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Trojan Mirror

Trojan Mirror2010

Wladyslaw Witalisz

About this book

The book examines four Middle English narratives of the Trojan War as examples of the medieval appropriations of classical history and classical narrative traditions as a discourse related to issues of contemporary politics and morality. The medieval stories of the fall of Troy are viewed as educational texts offering advice on moral and political conduct related in their aims to the genre of the medieval speculum. Four major verse narratives of the history of the Trojan War composed in Middle English at the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century are discussed: the anonymous Gest Hystoriale of the Destruction of Troy, the Laud Troy Book, the Seege of Troye and John Lydgate's Troy Book. -- Back cover.

Details

First published
2010
OL Work ID
OL21459947W

Subjects

English literature, history and criticism, middle english, 1100-1500Trojan war, literature and the warTroy (extinct city)Trojan WarEnglish literatureIn literatureHistory and criticismLiterature and the warThemes, motivesGest hystoriale of the destruction of TroyLaud Troy bookSeege of Troye

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.