Arthuriana 23.3 (Fall 2013)
III. Grails, Innocents, and Apocalypses
Verse and Prose in the Continuations of Chrétien de Troyes’ Conte du Graal
Massimiliano Gaggero
The Communication of Culture: Speech and the ‘Grail’ Procession in Historia Peredur vab Efrawc
A. Joseph McMullen
Jessie Weston and the Green Knight
Daniel Nastali
King Arthur and His Knights for Edwardian Children
Velma Bourgeois Richmond
Envisioning the End: History and Consciousness in Medieval English
Arthurian Romance
Jon Whitman
REVIEWS
Susan Aronstein, An Introduction to British Arthurian Narrative
Siân Echard
Paul Battles, ed., Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Michael W. Twomey
Lawrence Besserman, Biblical Paradigms in Medieval English Literature:
From Cædmon to Malory
Mary Davy Behrman
John M. Bowers, An Introduction to the Gawain Poet
Ad Putter
Nigel Bryant, trans., Perceforest: The Prehistory of King Arthur’s Britain
Karen Casebier
Neil Cartlidge, ed., Heroes and Anti-Heroes in Medieval Romance
Raluca l. Radulescu
C. Stephen Jaeger, ed., Magnificence and the Sublime in Medieval Aesthetics: Art, Architecture, Literature, Music
Tara Williams
Catherine Nall, Reading and War in Fifteenth-Century England: From Lydgate to Malory
Thomas H. Crofts
John A. Pitcher, Chaucer’s Feminine Subjects: Figures of Desire in the
Canterbury Tales
Giselle Gos
Seiji Shinkawa, Unhistorical Gender Assignment in La3amon’s Brut: A Case Study of a Late Stage in the Development of Grammatical Gender toward its Ultimate Loss
Mary Niepokuj ]
J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fall of Arthur
Shaun F.D. Hughes
Christopher A. Synder
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