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Essays examining a variety of aspects of important Arthurian poem.
The present volume grew from a nucleus of four papers given at the
Twelfth International Arthurian Conference at Regensburg in 1971 on
the alliterative Morte Arthure, increasingly recognised as one of
the great masterpiecesof medieval English literature. These
lectures sought to reappraise the poem and its somewhat enigmatic
historical and cultural context, and are presented here in a much
revised and expanded form. Unlike most volumes of theiskind, the
contributions form an integrated whole, the result of lengthy
discussions among the collaborating scholars over the past year.
The topics range from the poem's place among chronicles and
Arthurian romances to the date, audience and attitude to contempary
problems, notably that of war. pecific fields such as heraldry and
laments for the dead are examined in detail, while the linguistic
structure of the poem is the subject of two essays.
The papers in this book examine the thematic, structural and
aesthetic relationship between medieval English literature and a
wide variety of more recent modern texts. Some of the contributors
re-examine the concepts of authority and representation in Chretien
and Malory and of medieval romance and the modern novel, while
Caxton's Morte Darthur is interpreted from the point of view of
Norbert Elias; other focuses of interest are the love-death motif
in nineteenth-century novels, the comic in contemporary British
fiction, the literary representations of Arthurian characters
(Galahad, Tristan, Gawain), and recent Beowulf translations. In
addition, there are socio-historic and generic readings of
Chaucer's Sir Thopas and of Troilus and Criseyde, of Ipomadon and
Malory's Morte Darthur. Aspects of medieval heritage are uncovered
in Horace Walpole, Furst Puckler-Muskau, Georg Kaiser, A. S. Byatt,
David Lodge, Fay Weldon, Iris Murdoch, the Irish novelist Eamonn
Sweeney and the Polish writer Andrzej Sapkowski, in William
Gibson's cyberpunk novel Neuromancer and Peter Ackroyd's recent
Clerkenwell Tales. In addition, there is a translation of Karl
Heinz Goller's former essay on Chancer's Troilus and Criseyde.
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