Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: The Materiality of Medieval Romance and The Erle of Tolous
- 2 Courtly Culture and Emotional Intelligence in the Romance of Horn
- 3 Emplaced Reading, or Towards a Spatial Hermeneutic for Medieval Romance
- 4 Devotional Objects, Saracen Spaces and Miracles in Two Matter of France Romances
- 5 The Werewolf of Wicklow: Shapeshifting and Colonial Identity in the Lai de Melion
- 6 ‘Ladyes war at thare avowing’: The Female Gaze in Late-Medieval Scottish Romance
- 7 The Evolution of Cooperation in The Avowyng of Arthur
- 8 Ritual, Revenge and the Politics of Chess in Medieval Romance
- 9 Adventures in the Bob-and-Wheel Tradition: Narratives and Manuscripts
- 10 Reading King Robert of Sicily's Text(s) and Manuscript Context(s)
- 11 The Circulation of Romances from England in Late-Medieval Ireland
- 12 The Image of the Knightly Harper: Symbolism and Resonance
- 13 Carving the Folie Tristan: Ivory Caskets as Material Evidence of Textual History
- 14 Romancing the Orient: The Roman d'Alexandre and Marco Polo's Livre du grand Khan in Oxford, Bodleian Library MS Bodl. 264
- 15 The Victorian Afterlife of The Thornton Romances
- Index
15 - The Victorian Afterlife of The Thornton Romances
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: The Materiality of Medieval Romance and The Erle of Tolous
- 2 Courtly Culture and Emotional Intelligence in the Romance of Horn
- 3 Emplaced Reading, or Towards a Spatial Hermeneutic for Medieval Romance
- 4 Devotional Objects, Saracen Spaces and Miracles in Two Matter of France Romances
- 5 The Werewolf of Wicklow: Shapeshifting and Colonial Identity in the Lai de Melion
- 6 ‘Ladyes war at thare avowing’: The Female Gaze in Late-Medieval Scottish Romance
- 7 The Evolution of Cooperation in The Avowyng of Arthur
- 8 Ritual, Revenge and the Politics of Chess in Medieval Romance
- 9 Adventures in the Bob-and-Wheel Tradition: Narratives and Manuscripts
- 10 Reading King Robert of Sicily's Text(s) and Manuscript Context(s)
- 11 The Circulation of Romances from England in Late-Medieval Ireland
- 12 The Image of the Knightly Harper: Symbolism and Resonance
- 13 Carving the Folie Tristan: Ivory Caskets as Material Evidence of Textual History
- 14 Romancing the Orient: The Roman d'Alexandre and Marco Polo's Livre du grand Khan in Oxford, Bodleian Library MS Bodl. 264
- 15 The Victorian Afterlife of The Thornton Romances
- Index
Summary
This essay takes its impetus from the thriving discipline of ‘book studies’ with its dual emphasis on the book as material object and as cultural force. Of the five ‘events’ in the life of a book defined in a foundational article by Thomas R. Adams and Nicolas Barker—publication, manufacture, distribution, reception and survival—I limit my discussion to just two, publication and reception, in the life of The Thornton Romances, a volume edited by James Orchard Halliwell and published in London in 1844 by the Camden Society. While studies of the literary sources for Victorian medievalism most often focus on widely known works by Dante, Chaucer, Malory and Froissart, I hope to demonstrate that the four anonymous poems collected in The Thornton Romances played a surprisingly significant role in that medieval revival, despite the modest reputations today of Sir Perceval of Galles, Sir Isumbras, Sir Eglamour of Artois and Sir Degrevant.
‘The text’, Adams and Barker write, ‘is the reason for the cycle of the book’, and ‘publishing is the name we have given to the point of departure, the initial decision to multiply a text or image for distribution’. The decision to publish these four anonymous Middle English romances in one volume at this particular historical moment was made by the Council of the Camden Society, an organization founded in 1838 as one of numerous nineteenth-century learned societies devoted to securing publication for historically important books that no commercial publisher would undertake. The Society's stated object was ‘to perpetuate, and render accessible, whatever is valuable, but at present little known, amongst the materials for the Civil, Ecclesiastical, or Literary History of the United Kingdom’. Its members constitute a Who's Who of prominent mid-century figures, including Francis Egerton (later Earl of Ellesmere); Henry Hallam; Sir Robert Peel; the young John Ruskin; William John Thoms (later to found Notes ' Queries and coin the term folklore); Sir Frederic Madden (Keeper of Manuscripts at the British Museum); the scholar Sir Henry Ellis; the Bishop of Durham; the Archbishop of Canterbury; the Prince Consort; and the Queen as patron.
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- Medieval Romance and Material Culture , pp. 253 - 274Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015