Description
Book SynopsisNew editor, new directions: the series broadens its scope to encompass European literatures other than French and English; still, however, "an indispensable component of any historical or Arthurian library". NOTES AND QUERIESThis new volume of Arthurian Literature, the first under its new editor Keith Busby, is devoted to the
Roman van Walewein(The Romance of Walewein [Gawain]) by Penninc and Pieter Vostaert, an undisputed gem of Middle Dutch literature which has recently become accessible to an English-speaking audience through translation. Essentially a fairy-tale written into Arthurian romance, it presents a Gawain quite different to the man found in the English
Sir Gawain and the Green Knightor the French Gauvain. Expert readings of the
Walewein, especially commissioned and collected by
BART BESAMUSCA and
ERIK KOOPERof the University of Utrecht are provided by a group of renowned scholars, contributing to the on-going critical appraisal of the
Walewein.
KEITH BUSBY is George Lynn Cross Research Professor at the Center for Medieval and Renaissane Studies, University of Oklahoma. Contributors: BART BESAMUSCA, ERIK KOOPER, WALTER HAUG, DOUGLAS KELLY, NORRIS J. LACY, MATHIAS MEYER, AD PUTTER, FELICITY RIDDY, THEA SUMMERFIELD, JANE H.M. TAYLOR, BART VELDHOEN, NORBERT VOORWINDEN, LORI WALTERS
Table of ContentsIntroduction: The Study of the 'Roman van Walewein' (with Erik Kooper) - Introduction: The Study of the 'Roman van Walewein' (with Bart Besamusca) - Erik Kooper The 'Roman van Walewein' as a Postclassical Literary Experiment - Walter Haug The Pledge Motif in the 'Roman van Walewein': Original Variant and Rewritten Quest - Douglas Kelly Convention and Innovation in the Middle Dutch 'Roman van Walewein' - Norris J. Lacy It's Hard to Be Me, or Walewein/Gawan as Hero - Matthias M A Meyer Walewein in the Otherworld and the Land of Prester John - Ad Putter Giving and Receiving: Exchange in the 'Roman van Walewein' and 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight' - Linda Brosnan Reading a Motion Picture: Why Steven Spielberg Should Read the 'Roman van Walewein' - Thea Summerfield The 'Roman van Walewein': Man into Fox, Fox into Man - The 'Roman van Walewein' Laced with Castles - Bart Veldhoen Fight Descriptions in the 'Roman van Walewein' and in Two Middle High German Romances. A Comparison - Norbert Voorwinden Making Bread from Stone: The 'Roman van Walewein' and the Transformation of Old French Romance - Lori J. Walters