"This is a major collection of essays that gives new direction to the study of one of the most important poets of the Middle Ages and one of the most fascinating works of literature from the period." —C. Stephen Jaeger, University of Illinois
"Comprehensive and cutting edge, Visuality and Materiality in the Story of Tristan and Isolde defines the moment in the history of Tristan scholarship. The essays, gathered from both sides of the Atlantic, enrich and expand the key concepts of materiality and visuality to account for the proliferation of the Tristan story in an astonishing range of media. [Enhanced by an outstanding bibliography] the collection gives scholars in several disciplines the tools to explore the productive connections between the verbal and the visual in medieval culture." —Sarah Westphal-Wihl, Washington University in St. Louis
"Visuality and Materiality in the Story of Tristan and Isolde successfully opens up the conversation between literary historians and art historians on its intended subject, and as such is an original contribution to the field. The editors are well-versed in past and current medieval, and specifically Tristan, scholarship and their substantial introduction lays out the methodology behind the investigation as well as the structure of the book." —Denise Della Rossa, University of Notre Dame
“[This volume] represents a further step in the integration of material and visual culture as a useful interdisciplinary hermeneutic.” —Comitatus
“This collection of twelve essays is both traditional and innovative in the ground it covers and the approaches taken by its editors and authors. . . . [It] is in many ways representative of the kind of contemporary medieval literary studies that are taking us beyond the merely textual into the broader spheres of cultural context. For that reason, among others, it is a welcome addition to scholarship.” —Journal of English and Germanic Philology
"This fine and gorgeously illustrated collection of twelve essays grew out of a conference held at Duke University and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill in 2007. . . . The volume is resolutely and unapologetically German-centric and focused squarely on Gottfried von Strassburg: eleven of the thirteen contributors are from departments of German, and six of the essays are on Gottfried, with one other on Hans Sach" —Arthuriana
“The story of Tristan and Isolde held a special fascination for people all over Western Europe from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries, and this fascination is documented in numerous works of literature as well as pictures and pictorial narratives. Yet although this extensive corpus has been studied by literary scholars on the one hand and by art historians on the other, there has not been much dialogue between the two disciplines. . . . Hence the rationale for this volume, which brings together twelve contributions by experts from art history and literary studies with the aim of stimulating an interdisciplinary dialogue that, it is hoped, will lead to a keener awareness of the relations between the verbal and the visual in medieval culture.” —Speculum
“The editors are to be congratulated for a thought-provoking introductory essay and for producing a collection that conveys current thinking about some of the many aspects and manifestations of the story of Tristan and Isolde.” —The Medieval Review
“As this volume nicely illustrates, with the help of new theoretical concepts (visuality, materiality) there emerge possibilities to tease new meanings out of texts/manuscripts that have been discussed for a long time.” —The Comparatist