(Lucy) For much of the Middle Ages, King Arthur was Europe’s model king. His court could be a space for heroism, for romance, and also for the uncanny. Often drawing on oral tradition, written for elite audiences, the Arthurian romances of the 13th and 14th centuries can be surprisingly revealing about cultural values and cultural debates. This week we'll be looking at Christmas feasts, sun-god figures, and complex debates about the morality of flirting.
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Uncle Remus, Joel Chandler Harris, and the South, Part II
Uncle Remus, Joel Chandler Harris, and the South, Part I
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Ivanhoe and the Modern Middle Ages
Ivanhoe and the Invention of Merry England
Sicilian Vespers, Part II: The Massacre and the War of the Vespers
Sicilian Vespers, Part I: The Uprising
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Mohenjo Daro: Living City, Mound of the Dead
The History of Tikka Masala
Moe Berg, Baseball's Scholar and Spy
Christopher Columbus and the Book of Prophecies
Stede Bonnet, the Gentlemen Pirate
Empress, Strategist… Saint? Irene of Byzantium
Florida: Frontier and Cracker History
Anne Neville and the Wars of the Roses
Divorcing in Revolutionary France
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