Description
About the Author
Aisling Byrne studied at University College Dublin and St John's College, Cambridge. She has published on the transmission and translation of romance, on writers such as Gerald of Wales and Thomas Malory, and on themes such as marvels, feasting, chivalry, and territorial politics.
Reviews
The conclusion makes a succinct argument for transformative power of literature, a fitting end to a bracing book. * Medium Aevum *
[an] engaging and thoughtful study ... A great deal of ground is covered in this scholarly and well-structured book. * Julia Boffey, Times Literary Supplement *
Elegantly written, smoothly argued and highly informative, Otherworlds is the first book that anyone who wishes to learn about medieval otherworlds should read. * Kathy Lavezzo, Modern Philology *
This is an admirable book, readable, interesting, and impressively extensive in its range of references across a large swathe of medieval English, French, Irish, and Latin romance and history ... For scholars of medieval romance, this is an important book that will need to be read and assimilated before any further discussion of the supernatural otherworld can be attempted. * Helen Fulton, Studies in the Age of Chaucer *
Aisling Byrne's fine study of medieval Otherworlds takes our engagement with the concept of the archipelagic in new and exciting directions. * Robert Rouse, postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies *
Otherworlds is an ambitious and wide-ranging work that engages constructively with various debates around the roots and functions of medieval otherworlds while establishing new paradigms for further explorations of the magical and the marvellous in medieval literature of all kinds. * Molly Brown, Literature & History *
One of the book's great strengths is to move away from a conception of otherworlds as merely one exotic or fantastic place among many, and to consider them instead as opening new imaginary and narrative spaces...this book will appeal to a wide audience and will become a key reading for anyone interested in literary otherworlds. * Fabienne L. Michelet, The Review of English Studies *
a welcome addition to a recently expanding corpus of critical studies of magic and the supernatural in the medieval period. One of the distinguishing features of Byrne's study is the way in which she engages skilfully not just with English material, but also with Scottish, Welsh and Irish texts, as well as with material in Old French and that concerning the Isle of Man. * Emily Wingfield, Archiv fur das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Literaturen *
The book will have wide-ranging appeal to students and academics. The material on popular texts such as Sir Orfeo and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight will be beneficial to undergraduates and the introduction offers an intelligent definition of key terminology and an assessment of challenges and assumptions that will be a useful model for graduate students. For scholars working on the otherworld, Byrne's book will be essential reading and, with its wealth of primary sources, will no doubt inspire further research and scholarship for years to come. * The English Historical Review *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198833956
Author Aisling Byrne
Format Paperback
Page Count 224
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Dimensions(mm) 216mm * 147mm * 12mm