Acknowledgements
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ix
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A Note on Sources and Languages
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x
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|
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1.
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Love and Authority: Love Poetry and its Critics
|
1
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I.
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The Poetry of Love
|
1
|
|
II.
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Love’s Nemesis: Demands for Obedience
|
3
|
|
III.
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Love’s Critics: The Hermeneutics of Suspicion and the Authoritarian Approach to Criticism
|
10
|
|
IV.
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The Critics: Poetry Is About Poetry
|
23
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V.
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The Critics: The Author Is Dead (or Merely Irrelevant)
|
29
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|
|
2.
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Channeled, Reformulated, and Controlled: Love Poetry from the Song of Songs to Aeneas and Dido
|
37
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I.
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Love Poetry and the Critics who Allegorize: The Song of Songs
|
37
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II.
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Love Poetry and the Critics who Reduce: Ovid’s Amores and Ars Amatoria
|
57
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III.
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Love or Obedience in Virgil: Aeneas and Dido
|
77
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IV.
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Love or Obedience in Ovid: Aeneas, Dido, and the Critics who Dismiss
|
89
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3.
|
Love and its Absences in Late Latin and Greek Poetry
|
97
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|
I.
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Love in the Poetry of Late Antiquity: Latin
|
97
|
|
II.
|
Love in the Poetry of Late Antiquity: Greek
|
113
|
|
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4.
|
The Troubadours and Fin’amor: Love, Choice, and the Individual
|
121
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|
I.
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Why “Courtly Love” Is Not Love
|
121
|
|
II.
|
The Troubadours and Their Critics
|
136
|
|
III.
|
The Troubadours and Love
|
165
|
|
|
5.
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Fin’amor Castrated: Abelard, Heloise, and the Critics who Deny
|
195
|
|
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6.
|
The Albigensian Crusade and the Death of Fin’amor in Medieval French and English Poetry
|
215
|
|
I.
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The Death of Fin’amor: The Albigensian Crusade and its Aftermath
|
215
|
|
II.
|
Post-Fin’amor French Poetry: The Roman de la Rose
|
238
|
|
III.
|
Post-Fin’amor English Romance: Love of God and Country in Havelok the Dane and King Horn
|
275
|
|
IV.
|
Post-Fin’amor English Poetry: Mocking “Courtly Love” in Chaucer—the Knight and the Miller
|
280
|
|
V.
|
Post-Fin’amor English Poetry: Mocking “Auctoritee” in Chaucer—the Wife of Bath
|
286
|
|
|
7.
|
The Ladder of Love in Italian Poetry and Prose, and the Reactions of the Sixteenth-Century Sonneteers
|
295
|
|
I.
|
The Platonic Ladder of Love
|
295
|
|
II.
|
Post-Fin’amor Italian Poetry: The Sicilian School to Dante and Petrarch
|
300
|
|
III.
|
Post-Fin’amor Italian Prose: Il Libro del Cortegiano (The Book of the Courtier)
|
330
|
|
IV.
|
The Sixteenth-Century: Post-Fin’amor Transitions in Petrarchan-Influenced Poetry
|
336
|
|
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8.
|
Shakespeare: The Return of Fin’amor
|
353
|
|
I.
|
The Value of the Individual in the Sonnets
|
353
|
|
II.
|
Shakespeare’s Plays: Children as Property
|
367
|
|
III.
|
Love as Resistance: Silvia and Hermia
|
378
|
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IV.
|
Love as Resistance: Juliet and the Critics who Disdain
|
393
|
|
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9.
|
Love and its Costs in Seventeenth-Century Literature
|
421
|
|
I.
|
Carpe Diem in Life and Marriage: John Donne and the Critics who Distance
|
422
|
|
II.
|
The Lyricist of Carpe Diem: Robert Herrick and the Critics who Distort
|
445
|
|
|
|
10.
|
Paradise Lost: Love in Eden, and the Critics who Obey
|
467
|
|
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Epilogue. Belonging to Poetry: A Reparative Reading
|
501
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Bibliography
|
513
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Index
|
553
|