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The Medieval German Lohengrin
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The first monograph in English on the German Lohengrin, offering a new response to the challenges posed by the text.The tale of the mysterious knight carried across the water by a swan to the woman...
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01 November 2016

The first monograph in English on the German Lohengrin, offering a new response to the challenges posed by the text.
The tale of the mysterious knight carried across the water by a swan to the woman he saves and marries is one of the great narrative traditions of the Middle Ages. The version in the German Lohengrin (ca.1300) is perhaps the most striking. It captures the imagination with the appearance of the epic poet Wolfram von Eschenbach as narrator, the changing forms of the swan, and Lohengrin's appearance as a warrior alongside Saints Peter and Paul. In thepast, however, Lohengrin has been dismissed as an awkward amalgamation of earlier sources - partly due to more recent retellings of the material, such as Wagner's opera. This first monograph on Lohengrin in English presents a new response to the challenges the text poses. It is a study of how we read narrative across temporal distance, and at its heart lies the question: if a story is not held together by the chronological and causal links characteristic of modern narratives, how does it cohere? Alastair Matthews analyzes both the invocations of Wolfram that frame the text and the story of the Swan Knight that they enclose, arguing that Lohengrin is defined by a web of connections in which questions of identity and recognition are crucial, and thus that the themes at the core of the tale govern how it is told.
Alastair Matthews, DPhil Oxford, is a Marie Curie ResearchFellow at the Centre for Medieval Literature, University of Southern Denmark.
The tale of the mysterious knight carried across the water by a swan to the woman he saves and marries is one of the great narrative traditions of the Middle Ages. The version in the German Lohengrin (ca.1300) is perhaps the most striking. It captures the imagination with the appearance of the epic poet Wolfram von Eschenbach as narrator, the changing forms of the swan, and Lohengrin's appearance as a warrior alongside Saints Peter and Paul. In thepast, however, Lohengrin has been dismissed as an awkward amalgamation of earlier sources - partly due to more recent retellings of the material, such as Wagner's opera. This first monograph on Lohengrin in English presents a new response to the challenges the text poses. It is a study of how we read narrative across temporal distance, and at its heart lies the question: if a story is not held together by the chronological and causal links characteristic of modern narratives, how does it cohere? Alastair Matthews analyzes both the invocations of Wolfram that frame the text and the story of the Swan Knight that they enclose, arguing that Lohengrin is defined by a web of connections in which questions of identity and recognition are crucial, and thus that the themes at the core of the tale govern how it is told.
Alastair Matthews, DPhil Oxford, is a Marie Curie ResearchFellow at the Centre for Medieval Literature, University of Southern Denmark.
Price: $120.00
Pages: 250
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Camden House
Series: Studies in German Literature Linguistics and Culture
Publication Date:
01 November 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781571139719
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY CRITICISM / European / German, Literature: history and criticism, LITERARY CRITICISM / Medieval, Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
The critical discussion regarding the German narrative of the Swan Knight, Lohengrin, receives a welcome boost in this fine study by Alastair Matthews. . . . This Camden House volume is beautifully presented . . . . [T]he volume checks virtually anyone's list of desiderata for an excellent guide to an under-discussed medieval work, and would appeal to a broad audience, from undergraduate students of medieval literature or history to advanced academic critics.
Acknowledgments
Note on Abbreviations, Quotations, and References
Introduction
Wolfram and Polemic: Lohengrin and the Wartburgkrieg
Wolfram and Chronicles: Lohengrin and the Sächsische Weltchronik
Lohengrin's Journey: Identity in Transition
Lohengrin's Battles: Seeing and Hearing Identity
Lohengrin's Farewell: Knowing Identity
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Manuscripts
Appendix 2: Ottonian Germany in Recension A of the Sächsische Weltchronik: Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel, Cod. Guelf. 23.8 Aug. 4°
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Note on Abbreviations, Quotations, and References
Introduction
Wolfram and Polemic: Lohengrin and the Wartburgkrieg
Wolfram and Chronicles: Lohengrin and the Sächsische Weltchronik
Lohengrin's Journey: Identity in Transition
Lohengrin's Battles: Seeing and Hearing Identity
Lohengrin's Farewell: Knowing Identity
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Manuscripts
Appendix 2: Ottonian Germany in Recension A of the Sächsische Weltchronik: Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel, Cod. Guelf. 23.8 Aug. 4°
Notes
Bibliography
Index