The Historia Regum Brittaniae of Geoffrey of Monmouth is one of the most influential works of Medieval English literature and historiography, and incorporates both genealogical and romance narrative. In this paper, I will first attempt to provide a general overview of the context of the Historia Regum Britanniae, including the debate about its historicity. Then I will adapt Laura Barefield’s discussion of gender within the work to a textual analysis of two romance episodes featuring two very different rulers: the founding patriarch Brutus and the lustful usurper Vortigern. I argue that the unambiguous establishment of the noble character of the former and the wicked character of the latter early on in their respective narratives are extreme...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
This essay explores how female characters in historical literature written in high to late medieval ...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
This study concerns how historical narrative is formed in Shakespeare\u27s second tetralogy, Richard...
This study concerns how historical narrative is formed in Shakespeare\u27s second tetralogy, Richard...
The paper presents literary images of medieval women in four Middle English romances, viz. King Horn...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
This research explores the depiction of the nobility in ten romances composed in the thirteenth, fou...
In presenting a mythical establishment of British and English nationhood that is one of the most pop...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
This essay explores how female characters in historical literature written in high to late medieval ...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth-century French prose romance Mélusine survives in the major vernacula...
This study concerns how historical narrative is formed in Shakespeare\u27s second tetralogy, Richard...
This study concerns how historical narrative is formed in Shakespeare\u27s second tetralogy, Richard...
The paper presents literary images of medieval women in four Middle English romances, viz. King Horn...
This dissertation examines a series of specific problems affecting England's queens regnant, which a...
This research explores the depiction of the nobility in ten romances composed in the thirteenth, fou...
In presenting a mythical establishment of British and English nationhood that is one of the most pop...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation examines the relationship between chronicl...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...