Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Medieval English and Dutch Literature in its European Context and the Work of David F. Johnson
- 1 Reconstructing a Lost Manuscript of the Old English Gospels
- 2 The Reception of the Old English Version of Gregory the Great’s Dialogues between the Conquest and the Close of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 An Unrecorded Copy of Heinrich Krebs’s An Anglo-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Dialogues, Printer’s Proofs
- 4 The Body as Media in Early Medieval England
- 5 Who Snatched Grendel in Beowulf 852b?
- 6 ‘Mobile as Wishes’: Anchoritism, Intersubjectivity, and Disability in the Liber confortatorius
- 7 The Presence of the Hands: Sculpture and Script in the Eighth to Twelfth Centuries
- 8 Perceval’s Name and the Gifts of the Mother
- 9 A Relaxed Knight and an Impatient Heroine: Ironizing the Love Quest in the Second Part of the Middle Dutch Ferguut
- 10 Multilingualism in Van den vos Reynaerde and its Reception in Reynardus Vulpes
- 11 Three Characters as Narrator in the Roman van Walewein
- 12 As the Chess-Set Flies: Arthurian Marvels in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale and the Roman van Walewein
- 13 For a Performer’s Personal Use: The Corrector’s Lines in the Lower Margin of the Middle Dutch Lanceloet Manuscript
- 14 ‘Oft leudlez alone’: The Isolation of the Hero and its Consequences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 15 Shifting Skin: Passing as Human, Passing as Fay in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 16 The Lover Caught Between his Mother and his Maiden in Lanseloet van Denemerken
- 17 Afterlives: The Abbey at Amesbury and the ‘Rehabilitation’ of Guinevere in Malory and the Stanzaic Morte Arthur
- 18 The Importance of Being an Arthurian Mother
- Select Bibliography
- Bibliography of David F. Johnson’s Works
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
14 - ‘Oft leudlez alone’: The Isolation of the Hero and its Consequences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Medieval English and Dutch Literature in its European Context and the Work of David F. Johnson
- 1 Reconstructing a Lost Manuscript of the Old English Gospels
- 2 The Reception of the Old English Version of Gregory the Great’s Dialogues between the Conquest and the Close of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 An Unrecorded Copy of Heinrich Krebs’s An Anglo-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Dialogues, Printer’s Proofs
- 4 The Body as Media in Early Medieval England
- 5 Who Snatched Grendel in Beowulf 852b?
- 6 ‘Mobile as Wishes’: Anchoritism, Intersubjectivity, and Disability in the Liber confortatorius
- 7 The Presence of the Hands: Sculpture and Script in the Eighth to Twelfth Centuries
- 8 Perceval’s Name and the Gifts of the Mother
- 9 A Relaxed Knight and an Impatient Heroine: Ironizing the Love Quest in the Second Part of the Middle Dutch Ferguut
- 10 Multilingualism in Van den vos Reynaerde and its Reception in Reynardus Vulpes
- 11 Three Characters as Narrator in the Roman van Walewein
- 12 As the Chess-Set Flies: Arthurian Marvels in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale and the Roman van Walewein
- 13 For a Performer’s Personal Use: The Corrector’s Lines in the Lower Margin of the Middle Dutch Lanceloet Manuscript
- 14 ‘Oft leudlez alone’: The Isolation of the Hero and its Consequences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 15 Shifting Skin: Passing as Human, Passing as Fay in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 16 The Lover Caught Between his Mother and his Maiden in Lanseloet van Denemerken
- 17 Afterlives: The Abbey at Amesbury and the ‘Rehabilitation’ of Guinevere in Malory and the Stanzaic Morte Arthur
- 18 The Importance of Being an Arthurian Mother
- Select Bibliography
- Bibliography of David F. Johnson’s Works
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
Summary
ONE OF DAVID F. Johnson's many contributions to the study of Middle Dutch Arthuriana is an argument about the diverse reasons why Walewein should be considered as operating in a class of his own in the Roman van Walewein. Johnson's reading is characteristically astute, but his thesis about Walewein's individuality presents an opportunity to examine once again the manipulation of genre and convention evident in another Arthurian masterpiece focusing upon Arthur's nephew: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight [hereafter SGGK]. In this most carefully crafted of medieval English romances, genre and convention are also closely tied to issues of heroism. Indeed, the Gawain-poet's manipulation of generic features includes a persistent emphasis on the isolation of his hero; this isolation is unusual given the generic telos of reconciliation so commonplace in the romance kind. Part of what happens, in consequence, is that Gawain is and is not a traditional romance hero; accordingly, SGGK is a generic hybrid. The question of how best to define romance has produced considerable scholarly debate, but love, whether of a heterosexual or homosexual partner, or of family, or of one's chivalric fellows, is a recurring and, indeed, defining feature of the genre; Gawain thus undertakes adventure for the love of Arthur. Unusually, though, Gawain is careful to avoid the kind of amorous or loving dalliance that is another staple form of adventure in the romance genre. Gawain is in fact continuously isolated throughout the poem, and this isolation suggests that he is also, in part, an unusual epic-heroic hero, one interested not only in the winning of that all-important heroic trait of public fame but also in abiding by a powerful code of honour. As so often in the heroic ethos, it is this code of honour and heroism – including, in this case, keeping Lady Bertilak's secret – that gets the hero Gawain into trouble. These issues of the hero's isolation, generic trouble, and honour are important for reassessing Gawain's supposed failure.
Erwin Cook makes a convincing case for the ancient Greek hero being both active and passive, a figure who is willing and capable of taking physical action and rendering appropriate harm to opponents, but who is equally likely to suffer harm him- or her-self.
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- Medieval English and Dutch Literatures: the European ContextEssays in Honour of David F. Johnson, pp. 249 - 270Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022