Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Map of Occitania and neighbouring Catalonia
- Introduction
- 1 Courtly culture in medieval Occitania
- 2 Fin'amor and the development of the courtly canso
- 3 Moral and satirical poetry
- 4 The early troubadours: Guilhem IX to Bernart de Ventadorn
- 5 The classical period: from Raimbaut d'Aurenga to Arnaut Daniel
- 6 The later troubadours
- 7 The trobairitz
- 8 Italian and Catalan troubadours
- 9 Music and versification
- 10 Rhetoric and hermeneutics
- 11 Intertextuality and dialogism in the troubadours
- 12 The troubadours at play: irony, parody and burlesque
- 13 Desire and subjectivity
- 14 Orality and writing: the text of the troubadour poem
- 15 The chansonniers as books
- 16 Troubadour lyric and Old French narrative
- Appendix 1 Major troubadours
- Appendix 2 Occitan terms
- Appendix 3 Research tools and reference works
- Appendix 4 The chansonniers
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Rhetoric and hermeneutics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Map of Occitania and neighbouring Catalonia
- Introduction
- 1 Courtly culture in medieval Occitania
- 2 Fin'amor and the development of the courtly canso
- 3 Moral and satirical poetry
- 4 The early troubadours: Guilhem IX to Bernart de Ventadorn
- 5 The classical period: from Raimbaut d'Aurenga to Arnaut Daniel
- 6 The later troubadours
- 7 The trobairitz
- 8 Italian and Catalan troubadours
- 9 Music and versification
- 10 Rhetoric and hermeneutics
- 11 Intertextuality and dialogism in the troubadours
- 12 The troubadours at play: irony, parody and burlesque
- 13 Desire and subjectivity
- 14 Orality and writing: the text of the troubadour poem
- 15 The chansonniers as books
- 16 Troubadour lyric and Old French narrative
- Appendix 1 Major troubadours
- Appendix 2 Occitan terms
- Appendix 3 Research tools and reference works
- Appendix 4 The chansonniers
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Ever since Dante singled out the troubadours for their ‘vernacular eloquence’ the rhetorical artistry of these poets has been, on and off, in the spotlight. It has, in fact, become such a commonplace to speak of the rhetoric of troubadour poetry that a more compelling question is often overlooked, namely, why did the troubadours make their rhetoric evident at all? Why do so many of the poets draw attention to the fact that they are making poetry; why do many of them refer in explicitly technical ways to their ‘razos’ or the ‘art d'escriure’? These poetic works are not, or at least not primarily, didactic tracts where one might expect to find overt mention or explicit use of rhetorical techniques and strategies. Rather, the poems of the troubadours contain some of the most beautiful and lyrical verse of all time. Why, then, ‘spoil it’ with the metalanguage of rhetoric?
Linda Paterson and, more recently, Nathaniel Smith have each addressed the question of troubadour rhetoric. In Troubadours and Eloquence, Paterson sets out to discuss the nature of the eloquentia of five troubadours who made explicit mention of style in their poetry. Her project is to consider the literary terminology used by the poets themselves and to relate this terminology to their ‘methods of composition’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The TroubadoursAn Introduction, pp. 164 - 180Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999