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Reading Medieval Culture: Essays in Honor of Robert
W. Hanning. Edited by Robert M. Stein and Sandra Pierson Prior. Notre
Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press, 2005. Pp. ix + 505. $37.50
The editors of this Festschrift for Robert W. Hanning justly claim that
the 20 contributions represent the very wide interests of the honorand
who, as they say, "has addressed very large historical and cultural questions
through the examination of a wide range of texts in several quite diverse
genres, languages, and cultural settings" (p. 1). His major books, The
Vision of History in Early Britain (1966) and The Individual
in Twelfth-Century Romance (1977), are perhaps even more in tune
with current medieval studies than when they were written; the former
looks at the history of Britain, most notably as told by Geoffrey of Monmouth,
in terms of literary techniques, that is to say from the perspective of
romance; the latter takes the romance form, as exemplified principally
by Chrétien de troyes, as a serious and innovatory exploration of human
individuality, beginning with "sharply etched portraits of Abelard and
Christina [of Markyate] that emphasize their uniqueness and the intensity
of their private desires" (p. 11). the essays in this Festschrift are
grouped into sections on history and romance, Chaucer, and Italian writings
and art. As with all such diverse collections, there is a danger that
its contributions will be missed by those who should be interested in
them. that would be a pity, and so, though there is not space to notice
them all, I shall pick out a number that are particularly interesting
to me.
Thorlac Turville-Petre
University of Nottingham
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