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Ethics in the Arthurian Legend
Melissa Ridley Elmes, Evelyn Meyer; Contributions by Elizabeth Archibald, Steven Steven Bruso, Nichole Burgdorf, …
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R2,969
Discovery Miles 29 690
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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An interdisciplinary and trans-historical investigation of the
representation of ethics in Arthurian Literature. From its earliest
days, the Arthurian legend has been preoccupied with questions of
good kingship, the behaviours of a ruling class, and their effects
on communities, societies, and nations, both locally and in
imperial and colonizing contexts. Ethical considerations inform and
are informed by local anxieties tied to questions of power and
identity, especially where leadership, service, and governance are
concerned; they provide a framework for understanding how the texts
operate as didactic and critical tools of these subjects. This book
brings together chapters drawing on English, Welsh, German, Dutch,
French, and Norse iterations of the Arthurian legend, and bridging
premodern and modern temporalities, to investigate the
representation of ethics in Arthurian literature across
interdisciplinary and transhistorical lines. They engage a variety
of methodologies, including gender, critical race theory,
philology, literature and the law, translation theory, game
studies, comparative, critical, and close reading, and modern
editorial and authorial practices. Texts interrogated range from
Culhwch and Olwen to Parzival, Roman van Walewein, Tristrams Saga,
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Malory's Morte Darthur. As a
whole, the approaches and findings in this volume attest to the
continued value and importance of the Arthurian legend and its
scholarship as a vibrant field through which to locate and
understand the many ways in which medieval literature continues to
inform modern sensibilities and institutions, particularly where
the matter of ethics is concerned.
Essays on the post-modern reception and interpretation of the
Middle Ages, To attract followers many professional politicians, as
well as other political actors, ground their biases in (supposedly)
medieval beliefs, align themselves with medieval heroes, or condemn
their enemies as medieval barbarians. The essays in the first part
of this volume directly examine some of the many forms such
medievalism can take, including the invocation of "blood libels" in
American politics; Vladimir Putin's self-comparisons to "Saint
Equal-of-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir"; alt-right references to
medieval Christian battles with Moslems; nativist Brexit allusions
to the Middle Ages; and, in the 2019 film The Kid Who Would be
King, director Joe Cornish's call for Arthurian leadership through
Brexit. These essays thus inform, even as they are tested by, the
subsequent papers, which touch on politics in the course of
discussing the director Guy Ritchie's erasure of Wales in the 2017
film King Arthur: Legend of the Sword; medievalist alt-right
attempts to turn one disenfranchised group against another;
Jean-Paul Laurens's 1880 condemnation of Napoleon III via a
portrait of Honorius; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's extraordinarily
wide range of medievalisms; the archaeology of Julian of Norwich's
anchorite cell; the influence of Julian on pity in J.K. Rowling's
Harry Potter book series; the origins of introductory maps for
medievalist narratives; self-reflexive medievalism in a television
episode of Doctor Who; and sonic medievalism in fantasy video
games.
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