Michael Salda's Arthurian Animation: A Study of Cartoon Camelots on Film and Television is now available from McFarland and coming soon from Amazon.com and other distributors.
The contents have been uploaded to McFarland's page for the book and follow below. Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk currently offer previews of the contents, full preface, full introduction, and part of chapter one from the Kindle edition of the book (which is available to access today from both Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk), and BarnesandNoble.com offers a preview to owners of its Nook readers (though I was unable to access this). This is definitely a must-get; click the preceding links for purchasing/previewing.
Table of Contents
Preface 1
Introduction 3
1. The Iris Opens: "Bosko’s Knight-Mare" 7
2. The Best Arthurian Cartoon Never Made: Hugh Harman’s King Arthur’s Knights 16
3. "To Ye Jousting Tournament": Arthur’s Postwar Rise 36
4. "What’s Up, Duke?" Variety in the 1950s and Early 1960s 43
5. The Sword in the Stone, a "Full-length Flop," and Arthurianimation’s Decline 59
6. The Profane and the Sacred: What Hath Monty Python Wrought? 77
7. Many Returns of the King: The 1980s 85
8. Arthur, Arthur, Everywhere: Short Animation of 1990s 100
9. Four Roads to Camelot: The Feature Film Bumper Crop of 1997-98 131
10. Where Lies Arthur? Arthurianimation Since 2000 151
Coda 175
Chapter Notes 177
Works Cited 189
Index 197
Sponsored by The Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Matter of Britain, the "Matter of Britain on Screen" blog is designed as an aid to explorations of the transformations undergone by the Matter of Britain as it is translated to film, television, and related electronic media, such as games and internet video.
Excalibur is not a thing, something you can hold in your hand.
Excalibur is the good in you.
The power to do good, to stand up for what's right, to slay dragons, to capture bank robbers.
You always carry Excalibur in your heart.
Robert Tinnell, Kids of the Round Table (1995)
Friday, July 26, 2013
Updates on Salda's Arthurian Animation
Posted by
Blog Editor, The Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture
at
12:19 AM
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