Foreword
Book-Burning at Don Quixote's: Thoughts on the Educating Force of
Courtly Romance - C. Stephen Jaeger
Music and the Origins of Courtliness -
The Crusade as Context: The Manuscripts of Athis et Prophilias -
Richard Rouse and Mary Rouse
Context and Reception: A Crusading Collection for Charles IV of
France - Mary Rouse and Richard Rouse
The Anti-Romances of Andrea da Baberino - Gloria Allaire
From Trojan to Briton: Brutus's Masculinity and Lineage in Geoffrey
of Monmouth's Historia regum Britanniae - Laura D. Barefield
Le Roman de fils du roi Costant: vertigier en "fin' amant" - Anne
Berthelot
Adultery and Death in Shot Rustaveli's The Man in the Panther Skin
- G. Koolemans Beynen
Courtly Revision of Wace's Roman de Brut in British Library Egerton
MS 3028 - Jean Blacker
Burgundian Devotional Manuscripts: Philip the Good - Maureen
Boulton
Mirror Characters - Frank Brandsma
MS Sion Supersaxo 97bis: A Profeminine Reading of Alan Chartier's
Verse -
Baldesar Castiglione and The Book of the Courtier: Being a
Musician, the Courtier May Achieve His Highest Goal: The Balance
and Harmony of SpiritSpirit - Marco Cerocchi
A Good Tale, and Reading It Well: Truth, Fiction and a Future
Critical Perspective on Gottfried's Tristan - Christopher R.
Clason
Dire l'amour: étude comparée des modes du discours dans le De Amore
d'André le Chapelain, le Collier de la Colombe et le Kama
SutraSutra - Alain Corbellari
The Representations of Illness in the Hispani Chivalric Romance -
Ivy A. Corfis
The Scope and Importance of the Color Palettes Used by the Conte du
Graal Miniaturists - Paul Creamer
Le Lai du Laüstic: espace poétic où forme et fond fusionnent -
Evelyne Datta
Giving the Devil His Due: Justice and Equity in L'Advocacie Nostre
Dame - Judith Davis
Desire, Subjectivity, and Subjection in Bernart de Ventadorn's "Can
vei la lauzeta mover" - Fidel Fajardo-Acosta
Quelle fin pour un eseignement d'un père à son fils? La clôture du
texte dans les manuscrits des Fables Pierre Aufors (Chastoiement
d'un père à son fils, version A)son fils, version A) - Yasmina
Foehr-Janssens
"Tel cuide vengier sa honte qui l'accroist": Wrath in Jean
d'Arras's Roman de Mélusine - Stacey L. Hahn
Challenging the Court: Kings and Queens in Les miracles de Nostre
Dame par personages - Carol J Harvey
Love is a Monologue: The Lack of Courtship in Old French Courtly
Narrative - Kathy M. Krause
The Mulier mediatrix in the Deus Amanz of Marie de France - June
Hall McCash
The End of the "Courtly Book" in Wolfram's Titurel - Matthias M A
Meyer
Chaucer, Astronomy, and Astrology: A Courtly Connection - Edward J.
Milowicki
Inscribing the Breath of a Speaking Voice: Vox Sponsae in St.
Bernard's Sermons on the Canticles and in Chrétien's Erec et Enide
- Jeanne A. Nightingale
From Court to Empire: The Peninsular Trajectory of Oliveier de
Castille - Ana Pairet
Christmas Gifts in Medieval Occitania: Matfre Ermengaud's Letter to
His Sister - Pat Ayers
Reading Harley 978: Marie de France in Context - Rupert Pickens
Monstrous Children of Lanval: The Cantare of Ponzela Gaia - Maria
Bendinelli Predelli
Compilers and Users of Medieval German Song Collections (1250-1500)
- Silvia Ranawake
The Promise of Laughter: Irony and Allegory in Le conte dou graal
and Li chevaliers as deus espees - Paul Vincent Rockwell
Incipit Citation in French Lyric Poetry of the Twelfth through
Fourteenth Centuries - Samuel N. Rosenberg
Minor Characters in Marie de France's Lais: Messengers and Their
Messages - Judith Rice Rothschild
Talking about the Poem in the Poem - Perhaps for Special Reasons?
The Author (Male Author?) versus the Female "I" of the Poem? -
Marianne Sandels
Skeptical Takes on Courtly Culture in Les Miracles de Nostre Dame
par personnages - Susan L. Stakel
"daz hât diu harpfe getân": Music and Performance of Courtly
Culture in Middle High German Courtly Literature - Alexandra
Sterling-Hellenbrand
The Merchant's Residence and Garden as locus amoenus in the Yiddish
Dukus Horant - Joseph M. Sullivan
Romantic Love to the Death: The Fair Maiden of Astolat in Malory's
Morte D'Arthur and Lady Ariko in The Tale of Heike - Yuko
Tagaya
Uncourtly Texts in Courtly Books: Observations on MS Chantilly,
Musée Condé 475 - Richard Trachsler
Authority and Auctoritas in the Works of Jean Bodel - Adrian P.
Tudor
"Pour ce que cuers ne puet mentir": le personnage matenel dans
Galeran de Bretagne de Renaut - Marion Uhlig
Re-Examining Wace's Round Table - Lori J. Walters
Ex libris Mariae: Courtly Book Iconography in the Illuminated
Manuscripts of Marie de France - Logan E. Whalen
Instructing the Court: Raimon Vidal's Pedagogy for the Courtly
Joglar - Valerie M. Wilhite
Chemise and Ceinture: Marie de France's Guigemar and the Use of
Textiles - Monica L. Wright
Equinec. A Recently Discovered Fourteenth Lai Composed by Marie de
France - Walter A Blue
GLORIA ALLAIRE is Associate Professor of Italian at the University of Kentucky. Her primary research interest has been Italian chivalric literature of the late Middle Ages. Joseph M. Sullivan is an Associate Professor of German at the University of Oklahoma MAUREEN BOULTON Professor of French, Department of Romance Languages & Literatures, University of Notre Dame. Monica L. Wright is the Granger and Debaillon Professor of French and Medieval Studies at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, USA. Her research focuses on the use of clothing in medieval French literature.
This substantial volume reflects the richness and variety of
courtly literature as well as the diversity of critical lenses
through which contemporary scholars view medieval texts.
*JOURNAL OF ENGLISH & GERMANIC PHILOLOGY*
Anyone interested in courtly literature is likely to find something
valuable in this multifaceted wide-ranging volume.
*ENCOMIA*
An astonishingly rich volume.critically sophisticated and
thought-provoking.
*MEDIUM AEVUM*
The study of courtly literature is well served with this large
tome
*THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW*
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