The latest number of Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching (20.2) includes the following essays of interest:
CRYSTAL HALL Orlando Furioso: The Board Game
MOLLY MARTIN Malory’s Launcelot and Gwenyver in the Twenty-First-Century Classroom
KAROLYN KINANE Arthurian Legends in General Education: An Example of Student-Centered Pedagogy
As always, SMART can be ordered direct at http://webs.wichita.edu/?u=smart.
Welcome to King Arthur Forever: The Matter of Britain Lives, a blog sponsored by The Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain. Our mission, first laid out in 2000, is to embrace the full corpus of the Arthurian tradition and to promote study, discussion, and debate of representations of the legends in all their forms as produced from the Middle Ages through the contemporary moment (and beyond).
To me, methought, who waited with a crowd,
There came a bark that, blowing forward, bore
King Arthur, like a modern gentleman
Of stateliest port; and all the people cried,
"Arthur is come again: he cannot die."
"Morte d'Arthur" (1842)
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
There came a bark that, blowing forward, bore
King Arthur, like a modern gentleman
Of stateliest port; and all the people cried,
"Arthur is come again: he cannot die."
"Morte d'Arthur" (1842)
Alfred, Lord Tennyson
Saturday, November 16, 2013
New in SMART Fall 2013
Posted by
Blog Editor, The Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture
at
2:14 PM
No comments:
Labels:
Guinevere,
Lancelot,
New/Recent Scholarship,
Pedagogy,
Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)