Performing the Middle Ages from ‘Beowulf’ to
‘Othello’ traces the dialogic nature of the
relationship between the Middle Ages and modernity. Arguing that
modern beliefs in the alterity of the Middle Ages stem from the
Middle Ages’ own processes of self-representation, Johnston
explores varieties of nostalgia through a wide selection of texts.
This volume spans an extensive chronological period with a view to
demonstrating how our notions of the medieval have been crucially
informed by the past itself. The study is focused on works which
stage that popular literary archetype — the nostalgic figure
of the aristocratic warrior — and argues that it is this
image that provides a structural model for so many modern
perspectives on the Middle Ages. And yet, in the Middle Ages this
model was being deconstructed as it was also being generated. By
moving from the self-consciously archaic heroism of
Beowulf to the scathing comment on chivalric narrative
presented in Chaucer’s ‘Knight’s Tale’,
Johnston’s analysis offers an intriguing insight into the way
medieval texts engage in a continual aesthetic and ideological
critique of their own cultural moment. Using Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight and the Alliterative Morte
Arthure as examples of an incisive critique of the cult of
subjectivity and of a highly self-conscious desire for tradition,
Johnston extends his analysis to the early seventeenth century, and
explores the ways in which Shakespeare’s Othello
brilliantly deconstructs the very concept of ‘Renaissance
Man’. With its interest in issues of subjectivity, textual
performance, and the ideological self-awareness of medieval
culture, Performing the Middle Ages provides a scholarly
and compelling investigation into the Middle Ages’ ability
both to understand itself and to shape (post)modern notions of the
medieval.
"[...] there is more than enough in it to fascinate specialists in the texts and authors that Johnston traverses, as well as the wider community of scholars who continue to be troubled by the patronizing subordination of the early to the late." (Ellen MacKay, in The Medieval Review, 4 December 2009)
"A sophisticated and highly suggestive piece of work, which offers a formidable counterpoint to a whole range of hoary generalizations." (B. Parsons, in:Medium Aevum LXXIX, 2010, p. 133-134)
"Johnston's diligent and thorough book tries to challenge and modify all those ideological assumptions that seek to establish our understanding of modernity ex negativo [...]." (Christoph Houswitschka, in Anglia. Zeitschrift für englische Philologie128/3, April 2011)