The world of medieval romance is one in which magic and the supernatural are constantly present: in otherwordly encounters in the strange adventures experienced by questing knights in the experience of the uncanny and in marvellous objects - rings potions amulets and the celebrated green girdle in 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight'. This study looks at a wide range of medieval English romance texts including the works of Chaucer and Malory from a broad cultural perspective to show that while they employ magic in order to create exotic escapist worlds they are also grounded in a sense of possibility and reflect a complex web of inherited and current ideas. The book opens with a survey of classical and biblical precedents and of medieval attitudes to magic; subsequent chapters explore the ways that romances both reflect contemporary attitudes and ideas and imaginatively transform them. In particular the author explores the distinction between the `white magic' of healing and protection and the more dangerous arts of `nigromancy' black magic. Also addressed is the wider supernatural including the ways that ideas associated with human magic can be intensified and developed in depictions of otherworldly practitioners of magic. The ambiguous figures of the enchantress and the shapeshifter are a special focus and the faery is contrasted with the Christian supernatural - miracles ghosts spirits demons and incubi. Professor CORINNE SAUNDERS Saunders teaches in the Department of English University of Durham.
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