The monster outside and within: medieval literary reflections on ethical epistemology. From Beowulf to Marie de France, the Nibelungenlied , and Thüring von Ringoltingen’s Melusine
Identifieur interne : 000260 ( Main/Merge ); précédent : 000259; suivant : 000261The monster outside and within: medieval literary reflections on ethical epistemology. From Beowulf to Marie de France, the Nibelungenlied , and Thüring von Ringoltingen’s Melusine
Auteurs : Albrecht Classen [États-Unis]Source :
- Neohelicon [ 0324-4652 ] ; 2013.
English descriptors
- Teeft :
- Beast, Beowulf, Beowulf manuscript, Bisclavret, Burgundian, Burgundian court, Camden house, Classen, Courtly, Courtly world, Critical companion, Critical study, Dragon, Early modern, Early modern culture, Edwin mellen press, English beowulf, Entire middle age, Epic poem, Epistemological function, Ethical epistemology, Evil character, Evil incarnate, Existential threat, External challenge, Fachverlag wissenschaft, Female descendant, First place, Fleeting existence, German literature, Grendel, Hagen, Harvard university press, Heroic epic, Human being, Human civilization, Human race, Human society, Hunnish land, John mandeville, Johnston staver, Late middle age, Liminal figure, Long time, Male protagonist, Medieval, Medieval author, Medieval church, Medieval context, Medieval folklore, Medieval imagination, Medieval literature, Medieval monster, Medieval thinker, Melusine, Melusine narrative, Middle age, Mittelalter mythen, Monster, Monster lore, Monstrosity, Monstrous, Monstrous creature, Monstrous feature, Monstrous middle age, Monstrous race, Much more, Mythical beast, Mythological reading, Nibelungenlied, Numerous time, Ordinary weapon, Other word, Oxford university press, Palgrave macmillan, Pennsylvania press, Polar opposite, Postmodern beowulf, Protagonist, Reymond, Rural space, Same time, Second part, Siegfried, Significant parallel, Strange creature, Superhuman strength, Toronto press, Trans, True nature, Twelfth century, Up world, Walker bynum, Weisser silberin varbe, Werewolf, Wunderlich.
Abstract
Abstract: While previous research has often reflected on the phenomenon of monsters in medieval literature, identifying them as existential threats, reflections of imagination, or as symbols of the monstrous and evil in an apotropaic sence, here I suggest to refine our investigations of monsters in light of their epistemological function. Examining literary examples from the early to the late Middle Ages (Beowulf to Melusine), we can recognize how much monsters indeed serve consistently for the development of the individual protagonists, for coping with otherness at large, which commonly rests within the heroes and heroines as part of their characters. External challenges thus prove to be reflections of internal problems and issues, and the struggle against the monsters constitutes a struggle against or with the self.
Url:
DOI: 10.1007/s11059-013-0198-5
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ISTEX:80612BD2ABEFF0E72CCC3F73D852C4FD4F17593ALe document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: While previous research has often reflected on the phenomenon of monsters in medieval literature, identifying them as existential threats, reflections of imagination, or as symbols of the monstrous and evil in an apotropaic sence, here I suggest to refine our investigations of monsters in light of their epistemological function. Examining literary examples from the early to the late Middle Ages (Beowulf to Melusine), we can recognize how much monsters indeed serve consistently for the development of the individual protagonists, for coping with otherness at large, which commonly rests within the heroes and heroines as part of their characters. External challenges thus prove to be reflections of internal problems and issues, and the struggle against the monsters constitutes a struggle against or with the self.</div>
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