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Western Medieval European Poetry and Literature

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... the same aesthetic qualities as the woman/man one loved. ... So harshly does love punish my breast. I die, I die, I die. Because I must love and am not loved. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Western Medieval European Poetry and Literature


1
Western Medieval European Poetry and Literature
  • CNE/ENG 120
  • 11/3/04

2
Medieval Period
  • 1,000 year epoch in which nearly every element
    of modern European culture can be found already
    in existence, but in strange forms and used for
    alien purposes.

3
Vernacular Medieval Literature
  • Spans various genres epics, romances, courtly
    and other poetry.
  • In particular, Medieval lyric poetry, with its
    themes of love and loss, its reliance on simple
    effects of rhythm and rhyme, and its basis in
    sung performance - make it not that far from
    modern popular music in spirit and form.

4
Continuities
  • For example, Maria Rosa Menocals book, Shards of
    Love (1994) traces the path of inspiration
    linking the lyrics of Medieval Spain to Eric
    Claptons album, Layla and Other Assorted Love
    Songs.
  • The Troubadour lyrics are the original version,
    in some ways, of what we think of as the modern
    love song (high drama with lovely sound and
    imagery).

5
Layla by Eric Clapton and Jim Gordon
  • What'll you do when you get lonely And nobody's
    waiting by your side? You've been running and
    hiding much too long. You know it's just your
    foolish pride. Layla, you've got me on my knees.
    Layla, I'm begging, darling please. Layla,
    darling won't you ease my worried mind. I tried
    to give you consolation When your old man had let
    you down. Like a fool, I fell in love with you,
    Turned my whole world upside down. Chorus Let's
    make the best of the situation Before I finally
    go insane. Please don't say we'll never find a
    way And tell me all my love's in vain. Chorus
    Chorus

6
Troubadours Trobairitz(know these terms for
the exam)
  • Their performance culture is similar to those of
    other popular music traditions, such as folk
    music, the blues, and hip-hop. They all tend to
    be composed at their peak popularity by a tightly
    knit group of writers, producers, and performers.
    Lyrics and music are intertextual, borrowing,
    stealing, and adapting from previous singers and
    competitors. The hip-hop vogue for sampling
    earlier songs, alluding to music, the music
    industry, and various performers is much like the
    characteristic culture of the troubadours.

7
Courtly Love
  • Sang of courtly love, centered in southwest
    France.
  • Troubadours/Trobairitz composed the songs,
    jongleurs (traveling players) would perform them
    at various courts, after giving largely
    fictitious vitae of their composers.
  • Themes the art of composition, sex, money

8
Formal Characteristics
  • Rhyme was new in the 12th c., so poets explored
    it with a passion.
  • About 250 melodies have survived, representing
    about 10 of what existed at the time.
  • There were 2 main melodic styles
  • Syllabic (each syllable gets a single note)
  • Melismatic (many notes are used for 1 syllable)

9
Key Poetic Terms
  • The verb trobar to find - focuses on the skills
    of invention and improvisation.
  • If you were skilled at composition, it followed
    that you would be skilled at love.
  • The verses had to possess the same aesthetic
    qualities as the woman/man one loved.
  • A good poem required payment in good love
    Bernart threatens to stop composing and leave
    town because his lady hasnt followed this rule
    (When I see the skylark moving).

10
Guillem de Peiteus
  • 1071-1127 CE
  • Duke of Aquitaine
  • Ill write a verse about nothing
  • In the sweet time of renewal
  • what themes/imagery can we see here?

11
Bernart de Ventadorn
  • 1150-1180 CE
  • Perhaps belonged to the court of Eleanor of
    Aquitaine.
  • When I see the skylark moving
  • Listen to the song. What images and themes can we
    see here?

12
Beatriz, Comtessa de Dia
  • Flourished circa 1160 CE
  • We dont know much of anything about her.
  • To sing of what I would not want I must
  • I have been in great distress
  • What themes do we see in these? What kind of love
    features in the second poem?

13
Bertran de Born
  • C. 1140 - c. 1215 CE
  • Appears in Dantes Inferno as a sower of
    discord.
  • I love the glad time of Easter satirizes
    Richard the Lion-Hearted.

14
Walther von der Vogelweide
  • Austrian
  • c. 1170 - c. 1230 CE
  • A love-singer (minnesinger, or minstrel). Also
    calls for transcendence of the world through
    spiritual cleansing. Listen to the song
    Palastinalied (Palestine Song).
  • What are some themes and imagery we can see in
    his songs under the lime tree, someone tell
    me, what is love?, I sat upon a rock, and
    Alas, where have they disappeared, all my lifes
    short years?

15
Carmina Burana No. 116
  • Listen to Sic mea fata. By singing I ease my
    fate/as does the swan near death. A warm sorrow
    clings to my heart, the rosy color has fled from
    my face. From increasing care, lively pain,
    declining vigor, with misery, I die. So harshly
    does love punish my breast. I die, I die, I die.
    Because I must love and am not loved.
  • The Carmina Burana is a manuscript that recorded
    the Goliards (wandering clerics) dancing
    drinking songs (Latin). Poets proclaim bodily
    needs, attack conventional society.

16
Marie de France
  • French
  • mid 12th - early 13th c. CE
  • Genre lais (narratives in verse, tales of
    courtly love and adventure, based on Celtic
    folktale).
  • Character is revealed through action, not inner
    thoughts/reflection. The morals of her stories
    are exemplary rather than explicit - we must
    work them out from the behavior fate of the
    characters.
  • Name/term to know Bisclavret, lais

17
Marie de France on Love
  • Love can bring the lover closer to God ( it
    ennobles, and its pleasures are the closest one
    can experience to divine inspiration), but love
    is also an earthly/physical experience.
  • She isnt consistent in her moral presentation -
    she selectively condones adultery, for example.

18
Her Opening Lai, Guigemar
  • Love is a wound in the body, and yet nothing
    appears on the outside. Its a sickness that
    lasts a long time, because it comes from nature.
    Many people treat it lightly, like these false
    courtiers who have affairs everywhere they go,
    then boast about their conquests thats not love
    but folly, evil and lechery. If you can find a
    loyal love, you should serve love and serve it
    faithfully, be at its command.
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