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Tasso on Spenser: The Politics of Chivalric Romance

The Yearbook of English Studies, 1991
Abstract: Originally published in volume 21 of the Yearbook of English Studies (1991), this essay considers the relationship between Tasso’s Jerusalem Delivered (1581) and Spenser’s Faerie Queene (1590), and the ways in which the former can be an aid to interpretation of the latter.
R. Helgerson
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Chivalric Romance and Novella Collections

Oxford Scholarship Online, 2018
This chapter argues that the sixteenth-century novella collection and chivalric romance have much in common. However, their length, status as translations, and multiple authorships have rendered their comparison difficult and have limited their role in studies of pre-novelistic fiction until relatively recently.
H. Moore
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2. The Survival of English Chivalric Romances, in Shakespearean Tragedy as Chivalric Romance, 2nd ed

2014
Chapter 2: The Survival of English Chivalric Romances provides an account of the documentary evidence of manuscripts, entries, printings, and adaptations which detail the survival of English chivalric romances. The discussion considers other cultural artifacts and related literary kinds which include materials from the tradition of these romances in ...
Michael L. Hays
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THE “OTHER WORLD” IMAGE SPECIFIC IN THE FRENCH CHIVALRIC ROMANCE OF THE 12TH - 13TH CENTURIES

Folklore: structure, typology, semiotics, 2022
On the material of the novels by Chretien de Troyes (“Cliges”, “Perceval”), the anonymous “Floir and Blanchetflore” and “The Beautiful Stranger” by René de Beaujeu the article examines the basic parameters of marking, the specific features and the ...
Marina A. Abramova
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“[S]inne Shalle be no Shame, but Wurshipe to Man”: The Role of Chivalry and Chivalric Romance in Julian of Norwich’s Soteriology

, 2020
Julian of Norwich, fourteenth-century English visionary and vernacular theologian, asserts that “sinne shalle be no shame, but wurshipe to man”. These opposing concepts of “shame” and “wurshipe” have theological but also chivalric connotations, which I ...
Maria Prozesky
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Milton's Chivalric Tragedy: The Persistence of Romance in Book 9 of Paradise Lost

Milton studies, 2020
:Milton's most consequential statement regarding his plans for an Arthurian epic occurs in the proem to book 9 of Paradise Lost, in which he seemingly refuses to debase his current project with the trivialities of chivalric romance.
T. Cook
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