Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne is one of the earliest extant Robin Hood ballads. It is also one of the most grisly of the medieval outlaw tales, with a total of five deaths and several intense moments of violence connected directly to Robin, especially his decapitation, disfigurement and flaying of the bounty hunter Guy of Gisborne’s body. The cultural meaning of Robin’s violence and his treatment of Guy’s body resides in the animal skin (a horse hide) the bounty hunter wears. As this study demonstrates, the hide carries a series of identities, some of which transgress species boundaries and, through their connections to social mobility and monetary economies, also transgress class boundaries. Guy’s appropriation of the hide, and, thus, of ...
This thesis examines the representation of the three estates of medieval society in the early Robin ...
This paper examines six recent retellings of Robin Hood and concentrates on the representation of cl...
In a famous scene in a medieval Robin Hood rhyme, Robin invites the king, who is disguised as a monk...
Stephen Knight, Reading Robin Hood, Content, form and reception in the outlaw myth, Manchester Unive...
This article discusses the extent to which ‘gang-culture’ can be seen as central to the social world...
In this article, the topos of ‘The Noble Robber’, created by Eric Hobsbawm, the British historian, i...
In his book, Robin Hood: An Historical Enquiry, John Bellamy asserts that the lack of a study of the...
The Robin Hood tradition has had a continuing appeal from the middle ages to the present day, the he...
Robin Hood riding home from crusade seems a default opening to modern Sherwood stories, especially i...
In medieval England the outlaw was both an outcast from society while at the same time he was also a...
As we can see, the researchers and history have produced plenty of Robin Hoods. There are various Ro...
Eighteenth century criminal biography is a topic that has been explored at length by both crime hist...
This thesis examines the changing representations of England’s most famous outlaw, Robin Hood, durin...
1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill.Contains 1 illustration.Date of publication taken from Wing (2nd ed.)Imperfec...
The most common representation of Robin Hood is the popular culture portrayal of a noble outlaw who ...
This thesis examines the representation of the three estates of medieval society in the early Robin ...
This paper examines six recent retellings of Robin Hood and concentrates on the representation of cl...
In a famous scene in a medieval Robin Hood rhyme, Robin invites the king, who is disguised as a monk...
Stephen Knight, Reading Robin Hood, Content, form and reception in the outlaw myth, Manchester Unive...
This article discusses the extent to which ‘gang-culture’ can be seen as central to the social world...
In this article, the topos of ‘The Noble Robber’, created by Eric Hobsbawm, the British historian, i...
In his book, Robin Hood: An Historical Enquiry, John Bellamy asserts that the lack of a study of the...
The Robin Hood tradition has had a continuing appeal from the middle ages to the present day, the he...
Robin Hood riding home from crusade seems a default opening to modern Sherwood stories, especially i...
In medieval England the outlaw was both an outcast from society while at the same time he was also a...
As we can see, the researchers and history have produced plenty of Robin Hoods. There are various Ro...
Eighteenth century criminal biography is a topic that has been explored at length by both crime hist...
This thesis examines the changing representations of England’s most famous outlaw, Robin Hood, durin...
1 sheet ([1] p.) : ill.Contains 1 illustration.Date of publication taken from Wing (2nd ed.)Imperfec...
The most common representation of Robin Hood is the popular culture portrayal of a noble outlaw who ...
This thesis examines the representation of the three estates of medieval society in the early Robin ...
This paper examines six recent retellings of Robin Hood and concentrates on the representation of cl...
In a famous scene in a medieval Robin Hood rhyme, Robin invites the king, who is disguised as a monk...