Abbreviations
1. Introduction
2. The Vocabulary of Description
3. Narrative and Description in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
4. Morte Arthure: A Hero for our Time
5. Alexander’s Entry into Jerusalem in the Wars of Alexander
6. Authenticity and Interpretation in St Erkenwald
7. Landscapes and Gardens
8. Siege Warfare
9. Storms
10. Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Thorlac Turville-Petre is Professor Emeritus at the University of Nottingham. His many authored works include Reading Middle English Literature (Blackwell, 2007); Description and Narrative in Middle English Alliterative Poetry (LUP, 2018); (with J. A. Burrow) A Book of Middle English, 4th edn. (Blackwell, 2021) and Pearl: A Critical Edition (LUP, 2021).
Reviews 'These essays cap Thorlac Turville-Petre's nearly
half-century career devoted to the alliterative poetic tradition.
They ably explore a variety of paradoxes, most notably the tensions
between narrative progress and descriptive stasis, and between the
perceived 'otherness' of alliterative language and style and
various forms of familiarisation (appeals to lived experience,
manifold connections with other Middle English writing, as well as
with previously unnoted inspirations outwith English). Above all,
the essays testify to the power of skills almost forgotten in
today's academy, for Turville-Petre's careful unpacking of the
poets' capacity to visualise rests always upon an impressive
readerly attentiveness.'
Ralph Hanna, Professor of Palaeography (Emeritus) and Emeritus
Fellow at Keble College, Oxford.
‘This book can be approached as a treasury of close readings of the
Gawain group and related Middle English alliterative romances, with
attention to sources, representation, and locality. On that basis,
the book deserves praise, indeed gratitude, for its interpretive
precision.’Eric Weiskott, Modern Philology
‘[Offers] an informative summary of Turville-Petre’s body of work
and provides a critical anthology of vivid passages of alliterative
description […] Elegantly written and intellectually engaging.’Alex
Mueller, The Review of English Studies
'Thorlac Turville-Petre has produced a vade mecum for readers of
Middle English alliterative poetry. The most important poems all
receive attention. Two preliminary chapters define the corpus and
introduce readers to its language and form. The bibliography lists
preferred editions. Yet this is not a companion in the sense
popularized by Cambridge University Press and Boydell & Brewer. A
new “companion to Middle English alliterative poetry” would be
welcome, but Turville-Petre offers something more interesting: he
reads the poems. His subject is poetic technique, especially
descriptive technique and the way that descriptions sit within the
flow of narrative.'
Ian Cornelius, Anglia
'The book as a whole is the work of a scholar immersed in the
corpus of late-medieval alliterative verse. Turville-Petre's
command of the material is impressive and the texts are lovingly
described in clear and crisp prose. That alliterative poets excel
at descriptio is a commonplace of criticism, and this study will
provoke further analysis of their context and rhetoric.'
Richard J. Moll, The Medieval Review
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