Refashioning "knights and Ladies Gentle Deeds": The Intertextuality of Spenser's Faerie Queene and Malory's Morte DarthurRefashioning "Knights and Ladies Gentle Deeds" seeks to offer a more determinate sense than traditional source study of just how much Spenser's Faerie Queene owed to Malory's Morte Darthur. Once widespread, the assumption of Spenser's debt to Malory came under enough heavy fire in the first half of this century to render it shunned. Until now, the only book-length study on the topic was Prof. Marie Walther's nineteenth-century German inaugural dissertation, Malory's Einfluss auf Spenser's Faerie Queene, which has never been translated into English. Though the question has received renewed interest in several recent essays by A. Kent Hieatt, the disproportionately brief entry on Malory in the Spenser Encyclopedia demonstrates how much is yet to be learned about the relationship between these two dominant works of adjacent centuries. While not neglecting the question of direct borrowings, author Paul Rovang applies a theory of intertextuality to probe how the poet responded to the chivalric romance themes, conventions, materials, and structures which he encountered in the Morte Darthur. Both works are treated not as monoliths, but as links in a network of texts and other cultural phenomena relating to chivalry. In this way, a fuller sense is given not only of how vitally connected the two works are, but of how Spenser "refashioned" the transmitted ideals and symbols of Arthurian knighthood for his own age. |
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Page 24
Malory's Tale of Gareth exhibits numerous features parallel to this account . As Spenser's aspiring youth appears at Gloriana's feast , so does the unproven Gareth at “ the hyhe feest of Pentecost ” while Arthur is holding court at ...
Malory's Tale of Gareth exhibits numerous features parallel to this account . As Spenser's aspiring youth appears at Gloriana's feast , so does the unproven Gareth at “ the hyhe feest of Pentecost ” while Arthur is holding court at ...
Page 78
How completely different is this ending from any other surviving account of the story . ... 10 But Hardyng's Arthur , much as in the other accounts apart from Malory's , must return " home in hast " after a mere winter in Rome , in a ...
How completely different is this ending from any other surviving account of the story . ... 10 But Hardyng's Arthur , much as in the other accounts apart from Malory's , must return " home in hast " after a mere winter in Rome , in a ...
Page 94
This mingling of various traditions resulted in an account that was markedly different from those of the chronicles ... English poem places his version directly in the lineage of Arthurian accounts in the English chronicle tradition .
This mingling of various traditions resulted in an account that was markedly different from those of the chronicles ... English poem places his version directly in the lineage of Arthurian accounts in the English chronicle tradition .
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Contents
List of Abbreviations | 9 |
Introduction | 17 |
Thematic Similarities | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Refashioning "knights and Ladies Gentle Deeds": The Intertextuality of ... Paul R. Rovang Limited preview - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
accounts action Ages allegory already alters appears arms Arthur Arthurian battle becomes beginning called Caxton's chapter characters chivalry Christian chronicle comparable complete concern continued contrast court critical deeds discussion dragon edition effect Elizabeth Elizabethan England English epic episode evidence example explicits fact Faerie Queene fairy fiction final French further Gareth giant hand hero human important intertextual King King Arthur knighthood knights Kynge lady Lancelot Letter Malory Malory's Mark material matter means medieval Middle moral Morte Darthur narrative nature noble notes observed Orgoglio parallel person poem poet political present Prince prose quest readers recounts Redcrosse reference Renaissance romance Rome Round Table seems seen sense significant Spenser spiritual story structure sword symbolism Tale Thomas tion tradition Tristram true turn Vinaver virtue Winchester writes