
Contents
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ENCOMIUM TO AMBIVALENCE: EARLY CRITICAL ASSESSMENTS ENCOMIUM TO AMBIVALENCE: EARLY CRITICAL ASSESSMENTS
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NINETEENTH-CENTURY ACADEMIC REVIVAL: THE IMPACT OF EMIL KOEPPEL NINETEENTH-CENTURY ACADEMIC REVIVAL: THE IMPACT OF EMIL KOEPPEL
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THE TWENTIETH CENTURY THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
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REHABILITATION REHABILITATION
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter offers an overview of the critical reception of Lydgate's work, tracing the decline from a tradition of medieval encomium (voiced by, among others, William Dunbar and William Caxton), which praised Lydgate's aureate style and moralistic content and placed him alongside Geoffrey Chaucer and John Gower in an English poetic triumvirate, to a mid-Tudor ambivalence, much influenced by the Reformation. Later 19th-century traditions of positivistic German scholarship saw a resurgence in interest in Lydgate: attention is paid to the findings of Emil Koeppel's 1885 Munich thesis on the Fall, and to German and French studies that followed, especially that of Friedrich Brie (1929). Although there has more recently been a critical rehabilitation of Lydgate, kick-started in 1987 by David Lawton, attention has focused more on works such as Troy Book and Siege of Thebes than on the Fall.
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