Skip to product information
1 of 1

Walter Map and the Matter of Britain

Regular price $79.95
Regular price $79.95 Sale price $79.95
Sold out
Why would the sprawling thirteenth-century French prose Lancelot-Grail Cycle have been attributed to Walter Map, a twelfth-century writer from the Anglo-Welsh borderlands known for his stinging sat...
Read More
  • 25 July 2017
View Product Details

Why would the sprawling thirteenth-century French prose Lancelot-Grail Cycle have been attributed to Walter Map, a twelfth-century writer from the Anglo-Welsh borderlands known for his stinging satire, religious skepticism, ghost stories, and irrepressible wit? And why, though the attribution is spurious, is it not, in some ways, implausible?

Joshua Byron Smith sets out to answer these and other questions in the first English-language monograph on Walter Map—and in so doing, he offers a new explanation for how narratives about the pre-Saxon inhabitants of Britain, including King Arthur and his knights, first circulated in England. Smith contends that it was inventive clerics like Walter, and not traveling minstrels or professional translators, who popularized these stories. Smith examines Walter's only surviving work, the De nugis curialium, to demonstrate that it is not the disheveled text that scholars have imagined but rather five separate works in various stages of completion. This in turn provides new evidence to support his larger contention, that ecclesiastical networks of textual exchange played a major role in exporting Welsh literary material into England.

Medieval readers incorrectly envisioned Walter withdrawing ancient Latin documents about the Holy Grail from a monastery and compiling them in order to compose the Lancelot-Grail Cycle. In this detail they were wrong, Smith acknowledges, but a model of literary transmission that is not vernacular and popular but Latinate and ecclesiastical demands our serious consideration.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $79.95
Pages: 272
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 25 July 2017
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812249323
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval, Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval, HISTORY / Europe / Medieval
REVIEWS Icon
"Joshua Byron Smith lays hold of two slippery entities, not one, thereby meriting praise. What he offers is professional scholarship, elegantly presented by himself and his publisher. Painstaking and wide-ranging, his investigations nevertheless have clarity and even wit (a rare quality in a research volume) . . . Walter Map and the Matter of Britain deserves welcome as a groundbreaker."
Joshua Byron Smith is Associate Professor of English at the University of Arkansas.

List of Abbreviations
A Note on Translations

Introduction
Chapter 1. Walter Map, Wales, and Romance
Chapter 2. Works Frozen in Revision
Chapter 3. Glosses and a Contrived Book
Chapter 4. From Herlething to Herla
Chapter 5. The Welsh-Latin Sources of the De nugis curialium
Chapter 6. Walter Map in the Archives and the Transmission of the Matter of Britain
Epilogue

Appendix. A Preliminary List of Suspected Interpolated Glosses in the De nugis curialium
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments