Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book
Author Correll, Barbara, author

Title The End of Conduct : "Grobianus" and the Renaissance Text of the Subject / Barbara Correll
Published Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press, [2019]
©1996

Copies

Description 1 online resource (232 pages)
Contents Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- Author's Note: Texts, Translations, translatio -- Introduction: Indecent Ironies and the End of Conduct -- 1. Reading Grobianus: The Crisis of the Body in the Sixteenth Century -- 2. Malleable Material, Models of Power: Woman in Erasmus's 'Marriage Group" and Good Manners in Boys -- 3. Reading Grobianus; The Subject at Work in the "laborinth" of Simplicity -- 4. Grobiana in Grobianus; The Sexual Politics of Civility -- 5. Scheidt's Grobianus; Revolting Bodies, Vernacular Discipline, National Character -- 6. Gulls from Grobians: Dekkers Guls Home-booke and the Circulation of the Body in Renaissance England -- Notes -- Index
Summary Grobianus et Grobiana, a little-known but key Renaissance text, is the starting point for this examination of indecency, conduct, and subject formation in the early modern period. First published in 1549, Friedrich Dedekind's ironic poem recommends the most disgusting behavior-indecency-as a means of instilling decency. The poem, Barbara Correll maintains, not only supplements prior conduct literature but offers a reading of it as well; her analysis of the Grobianus texts (the neo-Latin original, the German vernacular adaptation, the 1605 English translation, and Thomas Dekker's Guls Horne-booke) also provides a historical account of conduct during the shift from a medieval to a Renaissance sensibility. According to Correll, the effect of Dedekind's text is to establish normative masculine identity through the labor of aversion. The gross, material body must be subjugated and reconstituted in order to attain its status as the bearer of civil manhood. Correll shows how the virtual subject of civil conduct emerges in dominant yet necessarily beleaguered relation to colonized Others, whether in feminine, animal, or peasant guise. Referring to Renaissance courtesy literature from Castiglione to Erasmus, she identifies this double drama of early modern subject formation as central to conduct books as well as to their grobian extensions. Her work places Grobianus in the civilizing process that marked emerging bourgeois society in early modern Europe
Notes In English
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on January 29, 2020)
Subject Dedekind, Friedrich, -1598. Grobianus et Grobiana.
Erasmus, Desiderius, -1536 -- Knowledge -- Education
Dekker, Thomas, approximately 1572-1632. Guls horne-booke
Dedekind, Friedrich, -1598 -- Influence
Scheidt, Caspar, -1565.
SUBJECT Dedekind, Friedrich, -1598 fast
Erasmus, Desiderius, -1536 fast
Scheidt, Caspar, -1565 fast
Grobianus et Grobiana (Dedekind, Friedrich) fast
Subject Didactic poetry, Latin (Medieval and modern) -- History and criticism
Conduct of life in literature.
Human body in literature.
Courtesy in literature.
Renaissance.
Humanists -- Europe
Renaissance.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Medieval.
Conduct of life in literature
Courtesy in literature
Didactic poetry, Latin (Medieval and modern)
Education
Human body in literature
Humanists
Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.)
Renaissance
Europe
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781501733857
1501733850