c’est-à-dire ce qu’il m’advient (ce qui me vient du Signifiant). For me, then, what is Semiology? It is an adventure, that is to say that which befalls me (that which comes upon me from the Signifier). —Roland Barthes, L’aventure semiologique A romance hero in the medieval tradition came into being as the causal distribution of epic-style adventures accumulated toward the merit of his heroic name; but these adventures often brought the hero into contact with a variety of implausible or contradictory happenstances along the way. Relegated to spatial puzzles, struggles against mythical obstacles, and interior dilemmas expressed in hesitation and doubt, these spectacular mishaps propel a narrative forward by pretending, at times, to regress. Scholars such as Tony Hunt, Sarah Kay, and Eugene Vance have demonstrated that this game of incremental progress possesses the character of dialectical thought intimating the crisis of evolving subjects in courtly literature. Through scenarios of opposition and agreement, the synthesis of contrasts forms a complex, dialectical artifact which we call a narrative. Narrative is, thus, a gentle label for something more polemical; for the hypothetical nature of narrative inquiry and its compounding ordered parts are a complex proposition that has been defamiliarized as a proposition at all. Odd as it may seem, then, the history of logic offers a way to rethink medieval romance as a genre. A difficulty that prevents the study of logic from informing the study of romance more directly has to do with the objectives of each as we construe them today. Logic seeks to itemize what can be said to be true; romance is consciously and overwhelmingly fanciful, 2 written, as Chrétien de Troyes himself would profess, by liars.1 Prevailing attempts to think about the genre of romance and its history, in fact, tend to focus on defining the nature of medieval “fictionality.”2 As a result, a strong emphasis tends to fall upon the false imaginings of romance, its capacity for untruth. On the flip side of the fictional, however, are the parameters by which truth could be determined, a preoccupation for Scholastic thinkers throughout the Middle Ages. What calls so deeply to the human senses through the fabrication of experiential fictions, whether in poems or novels, is, in fact, the resonant truthfulness of the literary, a strain of veracity that was itself the preoccupation of medieval romances, too. Where truth and untruth must often give equal and supplementary consent to a common end (i.e., what is or is not “true”), that which emerges between them is troublingly vague. David Oderberg writes, logic is a tool for truth, and since truth is about being, logic must in this sense be metaphysical. But since logic can be applied to fairies and phantoms as much as to bed knobs and broomsticks, we cannot say that logic must be about what is.3 The logic of subjects and predicates (or, term logic) was the prevailing logic of the Middle Ages, and with this brief insight into the fortunes of term logic, Oderberg gestures toward the very difficulty that lay at the heart of medieval language philosophy. This difficulty involved the ancient relationship that metaphysics shared with language itself that wondered whether the analysis of language (of its syntactic and semantic units) could also reliably reflect back to premodern thinkers a knowledge of the cosmos. Could language—the marker of man’s uniqueness, his rationality—lead toward a knowledge of the next dimension of being? While 1 At the end of Yvain, ou le chevalier au lion, Chrétien inadvertently implicates himself in the proliferation of romances which he attributes to liars. 2 For instance, D. H. Green, The Beginnings of Medieval Romance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002; and Païvi Mehtonen, Old Concepts and New Poetics: Historia, Argumentum and Fabula in the Twelfth- and Early Thirteenth-Century Latin Poetics of Fiction. Helsinki, Finland: Societas Scientiarum Fennica, 1996. 3 David Oderberg, “Predicate Logic and Bare Particulars,” in The Old New Logic:Essays on the Philosophy of Fred Sommers, ed. David S. Oderberg, (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005) 183.

Description:
Courtly literature is a surprising index of language’s changing theorization during an important period for developments in Western logic. This dissertation characterizes the changing functions of rhetoric and poesy vis-à-vis the arc of dialectic’s fortunes between the twelfth and fourteenth c
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.