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Chivalry, the Mediterranean, and the Crown of Aragon constitute the threefold axis of this collection of essays. The three are at the forefront of a real struggle among civilizations that took place around the borderland surrounding the Mediterranean in the late Middle Ages, namely in the Iberian and Italian peninsulas and the Balkans. In fact, it could be said that the late medieval Mediterranean came to be defined precisely because of this struggle. Chivalry thrived in its milieu both in real and fictional terms amidst conquering kingdoms, ethical chevaliers and knight kings that helped shape the identity of the Catalan-speaking territories.
págs. 7-17
Curial and Tiran: The Social and Literary Crisis of Chivalric Ideals in the Mediterranean “Borderland”
págs. 19-33
The Mediterranean Dawn of Chivalric Narrative (Girart de Rosselló and the Roman de Jaufré): Literary Chivalry and Its Early Mediterranean Connection
págs. 35-60
Of Shipwrecks and Epiphanies: The Mediterranean Wanderlust of Iberian Knights (Apolonio, Tirant, Curial, Cervantes)
págs. 61-83
págs. 85-100
State, Nation, and Language in the Middle Ages: The Crown of Aragon (Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries)
págs. 101-116
Cross-cultural Identity, Language Development, and Medieval Catalan Culture: The Prehumanism of Ramon Llull
págs. 117-129
págs. 131-149
Memory Construction: The Knight King Jaume I According to Troubadours and Chronicles
págs. 151-169
Comparing Tirant and Quijote: Four Plays from the Second Half of the Twentieth Century
págs. 171-196
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