First published in 1995. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
The Legacy of Chrétien de Troyes: Chrétien et ses contemporains. Ed. Norris J. Lacy, Douglas Kelly, and Keith Busby. 2 vols. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1987. II: 111–124. Cartlidge, Neil. “Masters in the Art of Lying?
He has published extensively on me- dieval literature and medieval poetics. Among his recent books are The Art of Medieval French Romance (Wisconsin, 1992); Medieval French Romance (Twayne, 1993); Internal Difference and Meanings in the ...
Le film , dont le tournage débute en Espagne en 1938 , est achevé en France en 1939 où il donne lieu à des projections privées ; sa diffusion publique commence après la guerre , en 1945 . Alexander the Great , 1956 , un “ peplum ...
Other holidays taught or reminded medieval Christians of aspects of their faith. In not a few cases festivals that in the Middle Ages were Christian in nature had been pagan in origin and, thus, did both. Following the advice that Pope ...
A paramount concern has been to determine precisely what Tristan carved upon the hazel branch. Line 54, 'De sun cutel escrit sun nun' (with his knife he wrote his name), appears quite explicit, but the matter is complicated by a ...
InGender and Text in the Later Middle Ages. Ed. Jane Chance. Gainesville: University Press ofFlorida, 1996. Pp. 96–131. Rockwell, Paul Vincent.Rewriting Resemblance in Medieval French Romance:Ceci n'est pasungraal.
Like all the other romances of the cycle , the Estoire uses the technique of rewriting , but to such an extent that ... The Art of Medieval French Romance ( Madison , 1992 ) ; Paul Vincent Rockwell , Rewriting Resemblance in Medieval ...
Questioning the Comparative in Medieval Castile Cynthia Robinson, Leyla Rouhi ... 1967); for a study of resemblance as a vehicle for intertextual rewriting, see Paul Vincent Rockwell, Rewriting Resemblance in Medieval French Romance.
Gaunt, Simon, Gender and Genre in Medieval French Literature (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1995). ———, Love and Death in Medieval French and Occitan Courtly Literature: Martyrs to Love (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2006). ———, and Sarah Kay, eds., ...
Gerald O'Daly notes that "Augustine distinguishes (De civitate Dei 14.9) between two senses of 'fear': (a) the ordinary language ... see Robert McMahon, Augustine's Prayerful Ascent (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1989), 1-155.