
Chivalry - CANCELLED
Medieval Ambiguities to Modern Applications
De Gruyter (Publisher)
Published on 29. March 2023
Book
Hardback
200 pages
978-1-5015-1768-6 (ISBN)
Description
Chivalry is a concept that was crucial to medieval culture and continues to fuel modern scholarly debate. Academic analyses of chivalry as an idea and an ethos are strikingly disparate, which reflects the fact that the expectations and the realities of knightly behavior themselves were highly varied. In turn, medieval source materials ranging from literature to historiography to theological commentaries provide a complex view of how contemporaries perceived chivalric culture. Today, countless films, books, and university course syllabi alike testify to the enduring appeal of chivalry in the popular imagination. However, those who study the topic at any level must break through the romanticisms, anachronisms, and political biases that surround the history of chivalry to come to a more complete, nuanced understanding of the idea's status within medieval culture and politics. Through a collection of essays that spans the disciplinary spectrum, this volume examines the idea of chivalry in theory and in practice, within both original medieval contexts and modern portrayals. From medieval law and literature to current university pedagogy and socio-political controversy, the volume's authors offer a multifaceted perspective that will help to shed new light on the meaning and implications of chivalry.
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
6 farbige Abbildungen
6 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 230 mm
Width: 155 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-5015-1768-6 (9781501517686)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
J.M. Grussenmeyer has lectured extensively on medieval and early modern history and literature at British and American universities, and he currently teaches history at Rowan University. His interdisciplinary research examines Lancastrian political culture, and he is completing work on his first monograph, Cardinal Kemp: Statesmanship and Political Service in Lancastrian England.
Geoffrey W. Gust is an Assistant Professor of Critical Thinking at Stockton University. His research largely focuses on Chaucer and his contemporaries, and he recently published his second major scholarly book, Chaucerotics: Uncloaking the Language of Sex in the Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde.
Geoffrey W. Gust is an Assistant Professor of Critical Thinking at Stockton University. His research largely focuses on Chaucer and his contemporaries, and he recently published his second major scholarly book, Chaucerotics: Uncloaking the Language of Sex in the Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde.
Content
Foreword by J.M. GrussenmeyerIntroduction by David Grummitt
Part 1: Theory
Chivalry and Law in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur by Ryan Muckerheide
"The Merchant's Tale," Chaucerotics, and the Anti-Chivalric Literary Tradition by Geoffrey W. Gust
Heraldic Narrative and Chivalric Identity in Sir Eglamour of Artois by Amy Vines
Illumination and Arthurian Mythology: Mirrors of Chivalric Cultural Identity by Bohdana Hrynda
Frodo and Faramir: Mirrors of Chivalry by Constance Wagner
Part 2: Practice
The (Chivalrous) Deeds of the Cypriots by Sarah James
Miles Christi: Henry IV and Lancastrian Chivalric Identity by J.M. Grussenmeyer
"This Magnyficent & Excellent Prynce Henry": Establishing Chivalric Culture in Early Tudor England by Hilary Jane Locke
Chivalry and the Just War Tradition by Christopher M. Bellitto
The Afterlives of Chivalry: Rape Culture, Militarism, and Toxic Masculinity in Medieval Studies by Adam Miyashiro
Part 1: Theory
Chivalry and Law in Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur by Ryan Muckerheide
"The Merchant's Tale," Chaucerotics, and the Anti-Chivalric Literary Tradition by Geoffrey W. Gust
Heraldic Narrative and Chivalric Identity in Sir Eglamour of Artois by Amy Vines
Illumination and Arthurian Mythology: Mirrors of Chivalric Cultural Identity by Bohdana Hrynda
Frodo and Faramir: Mirrors of Chivalry by Constance Wagner
Part 2: Practice
The (Chivalrous) Deeds of the Cypriots by Sarah James
Miles Christi: Henry IV and Lancastrian Chivalric Identity by J.M. Grussenmeyer
"This Magnyficent & Excellent Prynce Henry": Establishing Chivalric Culture in Early Tudor England by Hilary Jane Locke
Chivalry and the Just War Tradition by Christopher M. Bellitto
The Afterlives of Chivalry: Rape Culture, Militarism, and Toxic Masculinity in Medieval Studies by Adam Miyashiro