2. Ju Ok Yoon, Leprosy, Miracles, and Morality in Amis and Amiloun. pp. 29~56(28pages)
Abstract
Scholarship of the fourteenth-century Middle English romance Amis and
Amiloun has been divided in its interpretations of the implications of
Amiloun’s leprosy and the supernatural elements, including the two
miracles—Amiloun’s healing from leprosy and the resurrection of Amis’s
children—that are employed at the end of the romance as solutions to
problems that no human or human virtue can solve. Some modern critics
have expressed discomfort with the pronounced Christian didactic intent
that the romance articulates. In this paper, I reinterpret the romance
by examining the significance of Amiloun’s leprosy and the two miracles
in the context of the romance’s Christian moral stance. I introduce two
contrasting medieval attitudes towards leprosy—leprosy as punishment
and leprosy as a blessing. Unlike many critics of the romance who
understand Amiloun’s leprosy as a divine punishment for his false
swearing in the combat and his impertinence against God, I read his
disease as a blessing in disguise: the disease makes the leprous
Amiloun and other characters, including Amis and Belisaunt, acknowledge
God’s grace and mercy as their ultimate resort. I interpret the two
miracles as instruments employed to emphasize this Christian morality
of the romance.
저자 키워드 Key words
Amis and Amiloun, Amiloun, Amis, Belisaunt, leprosy, blessing, punishment, miracles, morality, Christianity