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Introduction: "Able to do lyke a knight": disability in Malory's Morte d'Arthur
Disability, lovesickness, and the chivalric code: women healers and harmers in the Morte
"For whome he wente oute of hys minde": women and the love-madness of Tristram and Lancelot
(Dis)abling heteronormativity: the touch of the queer/crip in Malory's Morte
Vessels of blood: (dis)abled bodies and the grail in Malory's "Tale of the sankgreal"
Lancelot's wounds, the healing of Urry, and images of (dis)ability in the book of Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere.
Disability, lovesickness, and the chivalric code: women healers and harmers in the Morte
"For whome he wente oute of hys minde": women and the love-madness of Tristram and Lancelot
(Dis)abling heteronormativity: the touch of the queer/crip in Malory's Morte
Vessels of blood: (dis)abled bodies and the grail in Malory's "Tale of the sankgreal"
Lancelot's wounds, the healing of Urry, and images of (dis)ability in the book of Sir Launcelot and Queen Guinevere.