Routledge, 2006. — 370 p.
Introduction - Raymond H. Thompson and Keith Busby
Gawain : his reputation, his courtesy, and his appearance in Chaucer's Squire's Tale - B. J. Whiting
Gwalchmei m. Gwyar - Rachel Bromwich
The character of Gauvain in the romances of Chretien de Troyes - William A. Nitze
Gauvain and fin' amors in the poems of Chretien de Troyes - Douglas Kelly
Arthurian adventure or quixotic "struggle for life"? A reading of some Gauvain romances in the first half of the thirteenth century - Friedrich Wolfzettel
Diverging traditions of Gauvain in some of the later Old French verse romances - Keith Busby
The formation of a Gauvain cycle in Chantilly manuscript 472 - Lori Walters
The character of Gauvain in the thirteenth-century prose romances - Fanni Bogdanow
The character of Gauvain in the prose Tristan - Keith Busby
Gawain against arthur : the impact of a mythological pattern upon arthurian tradition in accounts of the birth of Gawain - Raymond H. Thompson
Crisis and triumph in the world of medieval knighthood and chivalry : Gawan in Wolfram von Eschenbach's Parzival - Albrecht Classen
Gauvain as lover in the middle Dutch verse romance Walewein - Bart Besamusca
The transformation of the figure of Gauvain in Italy - Marie-Jose Heijkant
Middle English Arthurian romance : the repetition and reputation of Gawain - Phillip C. Boardman
Sir Gawain and the green knight : the poet's treatment of the hero and his adventure - W. A. Davenport
Gawain and heroic knighthood in Malory - Beverly Kennedy
Gawain in post-medieval English literature - Raymond H. Thompson
Keith Busby is Professor of French and Italian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is translator of the standard Penguin edition of
The Lais of Marie de France. He is also editor of
Word and Image in Arthurian Literature (Garland, 1996).
Raymond H. Thompson is Professor Emeritus of English at Acadia University. He is author of
The Return from Avalon: A Study of the Arthurian Legend in Modern Fiction and co-editor of
Merlin: A Casebook, also published by Routledge in the "Arthurian Characters and Themes" series.