A collection of twelve selected papers given at the Second Triennial Congress of the International Courtly Literature Society. Because the courtly ethos is the central phenomenon marking medieval vernacular literature, it provides a theme that serves as an ideological guide through the later Middle Ages and into the Renaissance.
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A collection of twelve selected papers given at the Second Triennial Congress of the International Courtly Literature Society. Because the courtly ethos is the central phenomenon marking medieval vernacular literature, it provides a theme that serves as an ideological guide through the later Middle Ages and into the Renaissance.
Read Less
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Seller's Description:
Minor rubbing. VG. 22x14cm, xii, 235 pp. Contains 12 papers. Includes: E. Vinaver "Landmarks in Arthurian Romance"; W. Calin "Defense & Illustration of Fin' Amor. Some Polemical Comments on the Robertsonian Approach"; F. Wiesmann-Wiedemann "From Victim to Villain: King Mark"; T. Scully "The Sen of Chrétien de Troye's Joie de la Cort"; M. T. Bruckner "Repetition & Variation in 12th-Century French Romance"; L.E. Jones "Narrative Transformations of 12th-Century Troubadour Lyric"; S. Sturm-Maddox "Transformations of Courtly Love Poetry: Vita Nuova & Canzoniere"; J.M. Bowers "How Criseyde Falls in Love"; D. Maddox "Early Secular Courtly Drama in France: L'Estoire de Griseldis"; F.H. Ridley " Scottish Transformations of Courtly Literature: William Dunbar & the Court of James IV"; W.G. Keaney "A Courtly Paradox in Book VI of Spenser's Faerie Queen"; W. Melczer "The War of the Carrots & the Onions or Concentration versus Dispersion: The Methodology of Interdisciplinary Studies Applied to the European Courts".