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‘But that the stone is fresh’

by
June-July 2006, no. 282

Medievalism and the Gothic in Australian Culture by Stephanie Trigg

MUP, $42.95 pb, 325 pp

‘But that the stone is fresh’

by
June-July 2006, no. 282

In her essay in this collection, Jenna Mead quotes from the work of a co-contributor, the Australian medievalist David Matthews. He tells a story which is likely to resonate in the memories of many of us who have, by choice or otherwise, studied medieval culture at university in this country. His tutor at the University of Adelaide, in the course of a seminar on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, asked the class about the famous line which describes Bertilak’s castle: ‘Towres telded bytwene, trochet ful [th]ick.’ ‘Where might the nearest example of such an architectural feature be found?’ The class, suspecting some academic trick, fell silent, not making the imaginative connection to the tower of the administration building ‘about two hundred yards away’.

Medievalism and the Gothic in Australian Culture

Medievalism and the Gothic in Australian Culture

by Stephanie Trigg

MUP, $42.95 pb, 325 pp

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