Robin Hood and Popular
Culture: Violence, Transgression, and Justice. Edited by Thomas Hahn.
Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2000. Pp. ix + 278; 3 illustrations. $85.
Two decades ago in a fine article on the Robin Hood poems, Douglas Gray
made the point that traditional literary studies would never have much
to say about Robin Hood because the texts lacked the formal qualities
of interest to literary critics. This is true, but fortunately for Robin
Hood, literary studies over the past thirty years have turned away from
formalism and toward just those issues that are often in the foreground
of the Robin Hood materials. What is more, Robin Hood continues to be
with us, reemerging on new frontiers and challenging new sheriffs and
abbots, and thus remaining culturally vital in a way that most six-hundred-year-old
literary characters are not. For these reasons, the essays in this volume†many
by literary scholars and critics but also by historians, filmmakers, dramatists,
and others†find much to say about Robin Hood, even those thin and formulaic
early ballads. Indeed, this collection is evidence that Robin Hood studies
are currently at a high point.
Timothy S. Jones
Augustana College |
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