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El. knyga: Medieval Gift and the Classical Tradition: Ideals and the Performance of Generosity in Medieval England, 1100-1300

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"Introduction: Since the 1960s historians studying gift giving have significantly deepened and nuanced our understanding of social, political and religious relations in medieval Europe. From the outset, historians have tended to see gift giving in terms of 'folk models.' In this they have been following in the footsteps of the social anthropologists from whom we have inherited the analytical apparatus of 'gift giving.' The founding father of gift-studies, Marcel Mauss, in his Essai sur le don, presented reciprocal gift exchange as a characteristic feature of archaic societies, found in its clearest form in 'primitive' cultures like that of ancient Germania. Pioneers in the field of medieval gift giving, such as Aaron Gurevich and George Duby, inherited the assumption that gift exchange and the rules of reciprocity that governed it were part of the cultural heritage passed down from the medieval elite's Germanic ancestors. More recently, as we shall see below, historians have been more cautious about explaining medieval gift giving through its supposed archaic roots. The assumption that gift exchange was based on folk traditions of reciprocity deployed in a difficult encounter with Biblical injunctions to charity, has, however, remained widely influential. In this book I suggest that this analytical tradition has led us to overlook or underestimate the influence exercised on medieval gift giving by a very different tradition: classical literature and philosophy"--

Daugiau informacijos

Explores how classical ideals of generosity influenced the writing and practice of gift giving in medieval Europe.
Acknowledgements vi
List of Abbreviations
viii
1 Introduction
1(13)
2 The Gift in Classical Literature
14(28)
3 De Beneficus in Medieval Contexts
42(24)
4 Writing Generosity
66(32)
5 Sanctifying Generosity
98(23)
6 Romancing Generosity
121(39)
7 Performing Generosity
160(24)
Conclusion 184(4)
Bibliography 188(29)
Index 217
Lars Kjęr is Senior Lecturer in Medieval History at the New College of the Humanities. His previous publications include, as co-editor, a special volume of the Journal of Medieval History entitled 'Feasts and Gifts of Food in Medieval Europe: Ritualised Constructions of Hierarchy, Identity and Community' (2011).