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King Arthur and the Myth of History (Paperback)
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King Arthur and the Myth of History (Paperback)
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"The few full-length studies of the Morte D'Arthur and other
Arthurian texts published in the past 15 years have rarely reached
and sustained the level of theoretical and interpretive
sophistication found here. King Arthur and the Myth of History
ought to have quite an impact on Arthurian studies, in part because
Finke and Shichtman take medieval Arthurian
literature--particularly what passes for history and
chronicle--very seriously, on its own terms, in its different
cultural contexts."--Kathleen Kelly, Northeastern University King
Arthur and the Myth of History considers why, in the 12th century,
tales of a 6th-century British king who achieved immortality in an
apparently hopeless struggle to repel Saxon invaders, suddenly
emerged full blown, virtually from nowhere. Further, why did this
figure from the margins of the Norman empire suddenly become an
important subject of historical writing at the center of that
empire, and why has he since continued to be an enduring cultural
icon? Laurie Finke and Martin Shichtman contend that Arthur has
been employed by historians as a potent but empty symbol to
legitimize institutional political ambitions during times of social
stress. The study focuses on three periods of cultural crisis: the
Norman colonization of England in the 11th and 12th centuries, the
Warsof the Roses in the 15th century, and the rise and resurgence
of fascism in 20th-century Europe. It examines four English
chronicles of the Norman period--those of William of Malmesbury,
Geoffrey of Monmouth, Wace, and Layamon. Other chapters investigate
John Hardyng's Chronicle and Malory's Morte D'Arthur, both produced
during the tumult of the Wars of the Roses. Finally, it considers
more contemporary texts that offer the history of Adolf Hitler's
acquisition of the Holy Grail: Jean-Michel Angebert's The Occult
and the Third Reich: The Mystical Origins of Nazism and the Search
for the Holy Grail and Trevor Ravenscroft's Spear of Destiny. Finke
and Shichtman argue that these texts reveal tensions between the
claims that history makes about objectivity or referentiality and
particular social, political, and ideological agendas. They
demonstrate that at historical moments of great stress, the turn to
antiquarianism, in an effort to bypass traumas of the recent past
in favor of archaic origins, offers a unique opportunity for the
literary and cultural theorists to investigate the aims and uses of
history itself.
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