1st Edition

Arthurian Literature and Christianity Notes from the Twentieth Century

Edited By Peter Meister Copyright 1999
    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    376 Pages
    by Routledge

    Intended as "the other bookend" to Jessie Weston's work some eighty years earlier, this essay collection provides a careful overview of recent scholarship on possible overlap between Arthurian literature and Christianity. From Ritual to romance and Notes, taken together, bracket contemporary inquiry into the relationship (if any) between Jesus and Arthur. T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land" is here regarded as one strand joining this matter to many a recent literary riddle (such as the meaning of the term "postmodernism"). Without reprinting work readily available elsewhere and no longer subject to revision through dialogue with fellow contributors, Notes attempts to do justice to all sides in twentieth century exploration of christianity's contribution to an art form which is also grounded in early European polytheism ("paganism").

    Chapter 1: The Time of the Four Branches Chapter 2: Parzival and the Grail Chapter 3: From Germanic Warrior to Christian Knight: The Heliand Transformation Chapter 4: Romancing the Grail: Fiction and Theology in the Queste del Saint Graal Chapter 5: Grace and Salvation in Chretien de Troyes Chapter 6: The Allegory of Adventure: An Approach to Chretien's Romances Chapter 7: The Symbolic Use of a Turtledove for the Holy Spirit in Wolfram's Parzival, Chapter 8: The Crusades and Wolfram's Parzival Chapter 9: Lady Love, King, Minstrel: Courtly Depictions of Jesus or God in Late-Medieval Vernacular Mystical Literature

    Biography

    Peter Meister (Edited by)