Malory and Christianity : essays on Sir Thomas Malory's Morte Darthur

Bibliographic Information

Malory and Christianity : essays on Sir Thomas Malory's Morte Darthur

edited by D. Thomas Hanks, Jr., and Janet Jesmok

(Studies in medieval culture, 51)

Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University, c2013

  • : clothbound
  • : pbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 191-202

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

: clothbound ISBN 9781580441759

Description

As Hanks and Jesmok note in their introduction, "pursuing opponents and pursuing love move the Morte's narrative, but the work's richness comes from its romance and tragic elements: the human quest for maturity and fulfillment and those uncontrollable forces that undermine the quest and destroy the dream. Malory's use of myth and magic to explore these themes has received extensive scholarly attention, but his views on and thematic use of Christianity have long needed a closer look."

Table of Contents

Prefatory Note Introduction "All maner of good love comyth of God": Malory, God's Grace, and Noble Love by D. Thomas Hanks, Jr. Adulterated Love: The Tragedy of Malory's Lancelot and Guinevere by Corey Olsen Endless Virtue and Trinitarian Prayer in Lancelot's Healing of Urry by Sue Ellen Holbrook Christian Rituals in Malory: The Evidence of Funerals by Karen Cherewatuk Rhetoric, Ritual, and Religious Impulse in Malory's Book 8 by Janet Jesmok Christianity and Social Instability: Malory's Galahad, Palomides, and Lancelot by Dorsey Armstrong Slouching towards Bethlehem: Secularized Salvation in Le Morte Darthur by Fiona Tolhurst Malory's Secular Arthuriad by K. S. Whetter "In my harte I am [not] crystynde": What Can Malory Offer the Nonreligious Reader? by Felicia Nimue Ackerman Bibliography Contributors Index
Volume

: pbk ISBN 9781580441766

Description

As Hanks and Jesmok note in their introduction, "pursuing opponents and pursuing love move the Morte's narrative, but the work's richness comes from its romance and tragic elements: the human quest for maturity and fulfillment and those uncontrollable forces that undermine the quest and destroy the dream. Malory's use of myth and magic to explore these themes has received extensive scholarly attention, but his views on and thematic use of Christianity have long needed a closer look."

Table of Contents

Prefatory Note Introduction "All maner of good love comyth of God": Malory, God's Grace, and Noble Love by D. Thomas Hanks, Jr. Adulterated Love: The Tragedy of Malory's Lancelot and Guinevere by Corey Olsen Endless Virtue and Trinitarian Prayer in Lancelot's Healing of Urry by Sue Ellen Holbrook Christian Rituals in Malory: The Evidence of Funerals by Karen Cherewatuk Rhetoric, Ritual, and Religious Impulse in Malory's Book 8 by Janet Jesmok Christianity and Social Instability: Malory's Galahad, Palomides, and Lancelot by Dorsey Armstrong Slouching towards Bethlehem: Secularized Salvation in Le Morte Darthur by Fiona Tolhurst Malory's Secular Arthuriad by K. S. Whetter "In my harte I am [not] crystynde": What Can Malory Offer the Nonreligious Reader? by Felicia Nimue Ackerman Bibliography Contributors Index

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    Available at 3 libraries

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