Among the narrative traditions of the Middle Ages, the Robin
Hood legend holds a unique, important, and often overlooked
position. Robin Hood's uniqueness and importance begins with his
status as the only English contribution to world mythology. His is
also the only lasting myth to arise from the High Middle Ages and
the last Western legend to achieve a sustained international
appeal. Several Robin Hood ballads survive from the Middle Ages,
and from the 15th to the 17th centuries he figured prominently in
folk drama. Since then, he has appeared in numerous proverbs,
placenames, operas, novels, children's stories, films, and
television series. A tale told so often must be profoundly
significant to the society that retells it. Yet in spite of its
importance and popularity, the legend of Robin Hood has received
surprisingly little study. This book overviews the genesis and
development of the Robin Hood legend from the Middle Ages to
1700.
As is appropriate for a work that bridges the divide between the
worlds of fiction and history, this volume incorporates the
strengths of both historical and literary approaches, respecting
both the circumstances of the historic setting and the legend's
status as a fictive creation. The principal focus of the book is
the interaction between the text and the social context in which
the legend arose and developed. The first two chapters examine the
early Robin Hood tradition, including the initial nondramatic
manifestations of the legend and the later dramatic
representations. The volume then looks at the transformation of the
legend in the 16th and 17th centuries and considers how the various
elements of the legend interacted with each other and with society
as a whole.
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