Medieval Cultural Studies: Essays in Honour of Stephen KnightRuth Evans, Helen Fulton, David Matthews University of Wales Press, 2006 - 286 sivua This collection of newly commissioned essays celebrates the sixty-fifth birthday of Professor Stephen Knight in 2005 by paying tribute to his pioneering work in a discipline we call medieval cultural studies . This is the first book-length study of this relatively new discipline.The contributions are grouped under five main headings: Defining the Field: Medieval Cultural Studies?; Robin Hood; Historical Chaucer; The Cultural Politics of Romance; Cultural Politics/The Politics of Culture. The essays address their subjects medievalism; Robin Hood; fabliaux; medievalist crime fiction; medieval romance; Chaucer; contemporary novels with medieval drama settings; medieval London; skaldic poetry; the crusades in the broad spirit of the kind of work that used to be done at the Birmingham Centre for Cultural Studies, and which is carried on more widely in cultural studies departments in the US, Australia and the rest of Britain.Distinguished contributors from Australia, North America, England, Scotland and Wales bear witness to Stephen Knight s diverse teaching experiences and research interests, by reflecting on and developing the work of a man who has inaugurated so much innovative thinking about the medieval past and its cultural legacies." |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 41
Sivu 69
... audience of those materials . The present study has used a range of texts to explore the treatment of written documents in the context of criminality and outlawry . If we differentiate between them in terms not of subject matter but of ...
... audience of those materials . The present study has used a range of texts to explore the treatment of written documents in the context of criminality and outlawry . If we differentiate between them in terms not of subject matter but of ...
Sivu 174
... audience in church . The humour and drama of the conclusion depend on the Pardoner conflating his two audiences in his closing address . And yet there are a number of signs that he is making this conflation rather earlier . The ...
... audience in church . The humour and drama of the conclusion depend on the Pardoner conflating his two audiences in his closing address . And yet there are a number of signs that he is making this conflation rather earlier . The ...
Sivu 264
... audience contract contained here fully accord with the medieval Tretise of Miraclis Pleyinge . The Tretise sees through actors as liars and recognizes the shallowness of men and women in the audience moved to tears by the illusions of ...
... audience contract contained here fully accord with the medieval Tretise of Miraclis Pleyinge . The Tretise sees through actors as liars and recognizes the shallowness of men and women in the audience moved to tears by the illusions of ...
Sisältö
What was Medievalism? Medieval Studies Medievalism | 9 |
The Long Profane | 23 |
Robin Hood and the Rise of Cultural Studies | 39 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
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Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
Adam Bell Anglo-Norman Otinel argues Athelston audience authority Bovo Cambridge Canterbury Canterbury Tales century Chaucer Cheapside chivalric Christian church contemporary context crime fiction cultural studies discourse early edition Edward ekphrasis essay Estut fabliau film genre Gest of Robyn Hebrew Henry hero Heurodis Hilton homo sacer Iceland Jewish Jews Jogaila John king king's kynge late medieval later Levita literary literature Lithuania London manuscript Maurice Keen medieval cultural studies medieval England medieval studies medievalists middle ages Middle English modern Monk murder mystery narrative Nottingham Ohlgren outlaw Oxford University Press pagan Pardoner Pardoner's Past & Present Paston peasant play poem poet poetry political popular Prussia repr Richard Robin Hood Robyn Hode Roland and Otuel romance royal saga Saracens scene scholars seal sexual sheriff Sir Orfeo skaldic ekphrasis Skáldskaparmál social speech Stephen Knight story texts theatre Thomas tradition trans W. M. Ormrod Westminster William Yiddish York