Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Foreword Bonnie Wheeler
- Professor Peter Field: An Appreciation
- 1 The Grail Romances and the Old Law
- 2 What did Robert de Boron really write?
- 3 On Capitalization in Some Early Manuscripts of Wace's Roman de Brut
- 4 Tristan Rossignol: The Development of a Text
- 5 What's in a Name? Arthurian Name-Dropping in the Roman de Waldef
- 6 The Enigma of the Prose Yvain
- 7 Dreams and Visions in the Perlesvaus
- 8 La Reine-Fée in the Roman de Perceforest: Rewriting, Rethinking
- 9 The Relationship between Text and Image in Three Manuscripts of the Estoire del Saint Graal (Lancelot-Grail Cycle)
- 10 Wigalois and Parzival: Father and Son Roles in the German Romance of Gawain's Son
- 11 Reading between the Lines: A Vision of the Arthurian World Reflected in Galician-Portuguese Poetry
- 12 The Lost Beginning of The Jeaste of Syr Gaweyne and the Collation of Bodleian Library MS Douce 261
- 13 Enide's See-through Dress
- 14 A Note on the Percy Folio Grene Knight
- 15 ‘False Friends’ in the Works of the Gawain-Poet
- 16 Place-Names in The Awntyrs Off Arthure: Corruption, Conjecture, Coincidence
- 17 Lancelot as Lover in the English Tradition before Malory
- 18 Malory and Middle English Verse Romance: The Case of Sir Tristrem
- 19 Sir Thomas Malory's (French) Romance and (English) Chronicle
- 20 Romantic Self-Fashioning: Three Case Studies
- 21 Are Further Emendations Necessary? A Note on the Definite and Indefinite Articles in the Winchester Malory
- 22 Lucius's Exhortation in Winchester and The Caxton
- 23 The Historicity of Combat in Le Morte Darthur
- 24 Personal Weapons in Malory's Le Morte Darthur
- 25 ‘now I take uppon me the adventures to seke of holy thynges’: Lancelot and the Crisis of Arthurian Knighthood
- 26 Malory's Language of Love
- 27 P.J.C. Field's Worshipful Revision of Malory: Making a Virtue of Necessity
- 28 Old Sir Thomas Malory‘s Enchanting Book’: A Connecticut Yankee Reads Le Morte Darthur
- P.J.C. Field: Publications
- Notes on Contributors
- Tabula Gratulatoria
20 - Romantic Self-Fashioning: Three Case Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Foreword Bonnie Wheeler
- Professor Peter Field: An Appreciation
- 1 The Grail Romances and the Old Law
- 2 What did Robert de Boron really write?
- 3 On Capitalization in Some Early Manuscripts of Wace's Roman de Brut
- 4 Tristan Rossignol: The Development of a Text
- 5 What's in a Name? Arthurian Name-Dropping in the Roman de Waldef
- 6 The Enigma of the Prose Yvain
- 7 Dreams and Visions in the Perlesvaus
- 8 La Reine-Fée in the Roman de Perceforest: Rewriting, Rethinking
- 9 The Relationship between Text and Image in Three Manuscripts of the Estoire del Saint Graal (Lancelot-Grail Cycle)
- 10 Wigalois and Parzival: Father and Son Roles in the German Romance of Gawain's Son
- 11 Reading between the Lines: A Vision of the Arthurian World Reflected in Galician-Portuguese Poetry
- 12 The Lost Beginning of The Jeaste of Syr Gaweyne and the Collation of Bodleian Library MS Douce 261
- 13 Enide's See-through Dress
- 14 A Note on the Percy Folio Grene Knight
- 15 ‘False Friends’ in the Works of the Gawain-Poet
- 16 Place-Names in The Awntyrs Off Arthure: Corruption, Conjecture, Coincidence
- 17 Lancelot as Lover in the English Tradition before Malory
- 18 Malory and Middle English Verse Romance: The Case of Sir Tristrem
- 19 Sir Thomas Malory's (French) Romance and (English) Chronicle
- 20 Romantic Self-Fashioning: Three Case Studies
- 21 Are Further Emendations Necessary? A Note on the Definite and Indefinite Articles in the Winchester Malory
- 22 Lucius's Exhortation in Winchester and The Caxton
- 23 The Historicity of Combat in Le Morte Darthur
- 24 Personal Weapons in Malory's Le Morte Darthur
- 25 ‘now I take uppon me the adventures to seke of holy thynges’: Lancelot and the Crisis of Arthurian Knighthood
- 26 Malory's Language of Love
- 27 P.J.C. Field's Worshipful Revision of Malory: Making a Virtue of Necessity
- 28 Old Sir Thomas Malory‘s Enchanting Book’: A Connecticut Yankee Reads Le Morte Darthur
- P.J.C. Field: Publications
- Notes on Contributors
- Tabula Gratulatoria
Summary
This chapter explores the proposition that narrators and their characters in romance share with their readers a knowing self-awareness of the genres within which they are placed. It focuses upon three Arthurian examples – Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Malory's stories of Sir Gareth and of the Maid of Astolat – to illustrate how writers employ such awareness to complicate and enrich the reader's response.
When a narrator sends a romance knight on a quest, he commits his hero not only to a journey but to a narrative-genre with whose conventions both knight and reader are familiar. Usually the experience will be comfortable for both, the product of a compact of author, narrator, characters, and reader, providing the hero with no opportunity for doubt, hesitation or self-questioning. But romance is at its most challenging when it scrutinizes its own conventions and confronts its characters with situations that expose the limitations of their seemingly secure codes. In this essay I want to contextualize key moments of self-questioning in three narratives – Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Malory's tales of Sir Gareth and of The Maid of Astolat – and consider their significance for the assessment of the characters and their values.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Arthurian Studies in Honour of P.J.C. Field , pp. 235 - 246Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2004