Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W852048002> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 items per page.
- W852048002 endingPage "99" @default.
- W852048002 startingPage "95" @default.
- W852048002 abstract "Reviews Elisabeth brewer, TH. White's The Once and Future King. Arthurian Studies 30. Woodbridge: D.S. Brewer, 1993. Pp. vii, 236. isbn: 0-85991-3937. $53. Despite the fact that TH. White's Once and Future King is 'probably the last major retelling ofthe [Arthurian] story based on Malory, set in the Middle Ages and in the chivalric tradition' (Brewer 19), it has generally been slighted by the academy, even within the communityofArthurian scholars. Since rhe appearance of SylviaTownsend Warner's biography ofWhite in 1967, only three book-length publications have been devoted to White prior to Brewer's: John Crane's TH. White in theTwayne Authors Series (1974), an annotated bibliography from Garland (1986), and Martin Kellman's TH. WhiteandtheMatterofBritain (1988). Such marginalization is understandable, given OFKs reputation as a children's book, its now-dated ideologies, the terminal whimsy that sometimes afflicts its style, and for North Americans, at least, the unavoidable association with such venues as Disney Studios and Broadway. This state ofaffairs is regrettable, however, sinceWhite arguablyshares pride ofplace with MaloryandTennyson as one ofthe triumviratewhose textscruciallyshaped subsequent developments in Anglophone Arthuriana; he is at the very least seminal, directly or indirectly, to the Arthurian revival, particularly in texts and products designed for mass consumption over the past thirty-five years. Given the cultural importance of OFK (however one might value either the book or the products of its influence), a serious scholarly study of the text and its author is long overdue. Elisabeth Brewer has provided just such a study. Mininga rich vein ofprimaryresources—archives, personal interviews, andWhite's own library—as well as mustering a substantial array ofsecondary materials, Brewer has assembled a study that is both impressive in the depth and breadth ofits research, and encyclopedic in its coverage ofall aspects ofWhite and his work, from his troubled personal history through the composition, revision, and publication history oíOFK. After a briefbiographical sketch ofWhite in Chapter 1, Brewer undertakes discussion (Chapters 2-5) ofeach ofthe four books of OFK. 'The Genesis of The Sword in the Stone' (Chapter 2) surveys the Byzantine complex ofvisions and revisions that mark the odysseyofthis firstbook ofOFKfrom its initial British publication (1938), through its recasting for an American readership (1939), to the book's final form (the one with which most ofus are familiar) in 1958. Chapter 3, 'From The Witch in the Woodto The Queen ofAir and Darkness,' looks at the ways in which White's earlier trearment of Morgause, driven by '[t]he overwhelming compulsion that he felt to revenge himself on his mother' (50) and marked by a savage and unpalatable misogyny, sufficiently cathected his oedipal rage to enable revision into the more mediated final version of ARTHURIANA 5.4(1995) 95 96ARTHURIANA rhis book. These two chapters are ofparticular interest to White aficionados as they make available material excised or suppressed from the 1958 ('definitive') edition of OFK. ' The Ill-Made Knight' (Chapter 4) and ' The CandU in the Windor, the Book of Sir Mordre' (Chapter 5), less complex because of the more straightforward compositional history of their subject matters, focus on content and genre. Brewer sees Knight, despite its ostensibly 'romantic' content (i.e. the relationship between Lancelot and Guenever) as rejecting the conventions of the romance genre in favor of those ofthe 'realistic novel,' while the Book of Mordred is described in terms of its dramatic properties and its affinities with Aristotelian tragedy (interestingly, White initially conceived the matter of Mordred as a play [1939]). Five literary essays on White and his work , whose titles are self-explanatory (Chapters 6-10), comprise the latter portion ofBrewer's study: 'Comedy in The OnceandFuture King,' 'Merlyn and The Book ofMerlyn,' 'The Education of Princes,' 'White's Historical Imagination,' and 'White and Malory.' In toto, Brewer's study is as complete an overview of the subject as one could desire. It is also rather a challenge to read. This could not have been an easy book to write, given the sticky nature of its subject matter, for White and his work mesh inextricably to a degree that makes it virtually impossible to discuss one without referencing the other. White's own personality was a disturbing..." @default.
- W852048002 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W852048002 creator A5022648206 @default.
- W852048002 date "1995-01-01" @default.
- W852048002 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W852048002 title "T.H. White's The Once and Future King by Elisabeth Brewer" @default.
- W852048002 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/art.1995.0006" @default.
- W852048002 hasPublicationYear "1995" @default.
- W852048002 type Work @default.
- W852048002 sameAs 852048002 @default.
- W852048002 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W852048002 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W852048002 hasAuthorship W852048002A5022648206 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C158071213 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C185592680 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C27206212 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C2776445246 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C2779728303 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C520712124 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C52119013 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C55493867 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C56273599 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C74916050 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W852048002 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C104317684 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C124952713 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C138885662 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C142362112 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C158071213 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C17744445 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C185592680 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C199539241 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C27206212 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C2776445246 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C2779728303 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C520712124 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C52119013 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C55493867 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C56273599 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C74916050 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C94625758 @default.
- W852048002 hasConceptScore W852048002C95457728 @default.
- W852048002 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W852048002 hasLocation W8520480021 @default.
- W852048002 hasOpenAccess W852048002 @default.
- W852048002 hasPrimaryLocation W8520480021 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2013693191 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2020385866 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2068046239 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2294695029 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2483530483 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2807067971 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W2989799779 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W315398972 @default.
- W852048002 hasRelatedWork W579216405 @default.
- W852048002 hasVolume "5" @default.
- W852048002 isParatext "false" @default.
- W852048002 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W852048002 magId "852048002" @default.
- W852048002 workType "article" @default.