Simon Gaunt - Love and Death in Medieval French and Occitan Courtly Literature. Martyrs to Love [2006][A]

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Product Details
Book Title: Love and Death in Medieval French and Occitan Courtly Literature: Martyrs to Love
Book Author: Simon Gaunt (Author)
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Oxford University Press (April 13, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0199272077
ISBN-13: 978-0199272075

Book Description
Publication Date: April 13, 2006
Some of medieval culture's most arresting images and stories inextricably associate love and death. Thus the troubadour Jaufre Rudel dies in the arms of the countess of Tripoli, having loved her from afar without ever having seen her. Or in Marie de France's Chevrefoil, Tristan and Iseult's fatal love is hauntingly symbolized by the fatally entwined honeysuckle and hazel. And who could forget the ethereal spectacle of the Damoisele of Escalot's body carried to Camelot on a supernatural funerary boat with a letter on her breast explaining how her unrequited love for Lancelot killed her? Medieval literature is fascinated with the idea that love may be a fatal affliction. Indeed, it is frequently suggested that true love requires sacrifice, that you must be ready to die for, from, and in love. Love, in other words, is represented, sometimes explicitly, as a form of martyrdom, a notion that is repeatedly reinforced by courtly literature's borrowing of religious vocabulary and imagery. The paradigm of the martyr to love has of course remained compelling in the early modern and modern period.

This book seeks to explore what is at stake in medieval literature's preoccupation with love's martyrdom. Informed by modern theoretical approaches, particularly Lacanian psychoanalysis and Jacques Derrida's work on ethics, it offers new readings of a wide range of French and Occitan courtly texts from the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and argues that a new secular ethics of desire emerges from courtly literature because of its fascination with death. This book also examines the interplay between lyric and romance in courtly literary culture and shows how courtly literature's predilection for sacrificial desire imposes a repressive sex-gender system that may then be subverted by fictional women and queers who either fail to die on cue, or who die in troublesome and disruptive ways.


Review
"Gaunt has given us a compelling analysis of courtly love, which should become required reading for all future debates."--Matilda Tomaryn Bruckner, Speculum

About the Author
Simon Gaunt is Professor of French Language and Literature and Head of the French Department at King's College London.

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Simon Gaunt - Love and Death in Medieval French and Occitan Courtly Literature. Martyrs to Love [2006][A]