Book contents
- Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle Ages
- Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle Ages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and Conventions
- The Career and Contributions of Alastair Minnis
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Access through Accessus
- Chapter 2 Scholastic Theory and Vernacular Knowledge
- Chapter 3 Poetics and Biblical Hermeneutics in the Thirteenth Century
- Chapter 4 Robert Holcot and De vetula
- Chapter 5 The Inspired Commentator
- Chapter 6 Guitar Lessons at Blackfriars
- Chapter 7 The Re-cognition of Doctrinal Discourse and Scholastic Literary Theory
- Chapter 8 Arts of Love and Justice
- Chapter 9 The Many Sides of Personification
- Chapter 10 Encountering Vision
- Chapter 11 George Colvile’s Translation of the Consolation of Philosophy
- Chapter 12 When Did the Emotions Become Political?
- Bibliography of the Works of Alastair Minnis
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 8 - Arts of Love and Justice
Property, Women and Golden Age Politics in Le Roman de la Rose
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 April 2023
- Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle Ages
- Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle Ages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and Conventions
- The Career and Contributions of Alastair Minnis
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Access through Accessus
- Chapter 2 Scholastic Theory and Vernacular Knowledge
- Chapter 3 Poetics and Biblical Hermeneutics in the Thirteenth Century
- Chapter 4 Robert Holcot and De vetula
- Chapter 5 The Inspired Commentator
- Chapter 6 Guitar Lessons at Blackfriars
- Chapter 7 The Re-cognition of Doctrinal Discourse and Scholastic Literary Theory
- Chapter 8 Arts of Love and Justice
- Chapter 9 The Many Sides of Personification
- Chapter 10 Encountering Vision
- Chapter 11 George Colvile’s Translation of the Consolation of Philosophy
- Chapter 12 When Did the Emotions Become Political?
- Bibliography of the Works of Alastair Minnis
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This essay reads the Roman de la Rose as taking up Ovid’s playful association of sex with the origins of human society. Jean de Meun’s Rose returns repeatedly to the narration of political origins – the fall from a Golden Age – imagining an idyllic communal past before it was shattered by conflict over wealth and women. These stories frame erotic desire as inevitably linked to the law and to possession, associating eros with desire for private property. I argue that Aristotle’s Politics functions as an unacknowledged literal referent that troubles the poem’s allegorical treatment of justice and social origins. Whereas Golden Age fables typically speak in unmarked terms about human comity and common possessions, Aristotle and medieval Aristotelian commentaries speak in terms of gendered power dynamics, masculine ownership and the fate of women as property. The Rose reveals the literal truths of scholastic philosophy to be in conflict with mythic truth, while anatomising the necessarily gendered dynamics of human sociality. In a political sphere in which women are considered in the same category as property, the heterosexual desire for possession will always be political. The Rose also leads us to consider whether the political, in turn, is always erotic.
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- Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle AgesInterpretation, Invention, Imagination, pp. 159 - 179Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023