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Module 4 - Part
3: Texts and Contexts
Other parts of this module include:
Index |
Part 1: Overview |
Part 2: Explorations and Exercises
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4: Web Resources
Variations on the Theme of Romantic Love in the Middle Ages
Primary sources
Selections from Andreas Cappellanus, The Art of Love.
Link
1
Marie de France, Chevrefoil, translated by Judith
Shoaf, with the translator's notes.
Link
2
Charles D'Orleans, "To His Mistress, To Succour His Heart
that is Beleaguered by Jealousy."
Link
3
The first two "joys" from "The Fifteen Joys of Marriage," an
anti-feminist treatise of the sort that influenced Chaucer's Wife
of Bath's Prologue.
Link
4
Secondary sources
A scholarly article by Colleen P. Donagher, "Socializing
the Sorceress: The Fairy Mistress in Lanval, Le
Bel Inconnu, and Partonopeu de Blois," published
in Essays In Medieval Studies, volume
4.
Link
5
An excellent essay by Royall Tyler, the most recent translator
of Murasaki's novel into English: "Marriage, Rank and Rape
in The Tale of Genji," published in Intersections,
a refereed electronic journal devoted to Asian Studies published
by Murdoch University in Perth, Western Australia.
Link
6
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