In its close examination of Richard Johnson's popular prose romance Tom a
Lincoln, published in two parts in 1599 and 1607, and William Rowley's play The Birth of
Merlin or the Childe Hath Found His Father, first performed in 1622, this project aims to
explore two key texts which have been previously neglected in discussions of Arthurian
and early modern canons. It explores the intersection between canon formation, textual
form, and gender to argue that to expand the Arthurian canon is to expand the possibilities
critical examination within it. Examining practices of testimonials, language, ventriloquism,
and adaptation, this project probes the tensions between the Arthurian canon and early
modern literary tradition and how each engages with issues of gender to argue for the
inclusion of these two popular texts into the Arthurian canon.
Through comparison to both traditional Arthurian texts and the works of Johnson and
Rowley’s contemporaries, this project argues that the understanding of the Arthurian
canon, particularly as a part of a longstanding literary tradition, and its representation of
gender necessarily shifts when these two texts are taken into consideration. Johnson and
Rowley’s texts give voices to those who largely remain voiceless in the traditional canon,
such as single mothers and victims of sexual violence, and as many of these elements
clearly intersect with the form of the work, to dismiss these texts is to dismiss the
contributions of the culture of popular media. Therefore, in its exploration of gender roles,
this project demonstrates the dangers of potentially reductive arguments which focus
solely on literary or historicist analysis of texts by examining the interplay between
literature and cultural expectations inherent in the formation of a literary tradition.
Date of Award | 2023 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Dafydd Moore (Other Supervisor) |
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Gender and literary form at the edge of the Arthurian world: Richard Johnson's Tom a Lincoln and William Rowley's The Birth of Merlin re-examined
Boone, E. (Author). 2023
Student thesis: PhD