The Genesis of Narrative in Malory's Morte Darthur

About The Book

The 'Morte Darthur' is both a representative of the traditions of Arthurian literature and a complex response to its stock themes and motifs. This book offers a new reading of the principles by which the 'Morte Darthur' is structured looking at the ways in which Malory deploys the Arthurian tradition and received narratives as both redactor and translator. The sources are considered in particular detail and the additions and deletions which Malory makes to them: central to the investigation is the ways in which the fifteenth-century work on the one hand conserves thirteenth-century narratives such as 'Le Mort le Roi Artu' yet on the other reconstitutes it as something new an approach which differs from the current critical trend of considering the 'Morte' mainly in relation to its contemporary milieu. In so doing the author develops a theory of `symbolic structure' to account for the principles of generation and combination of narrative elements in Malory looking at the ways in which entire narratives can be put into motion by the power of a symbol such as Balin's sword or the grail itself. Dr ELIZABETH EDWARDS teaches at the University of King's College Halifax Nova Scotia.
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