King Arthur in America, Volumen41

Portada
Boydell & Brewer, 1999 - 382 páginas
The first full-length study to focus exclusively on American reinterpretations of the Arthurian legends.

The Arthurian legends have had an immense and enduring appeal in America, influencing both America's own mythologies and its literature, film, social history, and popular culture. This is the first full-length study to focus exclusively on American re-interpretations of Arthuriana, and it offers detailed treatments of major authors traditionally associated with the legends, including Mark Twain, Edwin Arlington Robinson, T.S. Eliot, and John Steinbeck; italso explores the important use of Arthurian material by authors not usually considered in an Arthurian context, and by lesser-known writers. Among the topics addressed in the chronological survey are the beginnings of American Arthurian literature and the different reactions to Tennyson; satire and parody; the moralising of knighthood and the development of a body of didactic literature for children; and the reinterpretations of Arthurian tradition in theworks of contemporary writers such as Walker Percy and John Updike. A concluding chapter analyses Arthurian themes in American popular fiction and film and demonstrates the extent to which the Arthurian tradition has influenced American popular culture. The volume is completed with a comprehensive bibliography.
ALAN LUPACK is Curator of the Rossell Hope Robbins Library at the University of Rochester; BARBARA TEPA LUPACKis former AcademicDean at SUNY and Fulbright Professor of American Literature in Poland and France.

 

Contenido

Arthurian Literature in America before Twain
1
From Twain to the Twenties
93
Fitzgerald Hemingway and Faulkner
135
Steinbeck and the Arthurian Legend
183
Contemporary Novelists
210
The Arthurian Tradition and American Popular Culture
276
Bibliography
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Información bibliográfica