Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England by Jordan Kirk (review)

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES COMITATUS-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1353/cjm.2023.a912696
Kashaf Qureshi
{"title":"Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England by Jordan Kirk (review)","authors":"Kashaf Qureshi","doi":"10.1353/cjm.2023.a912696","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Reviewed by: Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England by Jordan Kirk Kashaf Qureshi Jordan Kirk, Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England (New York: Fordham University Press, 2021), 187 pp. While the term “signification” lends itself to oversaturation in literary studies, it poses a unique problematic in the study of medieval literature, where critics too often treat texts as puzzles meant to be secured into predetermined, discernable fixtures. Jordan Kirk reminds us to remain open to the idea that the interpretive purchase of medieval texts is, in fact, their inchoateness, engaged in the play of not making meaning, or nonsense. Bringing together the grammatical arts of the Middle Ages, the discipline of medieval logic, and fourteenth-century contemplative literature, Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England reorients us toward the ubiquity of nonsignification in medieval thought. Through the book’s structural organization, Kirk draws the mind’s ear into the world of nonsignification, each chapter divided by short subtitles such as “Bu, Ba, Buf,” emblematizing a verbal crux at the heart of each section. Kirk’s designs are intentional, and he describes the four main chapters of the book as a sequence of commentaries operating as “a set of mind engines” that “allow for awareness to encounter itself in the mirror of the past” (21). Because of this methodological commitment, some of the book’s innovations are understated. For instance, Kirk’s archive may seem odd at first—the first two chapters are an exhaustive linguistic history whereas the second two chapters each analyze a single work of experimental literature, respectively The Cloud of Unknowing and St. Erkenwald. However, these archival choices produce a cogent literary history that encompassed what I considered to be one of Kirk’s most compelling and salient [End Page 245] contributions: a call for the renovation of the category of the literary itself. For Kirk, the literary is a hermeneutic mode rooted in the emptiness of words, a topic most explicitly explored in the book’s introductory prolegomena. In the prolegomena, Kirk asks readers to think of Medieval Nonsense as an “archeology of the literary” (24), where literature encompasses any text that is “engineered in such a manner as to arrest the faculty of interpretation and force it to focus on the nonsignificative event of language itself” (25). In the treasury of these first twenty-six pages, where Kirk constellates nonsignification in Chaucer’s House of Fame, modernist literature and theory, and Anslem of Canterbury’s ontological proof of God, readers will discover what might be shared between medieval texts and avant-garde poetics, opening an exciting avenue for transhistorical literary theorization. This book will largely appeal to medievalists working in the fields of linguistics, philosophy, religion, and literary studies; but its introduction should be thought-provoking to any scholars interested in the longue durée of semiotics and theories of literature. Kirk’s audience will find that his writing reflects the productively irresolute forms of his objects of inquiry: just as you’ve come to a point of understanding, the author’s subsequent step is to deconstruct that very point of arrival, unveiling how these theories of meaning-making contain the ignition for their own counter-theories. Kirk’s task in the first two chapters is to introduce readers to differing treatments of vox between the disciplines of grammar and logic: medieval grammarians often utilized nonsignifying words whereas logicians typically rejected non-signification from their project, whether that meant foreclosing their work from a study of nonsense or dismantling the possibility of meaningless language altogether. Beginning at the antique auctoritates, the first chapter is an itinerary through the philosophies and textbooks of language arts that would be transmitted to the later medieval schoolroom. Analyzing Priscian’s Institutiones gram-maticae, Boethius’s seminal commentary on Aristotle’s De interpretatione, and Augustine’s semiotics, Kirk evinces a struggle over the idea that meaninglessness is an inextricable property and possibility of vox. Whereas Priscian and Boethius allow for classifications of vox where certain utterances, like syllables, may not signify anything, Augustine subsumes all sounds, words, and things into a sign system where they are always meaningful. Such debates constituted the experience of the...","PeriodicalId":53903,"journal":{"name":"COMITATUS-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"COMITATUS-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cjm.2023.a912696","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Reviewed by: Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England by Jordan Kirk Kashaf Qureshi Jordan Kirk, Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England (New York: Fordham University Press, 2021), 187 pp. While the term “signification” lends itself to oversaturation in literary studies, it poses a unique problematic in the study of medieval literature, where critics too often treat texts as puzzles meant to be secured into predetermined, discernable fixtures. Jordan Kirk reminds us to remain open to the idea that the interpretive purchase of medieval texts is, in fact, their inchoateness, engaged in the play of not making meaning, or nonsense. Bringing together the grammatical arts of the Middle Ages, the discipline of medieval logic, and fourteenth-century contemplative literature, Medieval Nonsense: Signifying Nothing in Fourteenth-Century England reorients us toward the ubiquity of nonsignification in medieval thought. Through the book’s structural organization, Kirk draws the mind’s ear into the world of nonsignification, each chapter divided by short subtitles such as “Bu, Ba, Buf,” emblematizing a verbal crux at the heart of each section. Kirk’s designs are intentional, and he describes the four main chapters of the book as a sequence of commentaries operating as “a set of mind engines” that “allow for awareness to encounter itself in the mirror of the past” (21). Because of this methodological commitment, some of the book’s innovations are understated. For instance, Kirk’s archive may seem odd at first—the first two chapters are an exhaustive linguistic history whereas the second two chapters each analyze a single work of experimental literature, respectively The Cloud of Unknowing and St. Erkenwald. However, these archival choices produce a cogent literary history that encompassed what I considered to be one of Kirk’s most compelling and salient [End Page 245] contributions: a call for the renovation of the category of the literary itself. For Kirk, the literary is a hermeneutic mode rooted in the emptiness of words, a topic most explicitly explored in the book’s introductory prolegomena. In the prolegomena, Kirk asks readers to think of Medieval Nonsense as an “archeology of the literary” (24), where literature encompasses any text that is “engineered in such a manner as to arrest the faculty of interpretation and force it to focus on the nonsignificative event of language itself” (25). In the treasury of these first twenty-six pages, where Kirk constellates nonsignification in Chaucer’s House of Fame, modernist literature and theory, and Anslem of Canterbury’s ontological proof of God, readers will discover what might be shared between medieval texts and avant-garde poetics, opening an exciting avenue for transhistorical literary theorization. This book will largely appeal to medievalists working in the fields of linguistics, philosophy, religion, and literary studies; but its introduction should be thought-provoking to any scholars interested in the longue durée of semiotics and theories of literature. Kirk’s audience will find that his writing reflects the productively irresolute forms of his objects of inquiry: just as you’ve come to a point of understanding, the author’s subsequent step is to deconstruct that very point of arrival, unveiling how these theories of meaning-making contain the ignition for their own counter-theories. Kirk’s task in the first two chapters is to introduce readers to differing treatments of vox between the disciplines of grammar and logic: medieval grammarians often utilized nonsignifying words whereas logicians typically rejected non-signification from their project, whether that meant foreclosing their work from a study of nonsense or dismantling the possibility of meaningless language altogether. Beginning at the antique auctoritates, the first chapter is an itinerary through the philosophies and textbooks of language arts that would be transmitted to the later medieval schoolroom. Analyzing Priscian’s Institutiones gram-maticae, Boethius’s seminal commentary on Aristotle’s De interpretatione, and Augustine’s semiotics, Kirk evinces a struggle over the idea that meaninglessness is an inextricable property and possibility of vox. Whereas Priscian and Boethius allow for classifications of vox where certain utterances, like syllables, may not signify anything, Augustine subsumes all sounds, words, and things into a sign system where they are always meaningful. Such debates constituted the experience of the...
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
《中世纪的废话:14世纪英格兰的无意义》,作者:乔丹·柯克(书评)
书评:《中世纪的废话:在14世纪的英格兰毫无意义》,作者:Jordan Kirk,《中世纪的废话:在14世纪的英格兰毫无意义》,纽约:福特汉姆大学出版社,2021),187页。虽然“意义”一词在文学研究中过于饱和,但它在中世纪文学研究中提出了一个独特的问题,批评家们经常把文本当作谜题,意味着要固定在预定的、可识别的固定装置中。乔丹·柯克提醒我们要保持开放的心态,对中世纪文本的解释性购买,实际上是它们的不成熟,参与了没有意义或胡说八道的游戏。汇集了中世纪的语法艺术、中世纪的逻辑学科和14世纪的沉思文学,《中世纪的废话:14世纪英格兰的无意义》将我们重新导向中世纪思想中无处不在的无意义。通过这本书的结构组织,柯克把读者的耳朵拉进了一个毫无意义的世界,每一章都有简短的字幕,比如“不,不,但是”,象征着每一节核心的语言问题。柯克的设计是有意为之,他将书中的四个主要章节描述为一系列的评论,就像“一套思维引擎”,“允许意识在过去的镜子中遇到自己”(21)。由于这种方法论上的承诺,本书的一些创新被低估了。例如,柯克的档案乍一看可能很奇怪——前两章是详尽的语言学史,而后两章分别分析了一部实验文学作品,分别是《未知之云》和《圣埃尔肯瓦尔德》。然而,这些档案选择产生了令人信服的文学史,其中包含了我认为柯克最引人注目和最突出的贡献之一:呼吁对文学本身的分类进行革新。对柯克来说,文学是一种根植于文字空虚的解释学模式,这一主题在本书的引言部分得到了最明确的探讨。在《绪论》中,柯克要求读者把中世纪的胡言乱语想象成“文学的考古学”(24),在这里,文学包含了任何“以这种方式设计的文本,以阻止解释的能力,迫使它专注于语言本身的无意义事件”(25)。在前二十六页的宝库中,柯克列举了乔叟的《名人堂》中的无意义,现代主义文学和理论,以及坎特伯雷的安斯勒姆的上帝本体论证明,读者将发现中世纪文本和前卫诗学之间可能有什么共同之处,为超历史文学理论化开辟了一条令人兴奋的道路。这本书将在很大程度上吸引在语言学、哲学、宗教和文学研究领域工作的中世纪学者;但它的介绍应该是发人深省的学者感兴趣的长期研究符号学和文学理论。柯克的读者会发现,他的作品反映了他的研究对象的富有成效的优柔寡断的形式:当你到达一个理解点时,作者的下一步是解构那个到达点,揭示这些意义制造的理论是如何包含他们自己的反理论的火种的。柯克在前两章的任务是向读者介绍语法和逻辑学科之间对vox的不同处理:中世纪的语法学家经常使用无意义的词,而逻辑学家通常在他们的项目中拒绝无意义,这是否意味着他们的工作不受无意义研究的影响,或者完全拆除无意义语言的可能性。从古代权威开始,第一章是通过哲学和语言艺术教科书的旅程,这些将被传播到中世纪后期的教室。柯克分析了普里西安的《语法制度》,波伊提乌对亚里士多德的《解释》的开创性评论,以及奥古斯丁的符号学,证明了无意义是声音不可分割的属性和可能性这一观点的斗争。尽管普里西安和波伊提乌允许对声音进行分类,其中某些话语,如音节,可能没有任何意义,但奥古斯丁将所有声音,单词和事物纳入一个符号系统,其中它们总是有意义的。这样的辩论构成了……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies publishes articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies. The journal maintains a tradition of gathering work from across disciplines, with a special interest in articles that have an interdisciplinary or cross-cultural scope.
期刊最新文献
Women’s Lives: Self-Representation, Reception and Appropriation in the Middle Ages ed. by Daniel Armenti and Nahir I. Otaño Gracia (review) The Complete History of the Black Death by Ole J. Benedictow (review) Art and Curiosity Cabinets of the Late Renaissance: A Contribution to the History of Collecting by Julius von Schlosser, and: Kunstkammer: Early Modern Art and Curiosity Cabinets in the Holy Roman Empire by Jeffrey Chipps Smith (review) Bishop Æthelwold, His Followers, and Saints’ Cults in Early Medieval England: Power, Belief, and Religious Reform by Alison Hudson (review) Writing Old Age and Impairment in Late Medieval England by Will Rogers (review)
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1