Introduction
Chapter 1. Believing in Fairies
Chapter 2. Policing Vernacular Belief
Chapter 3. Incubi Fairies
Chapter 4. Christ the Changeling
Chapter 5. Living in Fairyland
Postscript
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Starting from the assumption of a far greater cultural gulf between the learned and the lay in the medieval world than between rich and poor, Elf Queens explores the church's systematic campaign to demonize fairies and infernalize fairyland and the responses this provoked in vernacular romance.
Richard Firth Green is Academy Professor of The Ohio State University. He is author of several books, including A Crisis of Truth: Literature and Law in Ricardian England, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.
"Much has been written on medieval fairies in the past twenty years
or so, but in Elf Queens and Holy Friars Green succeeds
triumphantly in bringing new insights and thoughtful analysis to
their history and their metamorphoses into divergent forms, as the
early modern world begins to take shape."
*The Times Literary Supplement*
"As a guide to the traditions of Britain and France, [Green's]
can't be surpassed. This is cultural history from below, not the
usual top-down perspective. . . . It is not only original, sensible
and deeply researched but accessible. Not only medievalists will
actively enjoy reading it."
*London Review of Books*
"This wonderful book is a rare example of work which is genuinely
interdisciplinary, making an equal contribution to our
understanding of medieval romance literature, Western Christian
theology and medieval Western European cultural history. It does
this by bringing together two different bodies of source
material-the romances and the writings of medieval churchmen-in
both of which the author is equally expert. The result is a whole
series of exciting new insights, centred on the theme of fairyland
as a contested site in a struggle between official and unofficial
cultures in the high and late Middle Ages."
*Time and Mind*
"A new book by Richard Firth Green is always a significant event,
and this one, surveying fairy beliefs in the Middle Ages, is set to
become the work of first recourse on the subject. It is scholarly,
meticulously researched beyond the limits of all the more familiar
examples, and is in many respects a profoundly revisionary account
of such beliefs. It deserves to be read not just by folklorists and
critics of those medieval romances in which fairies figure, but by
cultural, social, and intellectual historians, theologians, and
historians of witchcraft."
*Speculum*
"Elf Queens and Holy Friars is a lucid, rich and engrossing book.
Green sustains his case for the contingency and variety of medieval
fairy beliefs, while also making a coherent and compelling argument
about medieval clerical approaches to such beliefs. The study is
likely to become a staple of reading lists across a number of areas
of literary and cultural history; however, its appeal should extend
well beyond the academy. Elf Queens and Holy Friars is a deeply
learned book, but it wears that learning lightly; there is much
here for readers new to this field to enjoy, not least the sheer
entertainment value of many medieval fairy accounts."
*Literature & History*
"Although I have brushed up against suggestions of fairy lore and
activity many times in the materials with which I work, I have
taken them for granted up to now, which also means I did not think
very hard about them. Reading this book has illuminated a large
expanse of material much more deeply and intimately than I imagined
possible."
*Claire Fanger, Rice University*
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