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

Saturday, September 2, 2023

CFP Merlin (A Roundtable) (in person) (9/15/2023; ICMS May 2024)


Sharing on behalf of the International Arthurian Society, North American Branch:


Merlin (A Roundtable) (in person)

Sponsoring Organization: International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Organizer: Molly A. Martin

The IAS-NAB is sponsoring a roundtable on Merlin at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo next year. We are hoping to have a nice mix of short (5-10 min) papers that look at Merlin in different time periods, different language traditions, different media, etc. If you have thoughts about Merlin and plan to be in Kalamazoo (it is an in-person session), do consider submitting.



Submissions are through the official system (see the CFP here) and are due on September 15.



Let me know if you have any questions (martinma@uindy.edu).



Thanks,

Molly Martin




Tuesday, August 29, 2023

CFP Creating Camelot(s): The Idea of Community in Arthurian Texts (virtual) (9/15/2023; ICMS 5/9-11/2024)

Creating Camelot(s): The Idea of Community in Arthurian Texts (virtual)



Sponsored by Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain and International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)

Organizers: Michael A. Torregrossa and Joseph M. Sullivan


Call for Papers - Please Submit Proposals by 15 September 2023

59th International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)

Hybrid event: Thursday, 9 May, through Saturday, 11 May, 2024


Session Objective



Creating Camelot(s): The Idea of Community in Arthurian Texts (virtual)


Although we often refer to the Matter of Britain as the Arthurian tradition, the figure of King Arthur is merely the center point of the story. The tales are in fact about the community that Arthur builds and the ways those inside it (and outside as well) interact with each other. Through Arthur and those he surrounds himself with, Camelot becomes a living thing, and we experience its birth, maturity, and death, as well as its re-creation across the ages.


In this session, we’d like to highlight the multiple ways that Arthur’s realm has been constructed from the Middle Ages to the present. Submissions can explore the Arthurian legends from across time and/or space as represented through diverse genres and media.


We seek contributions from a range of scholars–those within the disciplines of Arthurian Studies and/or Medieval Studies as well as those in outside fields, including beyond the humanities–as they consider at least one of the following questions:


  • What are the origins of Camelot? How do Arthur’s literary and/or historic predecessors (Ambrosius Aurelius, Arthur of Dal Riada, Constantine, Fionn mac Cumhaill, Lucius Artorius Castus, Riothamus, Uther Pendragon, Vortigern, etc.) influence the creation of his home base? What real locales inspired the idea or site of Camelot?
  • Moving forwards, how has Camelot been built as a physical place whether in the Arthurian past or in post-Arthurian re-creations? What does the site look like? How does it function as a space where individuals live and work?
  • Also, how has Camelot been shaped as a communal space, a location for people to come together in fellowship, and who has been included into this group? In what ways does the community grow and change under Arthur and/or his successors?
  • Alternatively, who has been excluded and/or expelled from the space(s) of Camelot, and in what ways have those individuals dealt with this loss?
  • Similarly, who has been invited to join the community at Camelot but resisted its entreaties and/or rebelled against Arthur and his rule (or that of his successors)? What are the reasons for their rejection of Camelot? How do their actions impact the Arthurian world?
  • Lastly, do those removed from and/or repelled by Camelot ever integrate (or re-integrate) and become part of the community? How does this acceptance shape them and/or the world of Camelot?


Submission Information



All proposals must be submitted into the Confex system at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call by 15 September 2023. You will be prompted to complete sections on Title and Presentation Information, People, Abstract, and Short Description.


Be advised of the following policies of the Congress: “You are invited to make one paper proposal to one session of papers. This may be to one of the Sponsored or Special Sessions of Papers, which are organized by colleagues around the world, OR to the General Sessions of Papers, which are organized by the Program Committee in Kalamazoo. You may propose an unlimited number of roundtable contributions. However, you will not be scheduled as an active participant (as a paper presenter, roundtable discussant, presider, respondent, workshop leader, or performer) in more than three sessions.”.



Thank you for your interest in our session. Please address questions and/or concerns to the organizers at KingArthurForever2000@gmail.com.


For more information on the Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain, please visit our website at https://KingArthurForever.blogspot.com/.


For more information on the International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB), please visit our website at https://www.international-arthurian-society-nab.org/ and consider becoming a member of our organization.



.

Thursday, August 17, 2023

CFP Re-Creating Camelot? Community-Building in Arthurian Studies (A Roundtable) (virtual) (9/15/2023; ICMS 5/9-11/2024)


Re-Creating Camelot? Community-Building in Arthurian Studies (A Roundtable) (virtual)



Sponsored by Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain and International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)

Organizers: Michael A. Torregrossa and Joseph M. Sullivan


Call for Papers - Please Submit Proposals by 15 September 2023

59th International Congress on Medieval Studies

Western Michigan University (Kalamazoo, Michigan)

Hybrid event: Thursday, 9 May, through Saturday, 11 May, 2024


See the shared Google Doc for the full call with a list of suggested resources on the topic: https://tinyurl.com/Re-Creating-Camelot-ICMS-2024.



Panel Objective



Re-Creating Camelot? Community-Building in Arthurian Studies (A Roundtable) (virtual)


Building off our sponsored session idea on Creating Camelot(s): The Idea of Community in Arthurian Texts, we’d like, also, this year at Kalamazoo to highlight in a roundtable format the ways that Arthurian enthusiasts and scholars have come together over the ages outside of fiction and strived to establish aspects of Camelot as reality in our/their world.


Questions to guide our conversations include:


  • How have the Arthurian legends influenced and inspired the formation of groups seeking to continue the work of the fellowship of the Round Table and/or help us to promote the Matter of Britain?
  • How—both in positive and negative ways—has the Matter of Britain been adapted, appropriated, compressed, expanded, and/or transformed by these new communities?
  • Ultimately, how have these communities succeeded in reviving the legends? In what ways could they do/have done better?


Presentations could focus on historic events and/or groups as well as current academic activities, organizations, and publications.


Some possible examples:


  • Brands/companies (King Arthur Flour). .
  • Classroom activities
  • Collection development (Bangor, Newberry Library, Rochester)
  • Fandoms (Merlin tv series)
  • Fanfiction communities (Merlin tv series)
  • Gaming/roleplaying communities
  • Labor organizations
  • Online communities (ArthurNet)
  • Organizations (International Arthurian Society, IAS regional branches, MLA’s Arthurian Discussion Group, PCA’s Arthurian Legends Area)
  • Outreach pursuits (conferences, symposia)
  • Propaganda (medieval and/or post-medieval)
  • Scholarly endeavors (Arthurian Literature, Arthuriana, Avalon to Camelot, book series, The Camelot Project, collections, special editions, special issues, sub-fields of Arthurian Studies)
  • Wiki/Wikia building
  • Youth groups



Please see the shared Google Doc for the full call with a list of suggested resources for examples of previous scholarship on our theme: https://tinyurl.com/Re-Creating-Camelot-ICMS-2024.



Submission Information



All proposals must be submitted into the Confex system at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress/call by 15 September 2023. You will be prompted to complete sections on Title and Presentation Information, People, Abstract, and Short Description.


Be advised of the following policies of the Congress: “You are invited to make one paper proposal to one session of papers. This may be to one of the Sponsored or Special Sessions of Papers, which are organized by colleagues around the world, OR to the General Sessions of Papers, which are organized by the Program Committee in Kalamazoo. You may propose an unlimited number of roundtable contributions. However, you will not be scheduled as an active participant (as a paper presenter, roundtable discussant, presider, respondent, workshop leader, or performer) in more than three sessions.”.



Thank you for your interest in our session. Please address questions and/or concerns to the organizers at KingArthurForever2000@gmail.com.



For more information on the Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain, please visit our website at https://KingArthurForever.blogspot.com/.


For more information on the International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB), please visit our website at https://www.international-arthurian-society-nab.org/ and consider becoming a member of our organization.

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

CFP History, Romance, Fantasy, and Others: The Blending of Genres in Arthuriana (9/15/2023; ICMS 5/9-11/2024)

ICMS CFP: History, Romance, Fantasy, and Others: The Blending of Genres in Arthuriana


Posted on August 5, 2023 by lhaught

Source: https://medievalisms.org/icms-cfp-history-romance-fantasy-and-others-the-blending-of-genres-in-arthuriana/.


History, Romance, Fantasy, and Others: The Blending of Genres in Arthuriana


Contact Person: Rachael Warmington; rachael.warmington@shu.edu

Delivery Mode: Traditional in-person

Principal Sponsoring Organization: International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)

The blending of genres in medieval Arthuriana signifies a crucial evolution in storytelling. These blended narratives resonate with contemporary audiences, fostering renewed interest in Arthuriana. As cultural norms shift, this intermingling of genres enables nuanced discussions of identity, ethics, and social roles. Additionally, these blended genres make possible reimaginations of the narratives that offer relevant and profound explorations of the human condition which foster a dialogue between the past and present. The diversity and hybridity of Arthuriana, particularly in chronicles, romances, and fantasies, align with contemporary literary tastes, enabling greater accessibility, relevance, and inclusivity.

Deadline for New Submissions: Friday, September 15, 2023; abstracts must be submitted through the ICMS website for consideration.

Friday, April 7, 2023

Coming Soon - Broadview Anthology of Medieval Arthurian Literature

The Broadview Anthology of Medieval Arthurian Literature

Edited by: Kathy Cawsey; Elizabeth Edwards

For further details and ordering information, see the publisher's site at this link.

Print Publication Date: September 15, 2023
eBook Publication Date: August 15, 2023
ISBN: 9781554815975 / 1554815975
500 pages; 7¾" x 9¼

PrintUS $49.95
Ebook will also be available for purchase upon publication.


Description

The Broadview Anthology of Medieval Arthurian Literature offers an up-to-date and student-friendly approach to teaching the literature of the Arthurian tradition. With a team of contributing editors creating new translations of classic texts, and a distinctive balance of familiar and lesser-known Arthur legends, the anthology is an authoritative and highly teachable resource. A companion website allows for greater flexibility without expanding the print book, and helpful introductions and notes support student readers throughout the anthology.


Contents



Readings listed in green are included on the anthology’s companion website.

1. Front matter
a. Acknowledgements & Thanks
b. List of figures
c. Abbreviations
d. Timeline

2. General Introduction

3. Texts
a. Welsh poetry
i. Early Welsh texts
ii. Priddeu Annwn
b. Early Latin texts
c. Culhwch and Olwen
d. Geoffrey of Monmouth
i. Deeds of the British
Book 8
Stonehenge and the Crowning of Uther Pendragon
Uther and Igerna
The Death of Uther
Book 9
The Crowning of Arthur
Arthur fights the Saxons
Arthur marries Guinevere
Peacetime passtimes
Emperor Lucius
Book 10
Arthur’s Dream
Giant of Mont St. Michel
Various battles with Rome
Mordred’s Betrayal
Book 11
Arthur and Mordred
ii. Vita Merlini
e. Wace – Brut
i. 8565-8822: Uther and Ygerne; conception, disguise, Merlin.
ii. 9587-9798: Arthur’s court and the Round Table
iii. 9905-10104: the Conquest of France and the defeat of Frollo.
iv. 10437-10954: Arthur’s coronation to the arrival of the Roman ambassadors
v. 11173-11188: Modret’s adulterous desire for the Queen.
vi. 11239-11606: Arthur’s dream and the Giant of Mont St Michel
vii. 13010-13298: Mordred, Guinevere, and the Death of Arthur
f. Chrétien de Troyes – The Knight of the Cart
g. Marie de France
i. Lanval
ii. Chevrefoil
h. Lai of Melion
i. Béroul – Tristan
i. The Ambiguous Oath
ii. King Arthur’s Court
iii. The Malpas
j. Layamon – Brut
k. Gunnlaugr Leifsson – Merlínússpá
l. Wolfram von Eschenbach – Parzival
m. Lancelot-Grail cycle
Lancelot
i. Lancelot’s arrival at court
ii. beginning of the love affair with Guinevere,
iii. Sir Galahalt the Haut Prince
iv. Galahalt’s suicide from grief.
Holy Grail
i. Galahad’s arrival at court
ii. beginning of the quest
iii. Bors’ quest
iv. end of the quest in Sarras.
n. Heldris of Cornwall – Roman de Silence
i. Nature vs. Nurture
ii. Merlin sections
o. Morien
p. Melech Artus
q. Alliterative Morte Arthure
r. Geoffrey Chaucer – “Wife of Bath’s Tale”
s. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (parallel text)
i. Modern English
ii. Middle English
t. Stanzaic Morte Arthur
u. Thomas Chestre – Sir Launfal
v. Hans Rosenplüt – The Crown
w. Prose Merlin
i. Conception of Merlin
ii. Uther & Ygerne
iii. Merlin & Nimiane
x. The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle
y. The Old Knight
z. Thomas Malory – Le Morte Darthur
1. Tale I
i. Uther & Igraine
ii. Sword in the Stone
iii. The Wedding & Round Table
iv. Pentecostal Oath
v. Merlin & Nenyve
vi. Arthur & Accolon
vii. Pelleas & Ettarde
2. Tale V
i. Palomides
3. Tale VI
i. Galahad’s arrival
4. Tale VII
i. Elaine of Ascolat
ii. Knight of the Cart
iii. The Tale of Sir Urry
5. Tale VIII
i. Rumours
ii. War with Lancelot
iii. Mordred
iv. Death of Arthur
vi. Death of Guinevere & Lancelot


Companion Website


A companion website will provide additional readings to supplement those in the print book.



Editors



Kathy Cawsey is Associate Professor of English at Dalhousie University. Elizabeth Edwards is Professor of English at the University of King’s College, Halifax.




Sunday, April 2, 2023

Sponsored Session Kalamazoo 2023



Pleased to announce the schedule for our sponsored session this year at Kalamazoo. The full program and registration information can be found on the conference website at this link




58th International Congress on Medieval Studies

Saturday, May 13

10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. EDT

345 Virtual

Accessing Avalon Today: Best Practices for Connecting Contemporary Readers to Arthurian Texts Online (A Roundtable)

Sponsor: Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain

Presider: Carl B. Sell, Univ. of Pittsburgh

Organizer: Michael A. Torregrossa, Bristol Community College



A roundtable discussion with Megan B. Abrahamson, Central New Mexico Community College; Tirumular (Drew) Narayanan, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison; and Anna Czarnowus, Univ. of Silesia


Saturday, February 18, 2023

JIAS 2022

Apologies for having missed posting this sooner.


The latest issue of the Journal of the International Arthurian Society was released in the fall of 2022 as a special issue on Arthurian Medievalism. It includes studies on comics, fiction, and film. Copies of the journal are sent to members of the society, and access to individual articles is possible through the publisher De Gruyter through the links below. 


Volume 10 Issue 1

Issue of Journal of the International Arthurian Society

CONTENTS
JOURNAL OVERVIEW

Contents

Publicly Available September 8, 2022

Titelseiten

Page range: i-iv
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Editorial

Leah Tether, Samantha J. Rayner
Page range: 1-2
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Guest Editors’ Foreword: Arthurian Medievalism

Andrew B. R. Elliott, Renée Ward
Page range: 3-4
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Desire, Consent and Misogyny in Post-medieval Adaptations of the Pelleas and Ettarde Story

Hannah Piercy
Page range: 5-28
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Notes Towards a Close Reading of David Lowery’s 2021 Film The Green Knight

Kevin J. Harty
Page range: 29-51
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

‘An Ancient Procession’: Memory, Myth and Movement in Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant

Alexie Labrom
Page range: 52-72
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Restorying Arthurian Legend: Space, Place and Time in Once & Future and Legendborn

Elizabeth Elliott
Page range: 73-93
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Deviant Characters and the Limits of Inventio in ‘Le Chevalier et la Charrette’

Karen Casebier
Page range: 94-113
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Obituary
Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Geoffrey Ashe (1923–2022)

Scott Lloyd
Page range: 114-115
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Simon Gaunt (1959–2021)

Thomas Hinton
Page range: 116-121
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Willem Pieter Gerritsen (1935–2019)

Bart Besamusca
Page range: 122-125
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Douglas Kelly (1934–2022)

Keith Busby
Page range: 126-128
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Angus Johnston Kennedy (1940–2021)

Nadia Margolis
Page range: 129-133
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Nigel F. Palmer (1946–2022)

Almut Suerbaum
Page range: 134-137
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Open Access September 8, 2022

Ursula Schulze (1936–2020)

Ricarda Bauschke-Hartung
Page range: 138-139
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Fiona Tolhurst (1968–2021)

K. S. Whetter
Page range: 140-142
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Notices
Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

Biennial JIAS Essay Prize Competition 2023

Page range: 143-143
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Requires Authentication September 8, 2022

XXVIIth International Arthurian Congress, Aix-en-Provence, France, 11–18 July 2024

Page range: 144-145
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Arthuriana Fall 2022

Sorry for being late on this.

Here are the contents from the last number of Arthuriana for Fall 2022.

Subscriptions can be ordered from the journal home page accessible at this link. The journal can also be accessed from Project MUSE and JSTOR if you have access to an institutional subscription.



Table of Contents
(32.3)


Safe Behind Doors? Sleep Deprivation in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight 3

Kristin L. Bovaird-Abbo



Exploration of Rationality: Der Stricker’s Contributions to the Intellectual Revolution in the Thirteenth Century, or, the Transformation of the Arthurian World

Albrecht Classen



Seminal Semiotics and Pornographic Displeasures in David Lowery’s The Green Knight (2021) 41

Tison Pugh



‘First You Get the Money’: Anachronism, Brexit, and King Arthur in Lavie Tidhar’s By Force Alone

Stephanie Russo



In Memoriam: Robert Simpson 75

Alan Lupack, Barbara Tepa Lupack, and Kevin J. Harty



———————————————————————————————————

REVIEWS

Stephanie L. Batkie, Matthew W. Irvin, and Lynn Shutters, eds., A New Companion to Critical Thinking on Chaucer

Kevin J. Harty



A.S.G. Edwards, ed., Medieval Romance, Arthurian Literature: Essays in Honour of Elizabeth Archibald

K.S. Whetter



Maud Burnett McInerney, Translation and Temporality in Benoît de Sainte-Maure’s Roman de Troie

Sylvia Federico



Annegret Oehme, He Should Have Listened to His Wife! The Construction of Women’s Roles in German and Yiddish Pre-Modern ‘Wigalois’ Adaptations

Evelyn Meyer



Myra Seaman, Objects of Affection: The Book and the Household in Late Medieval England

Megan G. Leitch