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E-grāmata: Telling Tales and Crafting Books: Essays in Honor of Thomas H. Ohlgren

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The great corpus that is medieval literature contains, at its very center, the tale. These verse and prose fictional narratives, as well as stories that are grounded in some degree of historical truth, are the foundation of what readers, scholars, and enthusiasts often point to as signifiers of the medieval age. These tales - from the skillfully crafted to the more rudimentary and plain - often make familiar to modern readers what seems so distant and foreign about the Middle Ages. This volume of essays focuses on the tale and its ability to create "mirth," what modern audiences would often define as "happiness" or "joy," and the significance that the book has had on the transference of this mirth to audiences.

This volume also celebrates the scholarship of Thomas H. Ohlgren, a medievalist whose work encompasses a number of different areas, but at its center lives the power of the tale and its ability to create a lasting impression on readers, both medieval and modern.
List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(22)
Alexander L. Kaufman
Part I Old English and the North
Grendel as Novelistic Outlaw-Hero: A Girardian Reading
23(26)
Eric R. Carlson
The Evolution of Monster Fights: From Beowulf versus Grendel to Jon Guomundsson læroi versus the Snæfjalladraugur and Beyond
49(44)
Shaun F. D. Hughes
Salvation Twice Told: Idolatry, Typology, and Repentance in Genesis B
93(26)
J. A. Jackson
Vision and Sex in the Iconography of the Old English Genesis Manuscript
119(20)
Molly A. Martin
Heroic/Apocalyptic Metalandscapes of Some Anglo-Scandinavian Art
139(22)
E. L. Risden
Part II Robin Hood
Feasts in the Forest
161(16)
Stephen Knight
Show or Tell? Priority and Interplay in the Early Robin Hood Play/Games and Poems
177(26)
John Marshall
"... something of the air of a celebration": Scott, Peacock, and Maid Marian
203(12)
Alan T. Gaylord
Two Ancient Ballads: "Robin Hood's Courtship with Jack Cade's Daughter" and "The Freiris Tragedie": An Edition
215(38)
Alexander L. Kaufman
"The grasping, rasping Norman race": Victorian Nationalism and Sir George Alexander Macfarren's 1860 Opera, Robin Hood
253(14)
Kevin J. Harty
Part III Books and Literature
The Evangelist Symbols in the Judith of Flanders Gospels: Devotion, Prestige, and Cultural Production
267(56)
Mary Dockray-Miller
Chaucer and the Art of Not Eating a Book
323(22)
Robert Boenig
Lancelot the One-Time Outlaw: Fallenness and Forgiveness in the Morte Darthur
345(26)
Jack R. Baker
Thomas H. Ohlgren's Published Writings 371(6)
Index 377
Dorsey Armstrong is Associate Professor of English, Purdue University.

Shaun F. D. Hughes is Professor of English, Purdue University.

Alexander L. Kaufman is Professor of English, Auburn University at Montgomery.