Yejung Choi, Sir Launfal : A Portrait of a Knight in Fourteenth Century England. pp. 1~28 (28 pages)
Abstract
The purpose of this study is to relate Sir Launfal to fourteenth
century England and to explore the contemporary re-conceptualization of
a knight presented in the poem. My argument is that Sir Launfal is a
portrait of a knight, not ensconced in the idealized setting as in
Marie de France’s poem, but frequently found among fourteenth century
English nobility. Appropriating inherited literary materials and stock
motifs of the genre, Chestre demystifies the ideal of knighthood,
de-idealizes romantic love and discloses the cohesiveness of wealth and
knighthood, mainly through his own insertions of episodes that serve to
widen the prospect of the poem from an individual knight to the society
in which he is entwined in the social networks and the value system
shared by its members. “Materialistic” or “bourgeois” features found in
the poem and criticized so far are symptomatic or reflective of the
state of affairs in Chestre’s age, such as the sumptuary laws, visual
display culture of the nobility, inheritance of lands through
heiresses, and a series of redistribution of estates from 1327 to 1337.
In conclusion, Sir Launfal is not a deplorable degradation of Lanval,
nor should it be evaluated by the standard which sets the twelfth
century French romances as a model. Rather, it should be viewed as a
poem born in fourteenth-century England—brimming with social, political
and social changes within and without the court—intended to depict a
knight of this age.
저자 키워드 Key words
Chestre, Marie de France, Sir Launfal, Lanval, knight, fourteenth century, romance, nobility