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The Lays of Marie de France: For Further Reading

The Lays of Marie de France
For Further Reading
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Foreword
  3. The Lays of Marie de France
    1. Prologue
    2. I. Guigemar
    3. II. Equitan
    4. III. Le Fresne
    5. IV. Bisclavret
    6. V. Lanval
    7. VI. The Two Lovers
    8. VII. Yonec
    9. VIII. Laüstic
    10. IX. Milun
    11. X. Chaitivel
    12. XI. Chevrefoil
    13. XII. Eliduc
  4. For Further Reading

For Further Reading

The text of the lais is available in Oeuvres complètes: les lais, les fables, le Purgatoire de saint Patrick, translated from the ancient French by Nathalie Desgrugillers (Clermont-Ferrand: Paleo, 2003); or in Marie de France: Lais, edited by Alfred Ewert (Oxford: Blackwell, 1944), or in Poésies de Marie de France, poète anglo-normand du XIIIe siècle, 2 vols., edited by B. de Roquefort (Paris: Chasseriau, 1819–20).

There are a number of general studies of Marie de France, the most easily accessible to the Anglophone reader being Glyn S. Burgess, The Lais of Marie de France: Text and Context (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1987); Paula Clifford, Marie de France: Lais (London: Grant and Cutler, 1981); Emmanuel J. Mickel, Jr., Marie de France (New York: Twayne, 1974); and Sharon Kinoshita and Peggy McCracken, Marie de France: A Critical Companion (Cambridge, UK: D. S. Brewer, 2012).

There are a few other translations, but if I had liked any of them, I shouldn’t have felt a need to do this one.

drs

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