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Arthurian Literature XXXV (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,183
Discovery Miles 21 830
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Arthurian Literature XXXV (Hardcover)
Series: Arthurian Literature
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The continued influence and significance of the legend of Arthur
are demonstrated by the articles collected in this volume. The rich
vitality of both the Arthurian material itself and the scholarship
devoted to it is manifested in this volume. It begins with an
interdisciplinary study of swords belonging to Arthurian and other
heroes and of the smithswho made them, assessed both in their
literary contexts and in "historical" references to their existence
as heroic relics. Two essays then consider the use of Arthurian
material for political purposes: a discussion of Caradog's Vita
Gildae throws light on the complex attitudes to Arthur of
contemporaries of Geoffrey of Monmouth in a time of political
turmoil in England, and an investigation into borrowings from
Geoffrey's Historia in a chronicle of Anglo-Scottish relations in
the time of Edward I, a well-known admirer of the Arthurian legend,
argues that they would have appealed to the clerical elite. Romance
motifs link the subsequent pieces: women and their friendships in
Ywain and Gawain, the only known close English adaptation of a
romance by Chretien, and the mixture of sacred and secular in The
Turke and Gawain, with fascinating alchemical parallels for a
puzzling beheading episode. This is followed by a discussion of the
views on native and foreign sources of three sixteenth-century
defenders of Arthur, John Leland, John Prise and Humphrey Llwyd,
and their responses to the criticisms of Polydore Vergil. In
twentieth-century reception history, John Steinbeck was an ardent
Arthurian enthusiast: an essay looks at the significance of his
annotations to his copy of Malory as he worked on his adaptation,
The Acts of King Arthur and his Noble Knights. The volume moves to
even more recent territory with an exploration of the adaptations
of Malory and other Arthurian writers that occur in the comic books
by Geoff Johns about Arthur Curry, aka Aquaman, King of Atlantis.
The book is completed by a reprint of a classic essay by Norris
Lacy on the absence and presence of the Grail in Arthurian texts
from the twelfth century on.
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