Ju Ok Yoon, What Matabryne the Queen Mother Wants in Chevalere
Assigne page(s): 25-41 (16 pages)
Abstract
One peculiar aspect of the fourteen century English romance
Chevalere Assigne is that Matabryne the queen mother is represented
as the sole and formidable antagonist of all the characters in the
text. When her daughter-in-law gives birth to seven children, the
queen mother replaces her newborn grandchildren with seven whelps
and plots to drown them. She makes the king imprison the apparently
sinful queen for over a decade and then instigates him to burn her
at the stake. Later when the Swan Knight (Chevalere Assigne), one of
the seven grandchildren whose lives have been miraculously spared,
appears to save his mother from being burnt in a field, the queen
mother attacks the young knight in person, and then strives to kill
him in the combat that she had set up. Scholarship of Chevalere
Assigne has repeatedly pointed out that the queen mother is the
principal villain, simply attributing her aggression wielded against
others to her fallen nature. In this essay, I would argue that, read
in the specific context of later medieval royal household, the
romance’s delineations of the old queen mother may be imbued with
contemporary socio-cultural assumptions and anxieties over the
strong old royal mother, one of which may be that her agency and
influence can become powerful enough to mislead and override the
male sovereign authority and to interrupt the succession of the
royal lineage. With this intention in mind, I want to focus my
discussion of Chevalere Assigne on what Matabryne the queen mother
may want.
저자 키워드 Key words
Chevalere Assigne, Matabryne, queen mother, Swan Knight