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

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Arthuriana Spring 2025 Now Available and Open Access

The previous number of Arthuriana, volume 35, number 1, for Spring 2025, is now available and can be read for free as open-access content from Project MUSE at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/54796

This is a special "crossover" issue with the journal's Public Humanities Project, The So What, and guest edited by Jonathan F. Correa Reyes. 

Subscriptions are also available at https://www.arthuriana.com/subscribe.  


Table of Contents 

(35.1)

Medieval Studies as a Public Good

Jonathan F. Correa Reyes                                                                                                                               


Couverture: Transing the Medieval Manuscript

Christopher T. Richards


Love and Tales: A Bridge Between the Heart and Culture

Mario Martín Páez


De Amore, Game of Thrones, and Imagining Violence in the Twelfth and Twenty-First Centuries

Elizabeth Liendo


Concocting a Seat at the Roundtable: Arthurian Legend, Historical Genealogy, and the Making of Empire in Tudor and Stuart England

Alexander Lowe Mcadams


From Chile to Camelot: Reception of the Arthurian Arc of Mampato and Ogú

Jonathan F. Correa Reyes and Camila Gutiérrez


Medievalism and (White) Nationalism: From Ossian to Today

Vanessa K. Iacocca 


Unexpected Swords in the Stone

Brenna Duperron


Winner of the 2024 ‘Fair Unknown’ Award

Worshyp and Noyse: Emotional Communities and Chivalric Identity in Malory’s Morte Darthur

Victoria E. Dikeman


The Round Table: News from the North American Branch


REVIEWS

Mary Bateman, Local Place and the Arthurian Tradition in England and Wales 1400–1700

Dwayne C. Coleman  


Eleanor Johnson, Waste and the Wasters: Poetry and Ecosystemic Thought in Medieval England

Andrew M. Richmond


Michel Pastoureau, Dernière visite chez le Roi Arthur. Histoire d’un premier livre

Richard Utz


Tison Pugh, Bad Chaucer: The Great Poet’s Greatest Mistakes in the Canterbury Tales

Alex Mueller  


Usha Vishnuvajjala, Feminist Medievalism: Embodiment and Vulnerability in Literature and Film

Virginia Blanton  


John Withrington, ed., The Arthurian Texts of the Percy Folio

Theresa M. Kenney


Arthuriana Summer 2025 Out Now (and Open-Access)

The latest number of Arthuriana, volume 35, number 2, for Summer 2025, is now available and can be read for free as open-access content from Project MUSE at https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/55177

Subscriptions are also available at https://www.arthuriana.com/subscribe.  


Table of Contents 

(35.2)

Sensory Reading Practices: Touching the Pages of Manchester, John Rylands Library MS French 1

Martha Claire Baldon                                                                                                                           


Sound, Song, and Silence in Le Conte du Papegau

Juliana M. Chapman


Mother-Quest: Maternal Remembrance and the Holy Grail in Chrétien de Troyes and Nicola Griffith

Brian J. Sheerin


Courtly Lovers and Bad Mothers: Foreign Queens in the Auchinleck Of Arthour and Of Merlin

Caitlin G. Watt


REVIEWS

Heather A. Badamo, Saint George Between Empires: Image and Encounter in the Medieval East

Jonathan Good  


Toby Clements, A Good Deliverance

Kenneth Hodges


Jonathan Fruoco, ed., Unveiling the Green Knight 

Kevin J. Harty


Michael Johnston, The Middle English Book: Scribes and Readers, 1350–1500

Sebastian Sobecki  


Patrick Sims-Williams, The Medieval Welsh Englynion y Beddau

Barry J. Lewis