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D. W. Robertson Jr.

Durant Waite Robertson Jr. (Washington, D.C. October 11, 1914 – Chapel Hill, North Carolina, July 26, 1992) was a scholar of medieval English literature and especially Geoffrey Chaucer. He taught at Princeton University from 1946 until his retirement in 1980 as the Murray Professor of English, and was "widely regarded as this [the twentieth] century's most influential Chaucer scholar".[1]

Early life and education edit

External image
  Photo of D. W. Robertson Jr. from Princeton Alumni Weekly October 21 1998

Robertson studied at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he received his Ph.D. degree in 1944. His dissertation on the work of Robert Mannyng, A Study of Certain Aspects of the Cultural Tradition of Handlyng Synne, was written under the direction of G. R. Coffman and Urban Tigner Holmes Jr. Subsequently he revised and published three important articles from it.[2][3][4]

Robertson taught briefly at the University of Maryland before joining the faculty at Princeton in 1946, where he remained for the rest of his career.[1]

Scholarly career edit

Robertson's deeply historical approach to medieval English literature challenged and even angered many of the leading medievalists of the mid-20th century. Opposition to Robertson's critical approach at length took the form of a scholarly debate at the meeting of the English Institute of 1958–59. The book of papers published from that event proved that Robertson's "exegetical criticism", sometimes simply called "Robertsonianism", had many learned supporters as well as opponents.[5]

Robertson's magnum opus was published in 1962 by Princeton University Press: A Preface to Chaucer. Studies in Medieval Perspectives, a massive work of 500 pages of text and 118 illustrations from medieval monastic manuscripts and religious sculpture and art. Critics were impressed by the extent of Robertson's reading in and grasp of primary sources, mainly in Latin and French, and secondary literature in every major European language as far back as the 19th century. Lynn Staley, Harrington and Shirley Drake Professor of the Humanities and Medieval & Renaissance Studies at Colgate University and one of Robertson's students, described it thus:

"His major study, A Preface to Chaucer (1962), challenged medieval studies when its tenets were increasingly influenced by the New Criticism; he insisted on the priority of primary texts in interpreting the hierarchical, Augustinian culture of the Middle Ages."[6]

It was also intimidating to medievalists of his generation, most of whom had never seen any need to study the range of primary sources, particularly religious writings in Latin, which Robertson had mastered. As late as 1965, medievalist and folklore scholar Francis Lee Utley called it "a strange hodgepodge...insulting to the community of scholars and, indeed, to the Twentieth Century itself".[7]

Scholarly supporters of Robertson's critical school gathered in March 1967 at the first annual conference of the Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies at State University of New York at Binghamton, an event often referred to among medievalists as "the Courtly Love conference". The volume of papers from this conference, published the following year,[8] has retained its importance as a watershed in the spread of a new paradigm of the concept of medieval courtly love.[9]

Teaching at Princeton edit

Robertson was a popular and engaging lecturer, and his seminars were usually full. Professor Staley has summarized his approach as follows:

"His gift for impersonation gave life to the dead: he could stage a conversation between John of Gaunt and John Wyclif as though he had been a fly on the wall, or recount Ovid's tales in a Carolina accent and with down-home details that made them as meaningful as they are slyly ironic. He insisted on the ways in which humor was fundamental to meaning. He shared his ongoing work with us, his moments of revelation, his tremendous interest in literature and cultural history. He insisted that we find proof for what we said in class or wrote in papers. He made it possible for me to learn in ways many professors might not have by giving me the freedom to chase my ideas through Firestone Library...He read the work we turned in quickly and willingly; he praised and criticized. The key to his approach was patience: he would not hound a student to finish chapters or to meet deadlines; you had to be self-directed, but Robbie met you more than halfway, and was quick to promote work he saw as significant."[6]

Among Robertson's most important scholarly legacies is the number of his students among the prominent medievalists of succeeding generations. These include Robert P. Miller, Paul Olson, Chauncey Wood, John V. Fleming, Alan T. Gaylord, David Lyle Jeffrey, Marc Pelen, and Lynn Staley.

Robertson retired from Princeton at the age of 65 in 1980. In his honor, Princeton University Press published Essays in Medieval Culture (1980), a collection of 24 of his essays. Among them are some of Robertson's bold attempts to extend the application of "Robertsonianism" beyond the confines of the Middle Ages: to Renaissance art (Leonardo), sixteenth-century literature (Sidney, Shakespeare's Hamlet), and beyond (Alexander Pope).

Family edit

Robertson married Betty McLean Hansen in 1937. They had one daughter, Susanna Howley, and two sons, Durant Waite Robertson III and Douglas Robertson.

Retirement edit

Robertson's research in retirement took him in the direction of the social historical context of literature, an interest he had occasionally expressed earlier. He did it so well that scholar Peter G. Beidler included one of Robertson's later essays, "Simple Signs from Everyday Life in Chaucer" (1981) in a bibliography of Marxist approaches to Chaucer.[10] Robertson would be shocked, but also no doubt amused, at this gesture.

Death edit

Suffering from declining health, Robertson entered a retirement home near his home in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where he died in 1992.

Influence edit

Alan T. Gaylord, Dartmouth College:

"Robertson's A Preface to Chaucer: Studies in Medieval Perspectives ... was and is, quite simply, the most important book on Chaucer in the twentieth century."[11]

Lee Patterson, Yale University:

"...Exegetics remains, apparently against all odds, the great unfinished business of Medieval Studies."[12]

Steven Justice, University of California, Berkeley:

"Robertson shows something important. I have been suggesting that the last generation of medieval literary study could not trenchantly criticize Robertson's intellectual vices—and the habit of creating a kind of period subjectivity for the Middle Ages was the direst of these—because it practiced similar vices in different tones of voice. Of course, no one "stole" Robertson; it is just that anyone was apt to be embarrassed by thinking closely about him. But in this last inconsistency of his we can see one of his virtues and one of the reasons younger scholars, rediscovering him, have found a wealth of suggestiveness in his work (at least this is my impression) that their elders did not. His reading of Augustine here displays a counterenergy, a willingness to be surprised by the past."[13]
  • 1961. Ronald Salmon Crane. "On Hypotheses in 'Historical Criticism": Apropos of Certain Contemporary Medievalists." The Idea of the Humanities and Other Essays Critical and Historical. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968: v.2, 236-260.
  • 1965. Francis Lee Utley. Robertsonianism Redivivus. Romance Philology 19. 250-260.
  • 1967–68. A. Leigh DeNeef. Robertson and the Critics. Chaucer Review 2. 205-234.
  • 1967. Paul Theiner. Robertsonianism and the Idea of Literary History. Studies in Medieval Culture 6-7. 195-204.
  • 1982. M. A. Manzalaoui. Robertson and Eloise. Downside Review 100. 280-289.
  • 1987. Lee Patterson. Historical Criticism and the Development of Chaucer Studies. Negotiating the Past. Madison WI: University of Wisconsin Press: 1-40, esp. 26-36.
  • 1996. Lynn Staley. Durant Waite Robertson Jr. Department of English. Luminaries. Princeton Faculty Remembered. Edited Patricia H. Marks. Princeton NJ: Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni: 229-234.
  • Gaylord, Alan T. (2006). "Reflections on D.W. Robertson Jr., and 'Exegetical Criticism.'". Chaucer Review. 40 (3): 311–33. doi:10.1353/cr.2006.0003. ISSN 0009-2002. S2CID 171039996.
  • Justice Steven, Steven (2009). "Who Stole Robertson?". PMLA. 124 (2). Modern Language Association: 609–15. doi:10.1632/pmla.2009.124.2.609. ISSN 0030-8129. S2CID 162260035. Essay has bibliography of other works discussing Robertson's legacy and influence.

Publications edit

Books:[14]

  • 1951. Piers Plowman and Scriptural Tradition (with Bernard F. Huppé). Princeton University Press.
  • 1962. A Preface to Chaucer. Studies in Medieval Perspectives. Princeton University Press.
  • 1963. Fruyt and Chaff: Studies in Chaucer's Allegories (with Bernard F. Huppé). Princeton University Press.
  • 1968. Chaucer's London. John Wiley & Sons.
  • 1970. The Literature of Medieval England. McGraw-Hill.
  • 1972. Abelard and Heloise. Dial Press.
  • 1980. Essays in Medieval Culture. Princeton University Press.
  • 1991. Lismahago's Meditations. As Recorded by Abel Goast. écrazez l'enfâme. Cleveland OH: The Cobham and Hatherton Press.
  • 2017. Uncollected Essays. With a Foreword by Paul A. Olson

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Saxon, Wolfgang (1992-06-30). "Dr. Durant Waite Robertson Jr., Influential Chaucer Scholar, 77". The New York Times. pp. D.25. Retrieved 2009-11-22.
  2. ^ Robertson, D. W. Jr. (December 1946). "Certain Theological Conventions in Mannyng's Treatment of the Commandments". Modern Language Notes. 61 (8): 505–14. doi:10.2307/2909108. JSTOR 2909108.
  3. ^ Robertson, D. W. Jr. (April 1947). "The Cultural Tradition of Handlyng Synne". Speculum. 22 (2): 162–85. doi:10.2307/2854724. JSTOR 2854724. S2CID 164179606.
  4. ^ Robertson, D. W. Jr. (1946). "The Manuel des Péchés and an English Episcopal Decree". Modern Language Notes. 60 (7): 439–47. doi:10.2307/2910194. JSTOR 2910194.
  5. ^ Critical approaches to medieval literature; selected papers from the English Institute, 1958-1959 (Columbia UP, 1960)
  6. ^ a b Staley, Lynn (1998-10-21). "Remembering Robbie: No one who heard D.W. Robertson read Chaucer can ever forget it". Princeton Alumni Weekly.
  7. ^ Utley, Francis Lee (1965–66). "Robertsonianism Redivivus". Romance Philology. 19: 250–60. p. 250
  8. ^ Newman, Francis X. (1968). The Meaning of Courtly Love. Albany: SUNY Press.
  9. ^ Jeffrey, David Lyle (November 6–8, 2008). "Lessons from the Locker-Room on Courtly Love". The Family: Searching for Fairest Love. Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture: 10. Archived from the original on December 17, 2012. Retrieved 2011-03-21.
  10. ^ Beidler, Peter G. (1996). The Wife of Bath. Boston: Bedford. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-312-11128-1.
  11. ^ Gaylord, Alan T. (2006). "Reflections on D. W. Robertson Jr., and 'Exegetical Criticism.'". Chaucer Review. 40 (3): 311–33. doi:10.1353/cr.2006.0003. ISSN 0009-2002. S2CID 171039996. p. 320.
  12. ^ Patterson, Lee (1987). Negotiating the Past: The Historical Understanding of Medieval Literature. Madison: U of Wisconsin P. pp. 26–36.
  13. ^ Justice Steven, Steven (2009). "Who Stole Robertson?". PMLA. 124 (2). Modern Language Association: 609–15. doi:10.1632/pmla.2009.124.2.609. ISSN 0030-8129. S2CID 162260035. p. 614.
  14. ^ Modern Language Association of America. Annual bibliography 1941-1992.
Preceded by Murray Professor of English Literature at Princeton University
1970–1980
Succeeded by

robertson, durant, waite, robertson, washington, october, 1914, chapel, hill, north, carolina, july, 1992, scholar, medieval, english, literature, especially, geoffrey, chaucer, taught, princeton, university, from, 1946, until, retirement, 1980, murray, profes. Durant Waite Robertson Jr Washington D C October 11 1914 Chapel Hill North Carolina July 26 1992 was a scholar of medieval English literature and especially Geoffrey Chaucer He taught at Princeton University from 1946 until his retirement in 1980 as the Murray Professor of English and was widely regarded as this the twentieth century s most influential Chaucer scholar 1 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Scholarly career 3 Teaching at Princeton 4 Family 5 Retirement 6 Death 7 Influence 8 Publications 9 See also 10 ReferencesEarly life and education editExternal image nbsp Photo of D W Robertson Jr from Princeton Alumni Weekly October 21 1998 Robertson studied at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he received his Ph D degree in 1944 His dissertation on the work of Robert Mannyng A Study of Certain Aspects of the Cultural Tradition of Handlyng Synne was written under the direction of G R Coffman and Urban Tigner Holmes Jr Subsequently he revised and published three important articles from it 2 3 4 Robertson taught briefly at the University of Maryland before joining the faculty at Princeton in 1946 where he remained for the rest of his career 1 Scholarly career editRobertson s deeply historical approach to medieval English literature challenged and even angered many of the leading medievalists of the mid 20th century Opposition to Robertson s critical approach at length took the form of a scholarly debate at the meeting of the English Institute of 1958 59 The book of papers published from that event proved that Robertson s exegetical criticism sometimes simply called Robertsonianism had many learned supporters as well as opponents 5 Robertson s magnum opus was published in 1962 by Princeton University Press A Preface to Chaucer Studies in Medieval Perspectives a massive work of 500 pages of text and 118 illustrations from medieval monastic manuscripts and religious sculpture and art Critics were impressed by the extent of Robertson s reading in and grasp of primary sources mainly in Latin and French and secondary literature in every major European language as far back as the 19th century Lynn Staley Harrington and Shirley Drake Professor of the Humanities and Medieval amp Renaissance Studies at Colgate University and one of Robertson s students described it thus His major study A Preface to Chaucer 1962 challenged medieval studies when its tenets were increasingly influenced by the New Criticism he insisted on the priority of primary texts in interpreting the hierarchical Augustinian culture of the Middle Ages 6 It was also intimidating to medievalists of his generation most of whom had never seen any need to study the range of primary sources particularly religious writings in Latin which Robertson had mastered As late as 1965 medievalist and folklore scholar Francis Lee Utley called it a strange hodgepodge insulting to the community of scholars and indeed to the Twentieth Century itself 7 Scholarly supporters of Robertson s critical school gathered in March 1967 at the first annual conference of the Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies at State University of New York at Binghamton an event often referred to among medievalists as the Courtly Love conference The volume of papers from this conference published the following year 8 has retained its importance as a watershed in the spread of a new paradigm of the concept of medieval courtly love 9 Teaching at Princeton editRobertson was a popular and engaging lecturer and his seminars were usually full Professor Staley has summarized his approach as follows His gift for impersonation gave life to the dead he could stage a conversation between John of Gaunt and John Wyclif as though he had been a fly on the wall or recount Ovid s tales in a Carolina accent and with down home details that made them as meaningful as they are slyly ironic He insisted on the ways in which humor was fundamental to meaning He shared his ongoing work with us his moments of revelation his tremendous interest in literature and cultural history He insisted that we find proof for what we said in class or wrote in papers He made it possible for me to learn in ways many professors might not have by giving me the freedom to chase my ideas through Firestone Library He read the work we turned in quickly and willingly he praised and criticized The key to his approach was patience he would not hound a student to finish chapters or to meet deadlines you had to be self directed but Robbie met you more than halfway and was quick to promote work he saw as significant 6 Among Robertson s most important scholarly legacies is the number of his students among the prominent medievalists of succeeding generations These include Robert P Miller Paul Olson Chauncey Wood John V Fleming Alan T Gaylord David Lyle Jeffrey Marc Pelen and Lynn Staley Robertson retired from Princeton at the age of 65 in 1980 In his honor Princeton University Press published Essays in Medieval Culture 1980 a collection of 24 of his essays Among them are some of Robertson s bold attempts to extend the application of Robertsonianism beyond the confines of the Middle Ages to Renaissance art Leonardo sixteenth century literature Sidney Shakespeare s Hamlet and beyond Alexander Pope Family editRobertson married Betty McLean Hansen in 1937 They had one daughter Susanna Howley and two sons Durant Waite Robertson III and Douglas Robertson Retirement editRobertson s research in retirement took him in the direction of the social historical context of literature an interest he had occasionally expressed earlier He did it so well that scholar Peter G Beidler included one of Robertson s later essays Simple Signs from Everyday Life in Chaucer 1981 in a bibliography of Marxist approaches to Chaucer 10 Robertson would be shocked but also no doubt amused at this gesture Death editSuffering from declining health Robertson entered a retirement home near his home in Chapel Hill North Carolina where he died in 1992 Influence editAlan T Gaylord Dartmouth College Robertson s A Preface to Chaucer Studies in Medieval Perspectives was and is quite simply the most important book on Chaucer in the twentieth century 11 Lee Patterson Yale University Exegetics remains apparently against all odds the great unfinished business of Medieval Studies 12 Steven Justice University of California Berkeley Robertson shows something important I have been suggesting that the last generation of medieval literary study could not trenchantly criticize Robertson s intellectual vices and the habit of creating a kind of period subjectivity for the Middle Ages was the direst of these because it practiced similar vices in different tones of voice Of course no one stole Robertson it is just that anyone was apt to be embarrassed by thinking closely about him But in this last inconsistency of his we can see one of his virtues and one of the reasons younger scholars rediscovering him have found a wealth of suggestiveness in his work at least this is my impression that their elders did not His reading of Augustine here displays a counterenergy a willingness to be surprised by the past 13 1961 Ronald Salmon Crane On Hypotheses in Historical Criticism Apropos of Certain Contemporary Medievalists The Idea of the Humanities and Other Essays Critical and Historical Chicago University of Chicago Press 1968 v 2 236 260 1965 Francis Lee Utley Robertsonianism Redivivus Romance Philology 19 250 260 1967 68 A Leigh DeNeef Robertson and the Critics Chaucer Review 2 205 234 1967 Paul Theiner Robertsonianism and the Idea of Literary History Studies in Medieval Culture 6 7 195 204 1982 M A Manzalaoui Robertson and Eloise Downside Review 100 280 289 1987 Lee Patterson Historical Criticism and the Development of Chaucer Studies Negotiating the Past Madison WI University of Wisconsin Press 1 40 esp 26 36 1996 Lynn Staley Durant Waite Robertson Jr Department of English Luminaries Princeton Faculty Remembered Edited Patricia H Marks Princeton NJ Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni 229 234 Gaylord Alan T 2006 Reflections on D W Robertson Jr and Exegetical Criticism Chaucer Review 40 3 311 33 doi 10 1353 cr 2006 0003 ISSN 0009 2002 S2CID 171039996 Justice Steven Steven 2009 Who Stole Robertson PMLA 124 2 Modern Language Association 609 15 doi 10 1632 pmla 2009 124 2 609 ISSN 0030 8129 S2CID 162260035 Essay has bibliography of other works discussing Robertson s legacy and influence Publications editBooks 14 1951 Piers Plowman and Scriptural Tradition with Bernard F Huppe Princeton University Press 1962 A Preface to Chaucer Studies in Medieval Perspectives Princeton University Press 1963 Fruyt and Chaff Studies in Chaucer s Allegories with Bernard F Huppe Princeton University Press 1968 Chaucer s London John Wiley amp Sons 1970 The Literature of Medieval England McGraw Hill 1972 Abelard and Heloise Dial Press 1980 Essays in Medieval Culture Princeton University Press 1991 Lismahago s Meditations As Recorded by Abel Goast ecrazez l enfame Cleveland OH The Cobham and Hatherton Press 2017 Uncollected Essays With a Foreword by Paul A OlsonSee also editcourtly love Johan Huizinga C S LewisReferences edit a b Saxon Wolfgang 1992 06 30 Dr Durant Waite Robertson Jr Influential Chaucer Scholar 77 The New York Times pp D 25 Retrieved 2009 11 22 Robertson D W Jr December 1946 Certain Theological Conventions in Mannyng s Treatment of the Commandments Modern Language Notes 61 8 505 14 doi 10 2307 2909108 JSTOR 2909108 Robertson D W Jr April 1947 The Cultural Tradition of Handlyng Synne Speculum 22 2 162 85 doi 10 2307 2854724 JSTOR 2854724 S2CID 164179606 Robertson D W Jr 1946 The Manuel des Peches and an English Episcopal Decree Modern Language Notes 60 7 439 47 doi 10 2307 2910194 JSTOR 2910194 Critical approaches to medieval literature selected papers from the English Institute 1958 1959 Columbia UP 1960 a b Staley Lynn 1998 10 21 Remembering Robbie No one who heard D W Robertson read Chaucer can ever forget it Princeton Alumni Weekly Utley Francis Lee 1965 66 Robertsonianism Redivivus Romance Philology 19 250 60 p 250 Newman Francis X 1968 The Meaning of Courtly Love Albany SUNY Press Jeffrey David Lyle November 6 8 2008 Lessons from the Locker Room on Courtly Love The Family Searching for Fairest Love Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture 10 Archived from the original on December 17 2012 Retrieved 2011 03 21 Beidler Peter G 1996 The Wife of Bath Boston Bedford p 196 ISBN 978 0 312 11128 1 Gaylord Alan T 2006 Reflections on D W Robertson Jr and Exegetical Criticism Chaucer Review 40 3 311 33 doi 10 1353 cr 2006 0003 ISSN 0009 2002 S2CID 171039996 p 320 Patterson Lee 1987 Negotiating the Past The Historical Understanding of Medieval Literature Madison U of Wisconsin P pp 26 36 Justice Steven Steven 2009 Who Stole Robertson PMLA 124 2 Modern Language Association 609 15 doi 10 1632 pmla 2009 124 2 609 ISSN 0030 8129 S2CID 162260035 p 614 Modern Language Association of America Annual bibliography 1941 1992 Preceded byGerald Eades Bentley Murray Professor of English Literature at Princeton University1970 1980 Succeeded byThomas McFarland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title D W Robertson Jr amp oldid 1186874230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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