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Module 4 - Part
4: Web Resources
Other parts of this module include:
Index | Part
1: Overview | Part
2: Explorations and Exercises | Part
3: Texts and Contexts
Variations on the Theme of Romantic Love in the Middle
Ages
The Tale of Genji
Columbia University professors talk about key elements
in The Tale of Genji, with illustrations and
excellent supporting material.
Link
1
A rich Web site that provides a summary of each chapter
in The Tale of Genji, with a full series of illustrative
woodcuts by a seventeenth-century artist, Harumasa Yamamoto.
Link
2
A helpful list of characters and their names.
Link
3
A short essay on the history of illustrations of The
Tale of Genji that charts their progress from the
twelfth-century Genji scroll to the manga,
or comic book, versions so popular today.
Link
4
Another useful introduction to the Genji illustrations.
Link
5
A page from the National Museum of Australia with a beautiful
illustration from Chapter 8.
Link
6
A course site with excellent suggestions for further exploration
of historical and cultural topics relevant to the study
of medieval Japan.
Link
7
This scroll painting illustrates the importance of the
supernatural in Japan.
Link
8
Illustrated summary of a No play about the jealousy of
the Rokujo lady.
Link
9
This illustrated essay gives a good diagram of a Heian
mansion. It comes from an interesting commercial site developed
in support of a contemporary novel by Liza Dalby, The
Tale of Murasaki.
Link
10
Medieval European Romance
A very rich academic site, with a valuable and well-documented
section on Arthurian legends, with many links.
Link
11
The Rules of Courtly Love, as formulated by
Andreas Capellanus.
Link
12
Larry Benson, "Courtly Love and Chivalry in the Later
Middle Ages." A lively review of the debates surrounding
this topic.
Link
13
A course site from Virginia that outlines the relationship
between the Marian cult and the development of courtly
love.
Link
14
The Metropolitan Museum of New York's illustrated discussion
of the Cult of the Virgin.
Link
15
A summary of the story of Tristan and Iseut, with links
to many other useful sources.
Link
16
From the Office of Tourism of St. Malo in Brittany, a
contemporary photograph of a courtyard not unlike the site
of Marie de France's Laustic, with the intersection
of fortified homes.
Link
17
The evolution of the medieval castle and the creation
of private chambers.
Link 18
Another extended discussion of the medieval castle, noting
the development of the bedroom when the development of
fireplaces, chimneys, and other refinements made it possible
to section off private chambers.
Link
19
A well-documented overview of the nature of Western medieval
romantic attachments by Piper L. Bringhurst.
Link
20
A marvelous site devoted to the Decameron, with
links and illustrations.
Link
21
Three of the four panels painted by Botticelli to illustrate
the story of Nastagio Degli Onesti, the eighth story of
the fifth day in Boccaccio's Decameron.
Link
22
A very useful study guide for medieval Love Songs in their
musical settings, with valuable comments on the poetic
traditions represented. Note the reference to the "Lamento
di Tristano" and its connection to Marie de France's Chevrefoil.
Link
23
Bhakti Poetry
A wide-ranging academic bibliography, with links to critical
sources for a variety of Asian texts by women.
Link
24
A brief summary of the contexts out of which the Bhakti
movement developed, emphasizing the egalitarian nature
of this devotional mode.
Link
25
A biographical sketch and appreciation of Mahadeviyakka.
Link
26
A reliable biographical note on Mirabai, from a valuable
site on South Asian materials organized by faculty at UCLA.
Link
27
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