Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Boydell & Brewer
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Notes on Contributors
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Abbreviations ix
- Foreword xi
- Professor Peter Field: An Appreciation xiii
- 1 The Grail Romances and the Old Law 1
- 2 What Did Robert de Boron Really Write? 15
- 3 On Capitalization in Some Early Manuscripts of Wace’s Roman de Brut 29
- 4 Tristan Rossignol: The Development of a Text 49
- 5 What’s in a Name? Arthurian Name-Dropping in the Roman de Waldef 63
- 6 The Enigma of the Prose Yvain 65
- 7 Dreams and Visions in the Perlesvaus 73
- 8 La Reine Fée in the Roman de Perceforest: Rewriting, Rethinking 81
- 9 The Relationship between Text and Image in Three Manuscripts of the Estoire del Saint Graal (Lancelot-Grail Cycle) 93
- 10 Wigalois and Parzival: Father and Son Roles in the German Romance of Gawain’s Son 101
- 11 Reading between the Lines: A Vision of the Arthurian World Reflected in Galician-Portuguese Poetry 117
- 12 The Lost Beginning of The Jeaste of Syr Gaweyne and the Collation of Bodleian Library MS Douce 261 133
- 13 Enide’s See-through Dress 143
- 14 A Note on the Percy Folio Grene Knight 165
- 15 ‘False Friends’ in the Works of the Gawain-Poet 173
- 16 Place-Names in The Awntyrs Off Arthure: Corruption, Conjecture, Coincidence 181
- 17 Lancelot as Lover in the English Tradition before Malory 199
- 18 Malory and Middle English Verse Romance: The Case of Sir Tristrem 217
- 19 Sir Thomas Malory’s (French) Romance and (English) Chronicle 223
- 20 Romantic Self-Fashioning: Three Case Studies 235
- 21 Are Further Emendations Necessary? A Note on the Definite and Indefinite Articles in the Winchester Malory 247
- 22 Lucius’s Exhortation in Winchester and The Caxton 253
- 23 The Historicity of Combat in Le Morte Darthur 261
- 24 Personal Weapons in Malory’s Le Morte Darthur 271
- 25 ‘now I take uppon me the adventures to seke of holy thynges’: Lancelot and the Crisis of Arthurian Knighthood 285
- 26 Malory’s Language of Love 297
- 27 P.J.C. Field’s Worshipful Revision of Malory: Making a Virtue of Necessity 307
- 28 ‘Old Sir Thomas Malory’s Enchanting Book’: A Connecticut Yankee Reads Le Morte Darthur 311
- P.J.C. Field: Publications 325
- Notes on Contributors 331
- Tabula Gratulatoria 335
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Abbreviations ix
- Foreword xi
- Professor Peter Field: An Appreciation xiii
- 1 The Grail Romances and the Old Law 1
- 2 What Did Robert de Boron Really Write? 15
- 3 On Capitalization in Some Early Manuscripts of Wace’s Roman de Brut 29
- 4 Tristan Rossignol: The Development of a Text 49
- 5 What’s in a Name? Arthurian Name-Dropping in the Roman de Waldef 63
- 6 The Enigma of the Prose Yvain 65
- 7 Dreams and Visions in the Perlesvaus 73
- 8 La Reine Fée in the Roman de Perceforest: Rewriting, Rethinking 81
- 9 The Relationship between Text and Image in Three Manuscripts of the Estoire del Saint Graal (Lancelot-Grail Cycle) 93
- 10 Wigalois and Parzival: Father and Son Roles in the German Romance of Gawain’s Son 101
- 11 Reading between the Lines: A Vision of the Arthurian World Reflected in Galician-Portuguese Poetry 117
- 12 The Lost Beginning of The Jeaste of Syr Gaweyne and the Collation of Bodleian Library MS Douce 261 133
- 13 Enide’s See-through Dress 143
- 14 A Note on the Percy Folio Grene Knight 165
- 15 ‘False Friends’ in the Works of the Gawain-Poet 173
- 16 Place-Names in The Awntyrs Off Arthure: Corruption, Conjecture, Coincidence 181
- 17 Lancelot as Lover in the English Tradition before Malory 199
- 18 Malory and Middle English Verse Romance: The Case of Sir Tristrem 217
- 19 Sir Thomas Malory’s (French) Romance and (English) Chronicle 223
- 20 Romantic Self-Fashioning: Three Case Studies 235
- 21 Are Further Emendations Necessary? A Note on the Definite and Indefinite Articles in the Winchester Malory 247
- 22 Lucius’s Exhortation in Winchester and The Caxton 253
- 23 The Historicity of Combat in Le Morte Darthur 261
- 24 Personal Weapons in Malory’s Le Morte Darthur 271
- 25 ‘now I take uppon me the adventures to seke of holy thynges’: Lancelot and the Crisis of Arthurian Knighthood 285
- 26 Malory’s Language of Love 297
- 27 P.J.C. Field’s Worshipful Revision of Malory: Making a Virtue of Necessity 307
- 28 ‘Old Sir Thomas Malory’s Enchanting Book’: A Connecticut Yankee Reads Le Morte Darthur 311
- P.J.C. Field: Publications 325
- Notes on Contributors 331
- Tabula Gratulatoria 335