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Happy New Year! ExamExam – Help, what should I study?! Medieval texts (content, background) Geoffrey, Chretien, Vulgate Cycle, Malory, etc. Lecture material.

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Presentation on theme: "Happy New Year! ExamExam – Help, what should I study?! Medieval texts (content, background) Geoffrey, Chretien, Vulgate Cycle, Malory, etc. Lecture material."— Presentation transcript:

1 Happy New Year! ExamExam – Help, what should I study?! Medieval texts (content, background) Geoffrey, Chretien, Vulgate Cycle, Malory, etc. Lecture material Developments, dates, terms Hand-outs Passages, overviews, background Reports on the website Content presentations and texts

2 Jogging your memory! Chronological survey, development: growth and change (e.g. characters) Oldest material; scraps, mixture of fact&fiction, traces of oral tradition (Culhwch, Bretons) HRB: Latin, pseudo-chronicle, sources, first biography (incl. Merlijn), propaganda Vernacular: Wace (RT, Espoir Breton), Layamon Chronicle  Romance (fiction!): Chrétien de Troyes  Lancelot  Graal

3 Graal and Merlin  Robert de Boron Lancelot and Graal  Lancelot en prose Vulgaat cycle: prose = ‘true’; double esprit Translations and variants (Middle Dutch Lancelotcompilatie, Middle English Stanzaic and Alliterative) Interchanging chronicle-romance Keystone Malory = basis for ‘Nachleben’

4 Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur (1470/1485) Sir Thomas Malory of Newbold Revell, born around 1416, died 1471 War of the Roses: Lancaster-York Knight-prisoner: criminal? Long list of misdeeds may be politically motivated Writer in prison: collection of Arthurian tales, based on `Frenssche bookes` (Lancelot en prose and Tristan en prose) In 1485 printed by William Caxton, also Winchester manuscript (1470) with 8 Tales instead of 21 books with small chapters  Works (ed. Vinaver) Caxton misread title final tale as title whole; Malory gives full biography (but undoes interlace).

5 Nachleben Caxton’s edition is popular, yet appreciation Arthurian stories diminishes in 15th-16th century 19th century (Romantic Period): revival Middle Ages  new editions of Malory shortly after 1800, parallel to ideological interest British king/queen (Westminsterpalace, Victorians, position monarchy needs support) Example: frescoes in The Queen’s Robing room Gawain and women  mercy Arthur and Lancelot  generosity Example: wood-engravings in the House of Parliament Arthur and Avalon Arthur and Excalibur

6 Nachleben Alfred, Lord Tennyson - The Lady of Shalott (ME bron = Mort Artu)  Loreena McKennit (hand-out)hand-out Idylls of the King, and other texts like Morris’s Defence of Guenevere Pre-Raphaelite Movement: a.o. Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Edward Burne-Jones, William Holman Hunt, John Everett Millais, Aubrey Beardsley Launcelot’s Vision of the Sanc Grael: Oxford murals  art in public space; windows above the sink Themes: -Arthur in boat to Avalon  photo Julia Margaret Cameron -Lady of Shalott, Elaine of Astolat

7 William Holman Hunt The Lady of Shallot Dante Gabriele Rossetti Damsel of the Sanct Grael

8 Aubrey Beardsley – Merlin (1893–94, for an edition of Le Morte Darthur, Malory)

9 Oxford Union Murals The Lady of the Lake gives Excalibur to Arthur

10 Julia Margaret Cameron The Passing of Arthur

11 Nachleben ‘Nachleben’ continues after 19th century: examples Galahad as symbol for unknown soldier, Grail metaphor, Round Table, Avalon Many novels, often with new perspectives (Morgaine, Guinevere, Merlin, minor characters) Music: Rick Wakeman, Kayak. McKennit Games Movies: Friday, 10-12! (Monty Python, First Knight, The Fisher King, Excalibur, etc.)

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