International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest of the Breton lays the literary character as such can be seen to emerge, this article goes further to remark that women are the roundest characters. It aims to point out the potentially innovative take of research writers who have applied some of the methods of gender and post-colonial studies to the study of theses medieval texts, considering that the lays, especially those that are adapted translations from Marie de France, are the produce of the ‘post-conquest’ socio-cultural context, in all its lasting complexity. For example, the influence of Bernard de Clairvaux, and especially his notion of the fortis femina (strong woman) offers a pot...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Love is usually said to be the central concern of the Middle English Breton lays, as of the French o...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
Starting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest of the Breton lays the...
Starting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest of the Breton lays the...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
The Middle English Breton Lays edited by Anne Laskaya and Eve Salisbury (1995) were written between ...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Love is usually said to be the central concern of the Middle English Breton lays, as of the French o...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
International audienceStarting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest ...
Starting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest of the Breton lays the...
Starting from the fact that in the time gap between the oldest and the newest of the Breton lays the...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This dissertation employs Lacanian psychoanalysis and feminist theory to consider five of the Middle...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
This study considers the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Sir Orfeo from a new critical per...
The Middle English Breton Lays edited by Anne Laskaya and Eve Salisbury (1995) were written between ...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Constructing the Female Subject in Anglo-Norman, Middle English and Medieval Irish Romance Giselle G...
Love is usually said to be the central concern of the Middle English Breton lays, as of the French o...