dc.contributor.author | Amodio, Mark C. | eng |
dc.date.issued | 2000-10 | eng |
dc.description | Of the many periods into which scholars habitually divide English literary and social history, the post-Conquest period surely ranks as one of the most interesting and most complex. The tumultuous years 1066-1250 witness not only the rise of most of those political and social institutions upon which England's unique national identity rests,1 but it is also the period in which literacy and its concomitant practices and habits of mind move beyond the walls of the monastic and scholastic cells where they had long been sheltered and begin to become more widely available, and increasingly necessary, to people situated at all levels of the social hierarchy.2 | eng |
dc.description | Note | eng |
dc.format.extent | 24 pages | eng |
dc.identifier.citation | Oral Tradition, 15/2 (2000): 191-214. | eng |
dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10355/64816 | |
dc.language | English | eng |
dc.rights | OpenAccess. | eng |
dc.rights.license | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License. | |
dc.title | Tradition, performance, and poetics in the Early Middle English period | eng |
dc.type | Article | eng |