Chronicled in two medieval novels, by Jean d'Arras and Coudrette, at the turn of the 15th century, the story of Melusine is that of the fairy who founded the Lusignan family. When she marries Raymondin, he promises not to insist on seeing her on Saturdays. But here we see him discovering the secret of Melusine, half-woman half-snake, leading to her transformation into a dragon and her departure from this world. Blending ancient myths of aquatic fertility with Christian morality, the medieval fairy is ambivalent, bestial and even diabolical, symbolizing feminine duplicity, but also a provider and an exemplary mother. The age of women in fantasy has evolved and their link with dragons is now more highly valued, as in Anne McCaffrey's Dragonri...
The legend of Mélusine examined in a pan-European context. Readers have long been fascinated by t...
abstract: Medieval European manuscripts contain a wealth of diverse and imaginative collections of i...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
International audienceMetamorphosis lies at the heart of the Melusinian legend. It concerns the pass...
International audienceMetamorphosis lies at the heart of the Melusinian legend. It concerns the pass...
Hybrid, demonic women have shown up in various literary forms since ancient Greece; however, in the ...
Melusine's husband could not resist the forbidden fruit: he had to see, follow, know. That turned ou...
By comparing the European literary character Melusine with her Chinese counterpart Madam White, my t...
By comparing the European literary character Melusine with her Chinese counterpart Madam White, my t...
In contemporary theory and artistic representation, the grotesque is understood as a creative space ...
International audienceThe deeply medieval Melusine echoes several ancient characters and her story s...
International audienceThe deeply medieval Melusine echoes several ancient characters and her story s...
Melusine’s Footprint: Tracing the Legacy of a Medieval Myth offers nineteen new critical essays from...
Melusine, a snake-woman forced to flee her home after her true identity was revealed, remains a moth...
Jean d’Arras’s splendid late fourteenth-century prose romance Melusine – written for Jean de Berry, ...
The legend of Mélusine examined in a pan-European context. Readers have long been fascinated by t...
abstract: Medieval European manuscripts contain a wealth of diverse and imaginative collections of i...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...
International audienceMetamorphosis lies at the heart of the Melusinian legend. It concerns the pass...
International audienceMetamorphosis lies at the heart of the Melusinian legend. It concerns the pass...
Hybrid, demonic women have shown up in various literary forms since ancient Greece; however, in the ...
Melusine's husband could not resist the forbidden fruit: he had to see, follow, know. That turned ou...
By comparing the European literary character Melusine with her Chinese counterpart Madam White, my t...
By comparing the European literary character Melusine with her Chinese counterpart Madam White, my t...
In contemporary theory and artistic representation, the grotesque is understood as a creative space ...
International audienceThe deeply medieval Melusine echoes several ancient characters and her story s...
International audienceThe deeply medieval Melusine echoes several ancient characters and her story s...
Melusine’s Footprint: Tracing the Legacy of a Medieval Myth offers nineteen new critical essays from...
Melusine, a snake-woman forced to flee her home after her true identity was revealed, remains a moth...
Jean d’Arras’s splendid late fourteenth-century prose romance Melusine – written for Jean de Berry, ...
The legend of Mélusine examined in a pan-European context. Readers have long been fascinated by t...
abstract: Medieval European manuscripts contain a wealth of diverse and imaginative collections of i...
For medieval audiences women occupied a specific, designated cultural area which, while they could ...