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. |
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Page 64
... concern for expediency over decorum is everywhere evident in his manual of military strategy , which replaces the ... concerned than the medieval knight about how the battle was fought . The former , " in identifying his cause with the ...
... concern for expediency over decorum is everywhere evident in his manual of military strategy , which replaces the ... concerned than the medieval knight about how the battle was fought . The former , " in identifying his cause with the ...
Page 124
... concern for the accuracy of place names . These concerns have not been lost on Spenser , with his radically different approach to what these writers considered historical material . In the spirit of his playful defense of the existence ...
... concern for the accuracy of place names . These concerns have not been lost on Spenser , with his radically different approach to what these writers considered historical material . In the spirit of his playful defense of the existence ...
Page 129
... concern to his knights : " Praye for my soule " ( 21.5 ) . The chief surviving knights abandon temporal concerns to become monks , and Guenevere takes the veil . Finally , at the moment of Lancelot's death , the former Bishop of ...
... concern to his knights : " Praye for my soule " ( 21.5 ) . The chief surviving knights abandon temporal concerns to become monks , and Guenevere takes the veil . Finally , at the moment of Lancelot's death , the former Bishop of ...
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 adventure allegory Alliterative Morte Arthure Ariosto Artegall Arthur's court Arthurian romance Balin Blamor Book Calidore Caxton's edition chapter chivalric romance chivalry Christian Chronicle deeds Dolorous Stroke dragon Duessa Edmund Spenser Elizabeth Elizabethan England English epic episode Eugène Vinaver explicits Faerie Queene fairy fiction French Gawain Geoffrey of Monmouth Geoffrey's giant Gloriana Grail grete Guyon haue hero Hieatt humanist Ibid intertextual King Arthur knighthood knights Kynge lady Lancelot Le Morte Darthur Letter to Raleigh magic Malory's Arthur Merlin Middle Ages Millican Mordred Morte Darthur narrative neuer noble Orgoglio Oxford University Press parallel poem poet Polychronicon present Prince Arthur Prose quest readers recounts Redcrosse Redcrosse's Renaissance Roman War Story Rome Round Table Sidney Sir Thomas Malory Spenser's Faerie structure sword test symbolism Syre Tale of Gareth tion tradition Translated Tristram Tudor Vinaver virtue vnto vols vpon Vulgate Cycle William Winchester