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A new study of the continuations to Chrétien's Conte du Graal shows their crucial influence on the development of Arthurian literature.Chrétien de Troyes's late twelfth-century Conte du Graal has inspired writers and scholars from the moment of its composition to the present day. The challenge represented by its unfinished state was quickly taken up, and over the next fifty years the romance was supplemented by a number of continuations and prologues, which eventually came to dwarf Chrétien's text.In one of the first studies to treat the Conte du Graal and its continuations as a unified work, Thomas Hinton considers the whole corpus as a narrative cycle. Through a combination of close textual readings and manuscript analysis, the author argues that the unity of the narrative depends on a balanced tension between centripetal and centrifugal dynamics. He traces how the authors, scribes and illuminators of the cycle worked to produce coherence, even as they contended with potentially disruptive forces: multiple authorship,differences of intention, and changes in the relation between text, audience and book. Finally, he tackles the long-held orthodoxy that places the Perceval Continuations on the margins of literary history. Widening the scope of enquiry to consider the corpus's influence on thirteenth-century verse romances, this study re-situates the Conte du Graal cycle as a vital element in the evolution of Arthurian literature.Thomas Hinton isJunior Research Fellow in Modern Languages at Jesus College, Oxford.
IntroductionNarrative Aesthetic and Cyclic FormationManuscripts, Memory and Textual TransmissionAuthorship, Kinship and the Ethics of ContinuationRereading the Evolution of Arthurian Verse RomanceConclusionAppendix 1: Narrative SummariesAppendix 2: Lengths and Dates of TextsAppendix 3: Manuscripts of the Conte du Graal CycleAppendix 4: Full Contents of Conte du Graal Cycle ManuscriptsAppendix 5: Arthurian Verse Romances: Dates and ManuscriptsAppendix 6: Contents of Arthurian Verse Romance ManuscriptsBibliography
Hinton's notes and explanations of earlier critical views, whether standard references or newer treatments, are cogent and thorough, providing the new student of this literature with direction and the experienced scholar with helpful reminders.
Laine E Doggett, Daniel E Daniel O'Sullivan, Laine E (Contributor) Doggett, Daniel E (Customer) Daniel O'Sullivan, Laine E. Doggett, Daniel E. Daniel O'Sullivan