Description

Book Synopsis
New and fresh assessments of Malory's Morte Darthur. The essays here are devoted to that seminal Arthurian work, Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur. Developments of papers first given at the 'Malory at 550: Old and New' conference, they emphasise here the second part of its remit. Accordingly, several contributors focus new attention on Malory's style, using his stock phrases, metaphors, characterization, or manipulation of sources to argue for a deeper appreciation of his merits as an author. If, as others illustrate, Malory is a much better artist than his twentieth-century reputation allowed, then there is a renewed need to re-assess the vexed question of the possible originality of his 'Tale of Sir Gareth of Orkeney'. Similarly fresh approaches underlie those essays re-examining Malory's attitude to time and the sacred in 'The Sankgreal', the manner in which the ghosts of Lot and his sons highlight potential failures in the Round Table Oath, or the pleasures and pitfalls of Arthurian hospitality. The remaining contributions argue for new approaches to Malory's narrative gaps, Launcelot's status as a victim of sexual violence, and the importance of rejecting Victorian moral attitudes towards Gwenyvere and Isode, moralizing that still informs much recent scholarship addressing Malory's female characters. Contributors: Joyce Coleman, Elizabeth Edwards, Kristina Hildebrand, Cathy Hume, David F. Johnson, Megan Leitch, Andrew Lynch, Molly A. Martin, Cory James Rushton, † Fiona Tolhurst, Michael W. Twomey

Table of Contents
Introduction: The Tournament at Mapplemalleoré: Malory at 550 Cory James Rushton 1. Malory and the Stock Phrase Joyce Coleman 2. The Artistry of Malory's Mercantile Metaphors: Good, Generosity, and the Source of 'The Tale of Sir Gareth' Megan G. Leitch 3. 'A grete bourder and a passynge good night': Sir Dinadan: 'Gareth with a Twist' David F. Johnson 4. Moonlight in the Nocturnal Typology of Malory's Morte Darthur Michael W. Twomey 5. 'That shall nat ye know for me as at nighty': Cognitive Narratology and Filling Malory's Gaps Cathy Hume 6. 'On a tyme': Action and Temporality in Malory's 'Sankgreal' Andrew Lynch 7. Hospitality in Malory Elizabeth Edwards 8. The Haunting of the Orkneys and Malory's Arthurian Project Molly A. Martin 9. 'I love nat to be constreyned to love': Launcelot and Coerced Sex Kristina Hildebrand 10. Eradicating Victorian Backreading: Re-reading Malory's Gwenyvere through Gaynour and Isode Fiona Tolhurst

Arthurian Literature XXXVII: Malory at 550: Old

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    A Hardback by Megan G Leitch, Professor Kevin S Whetter, Joyce Coleman

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      View other formats and editions of Arthurian Literature XXXVII: Malory at 550: Old by Megan G Leitch

      Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
      Publication Date: 14/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781843846352, 978-1843846352
      ISBN10: 1843846357

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      New and fresh assessments of Malory's Morte Darthur. The essays here are devoted to that seminal Arthurian work, Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur. Developments of papers first given at the 'Malory at 550: Old and New' conference, they emphasise here the second part of its remit. Accordingly, several contributors focus new attention on Malory's style, using his stock phrases, metaphors, characterization, or manipulation of sources to argue for a deeper appreciation of his merits as an author. If, as others illustrate, Malory is a much better artist than his twentieth-century reputation allowed, then there is a renewed need to re-assess the vexed question of the possible originality of his 'Tale of Sir Gareth of Orkeney'. Similarly fresh approaches underlie those essays re-examining Malory's attitude to time and the sacred in 'The Sankgreal', the manner in which the ghosts of Lot and his sons highlight potential failures in the Round Table Oath, or the pleasures and pitfalls of Arthurian hospitality. The remaining contributions argue for new approaches to Malory's narrative gaps, Launcelot's status as a victim of sexual violence, and the importance of rejecting Victorian moral attitudes towards Gwenyvere and Isode, moralizing that still informs much recent scholarship addressing Malory's female characters. Contributors: Joyce Coleman, Elizabeth Edwards, Kristina Hildebrand, Cathy Hume, David F. Johnson, Megan Leitch, Andrew Lynch, Molly A. Martin, Cory James Rushton, † Fiona Tolhurst, Michael W. Twomey

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: The Tournament at Mapplemalleoré: Malory at 550 Cory James Rushton 1. Malory and the Stock Phrase Joyce Coleman 2. The Artistry of Malory's Mercantile Metaphors: Good, Generosity, and the Source of 'The Tale of Sir Gareth' Megan G. Leitch 3. 'A grete bourder and a passynge good night': Sir Dinadan: 'Gareth with a Twist' David F. Johnson 4. Moonlight in the Nocturnal Typology of Malory's Morte Darthur Michael W. Twomey 5. 'That shall nat ye know for me as at nighty': Cognitive Narratology and Filling Malory's Gaps Cathy Hume 6. 'On a tyme': Action and Temporality in Malory's 'Sankgreal' Andrew Lynch 7. Hospitality in Malory Elizabeth Edwards 8. The Haunting of the Orkneys and Malory's Arthurian Project Molly A. Martin 9. 'I love nat to be constreyned to love': Launcelot and Coerced Sex Kristina Hildebrand 10. Eradicating Victorian Backreading: Re-reading Malory's Gwenyvere through Gaynour and Isode Fiona Tolhurst

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