The continuous interest in medieval literature, history and culture, has resulted in a significant number of works on medievalism. Medievalism, however, has many faces, which range from motifs and themes loosely connected with the Middle Ages, to works set in the period. This book explores all such diverse aspects of medievalism and attempts to show the different ways in which consecutive literary periods appropriated medieval literature and culture.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Contents: Marcin Cieniuch: Layers of fictionality. Reading Victorian medievalism in A. S. Byatt s Possession Lindsay Clarke: The alchemy of imagination Anna Czarnowus: Artificial discourse of national belonging: the case of Anglo-Saxonism Jacek Fabiszak: The gender of the Vice: from the Medieval she-vice to the Renaissance she-villain in Shakespeare s Macbeth Keiko Hamaguchi: Rewriting Arthurian legends in Soseki: «Kairoko» and Malory ukasz Hudomi t: The portrayal of (d)evil in Iris Murdoch s The Flight from the Enchanter, A Fairly Honourable Defeat and The Time of the Angels Dagmara Krzy aniak: Medieval dramatic tradition revisited in Peter Barnes Red noses Joanna Maciulewicz: Translations and imitations of medieval texts in Neoclassicism: Chaucer as a «rough diamond» that «must first be polished ere he shines» Ma gorzata Milczarek: The witch in English literature: negotiation of power and gender politics Hans Sauer: Teaching the English Middle Ages of film - possibilities, problems, perspectives Agnieszka Setecka: Alfred Tennyson s «Vivien» and «Guinevere»: sensation stories in medieval setting Liliana Sikorska: The alchemy of love: Representing desire in a medievalist (con)text. Lindsay Clarke s The Chymical Wedding Anna Warmuz: Medieval bestiaries and modern beasts - the making of beast fables in contemporary literature Andrzej Wicher: Some Boethian and ecclesiological themes in C.S. Lewis s Screwtape Letters W adys aw Witalisz: Blind Hary s The Wallace and Mel Gibson s Braveheart: what do medieval romance and Hollywood film have in common?