Introduction
1. England, c. 1000: this world is in haste
2. Conquests, kings, and transformations
3. Know yourself: interiority, love, and God
4. The Bellator and Chevalerie: the struggle for the warrior's soul
5. It is different with us: love, individuality, and
fiction
6. Conversations with the living and the dead
7. Engletere and the Inglis: Conflict and construction
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
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Laura Ashe is Associate Professor of English and a Tutorial Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford. Her main research interests lie in high medieval literary and cultural history. Educated at Cambridge and Harvard, her books include Fiction and History in England, 1066-1200 (2007), Early Fiction
in England: From Geoffrey of Monmouth to Chaucer (2015), and Richard II (2016). She is one of the editors of New Medieval Literatures, has edited several other collaborative volumes, and published numerous articles, on England's multilingualism, kingship and national identity, romance and
historiography, saints' lives, chivalry, warfare, medieval colonialism, vernacularity, and early modern legacies, among other things.
Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin