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Marriage, Adultery and Inheritance in Malory's Morte Darthur
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An exploration of how Malory deals with the themes of love, marriage and adultery, revealing the socially conservative vantage of the gentry and nobility.Marriage in the Middle Ages encompassed tw...
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21 September 2006

An exploration of how Malory deals with the themes of love, marriage and adultery, revealing the socially conservative vantage of the gentry and nobility.
Marriage in the Middle Ages encompassed two crucial but sometimes conflicting dimensions: a private companionate relationship, and a public social institution, the means whereby heirs were produced and land, wealth, power and political rule were transferred. This study examines the concept of marriage as seen in the Morte Darthur, moving beyond it to look at "adulterous" and other male/female relationships, and their impact on the world of the RoundTable in general. Key points addressed are the compromise achieved in the "Tale of Sir Gareth" between natural, youthful passion and the gentry's pragmatic view of marriage; the problems of King Arthur's marriage in light of bothpolitical need and the difficulty of the queen's infertility and adultery; and the repercussions of Lancelot's adultery in the tragedies of two marriageable daughters, Elaine of Astolat and Elaine of Corbin. Finally, the author reveals and considers in detail (focusing on dynastic dysfunction in three generations of Pendragon men: Uther, Arthur and Mordred) the myth of benevolent paternity by which men, whether born legitimate of bastard, were united through the Round Table.
KAREN CHEREWATUK is Professor of English at St Olaf College, Minnesota.
Marriage in the Middle Ages encompassed two crucial but sometimes conflicting dimensions: a private companionate relationship, and a public social institution, the means whereby heirs were produced and land, wealth, power and political rule were transferred. This study examines the concept of marriage as seen in the Morte Darthur, moving beyond it to look at "adulterous" and other male/female relationships, and their impact on the world of the RoundTable in general. Key points addressed are the compromise achieved in the "Tale of Sir Gareth" between natural, youthful passion and the gentry's pragmatic view of marriage; the problems of King Arthur's marriage in light of bothpolitical need and the difficulty of the queen's infertility and adultery; and the repercussions of Lancelot's adultery in the tragedies of two marriageable daughters, Elaine of Astolat and Elaine of Corbin. Finally, the author reveals and considers in detail (focusing on dynastic dysfunction in three generations of Pendragon men: Uther, Arthur and Mordred) the myth of benevolent paternity by which men, whether born legitimate of bastard, were united through the Round Table.
KAREN CHEREWATUK is Professor of English at St Olaf College, Minnesota.
Price: $120.00
Pages: 180
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: D.S.Brewer
Publication Date:
21 September 2006
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781843840893
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval, Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
An appealing and needed study.
Pledging Troth in Malory's "Tale of Sir Gareth"
The King and Queen's Marriage: Dowry, Infertilit, and Adultery
Marriageable Daughters: The Two Elaines
Fathers and Sons in Malory
Royal Bastardy, Incest, and a Failed Dynasty
The King and Queen's Marriage: Dowry, Infertilit, and Adultery
Marriageable Daughters: The Two Elaines
Fathers and Sons in Malory
Royal Bastardy, Incest, and a Failed Dynasty