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Medieval romance: themes and approaches by…
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Medieval romance: themes and approaches (original 1973; edition 1973)

by John E. Stevens

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291809,248 (4.5)None
You'd think that, six hundred years after the romances were written, people would have figured them out.

Surprisingly, this is still not true. Reputable scholars argue about whether a Romance (in the proper, medieval sense of the term) must be about courtly love, or about knighthood, or about courtesy, or about magic.

The best answer, surely, is that it may be about those things, but it must be about people who strive to be greater than themselves, and who work to accomplish something of true importance. The purpose of the romance is to strip away the mundane things that make this harder to see. So there may be magic, because a magical world tends to make it easier to understand good and evil. There may be courtly love, because a certain part of the population saw this as virtuous. There may be knights, because the ideal of chivalry tends to be expressed through tales of knighthood. But there may be none of these things -- a romance such as Gamelyn has no magic, no women, and a main character whose only virtue is his quick fists.

So to understand romances requires a broad view, looking at the settings of the romance, the characters, the mechanics -- all the myriad working parts.

Few books do that as well as this. This isn't a book of romances, it is a book about romances, and one of the most thought-provoking I have seen. Most books on romances, e.g., talk about modern romances, such as Tolkien's Middle Earth complex or the Harry Potter books, as latter-day expressions of an ancient phenomenon. I have to admire a book that has the nerve to turn that on its head and say that we should study the medieval romances because they are the sources Tolkien consulted to write the first great modern romance.

This is not a perfect book. A few of the examples run on too long. And very little attention is paid to the structure of the romances -- verse forms and the like. Still, in writing my own book on romances, I found that I cited this slim volume more than any other source. If you are the sort who takes an exclusionist view of romances, Stevens may not appeal to you. But if you want to study the romances in all their amazing (and, admittedly, sometimes monotonous) variety, this is a very good book to have. ( )
  waltzmn | Dec 2, 2012 |
You'd think that, six hundred years after the romances were written, people would have figured them out.

Surprisingly, this is still not true. Reputable scholars argue about whether a Romance (in the proper, medieval sense of the term) must be about courtly love, or about knighthood, or about courtesy, or about magic.

The best answer, surely, is that it may be about those things, but it must be about people who strive to be greater than themselves, and who work to accomplish something of true importance. The purpose of the romance is to strip away the mundane things that make this harder to see. So there may be magic, because a magical world tends to make it easier to understand good and evil. There may be courtly love, because a certain part of the population saw this as virtuous. There may be knights, because the ideal of chivalry tends to be expressed through tales of knighthood. But there may be none of these things -- a romance such as Gamelyn has no magic, no women, and a main character whose only virtue is his quick fists.

So to understand romances requires a broad view, looking at the settings of the romance, the characters, the mechanics -- all the myriad working parts.

Few books do that as well as this. This isn't a book of romances, it is a book about romances, and one of the most thought-provoking I have seen. Most books on romances, e.g., talk about modern romances, such as Tolkien's Middle Earth complex or the Harry Potter books, as latter-day expressions of an ancient phenomenon. I have to admire a book that has the nerve to turn that on its head and say that we should study the medieval romances because they are the sources Tolkien consulted to write the first great modern romance.

This is not a perfect book. A few of the examples run on too long. And very little attention is paid to the structure of the romances -- verse forms and the like. Still, in writing my own book on romances, I found that I cited this slim volume more than any other source. If you are the sort who takes an exclusionist view of romances, Stevens may not appeal to you. But if you want to study the romances in all their amazing (and, admittedly, sometimes monotonous) variety, this is a very good book to have. ( )
  waltzmn | Dec 2, 2012 |

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