The Stranger in Medieval Society
Frank. R. P. Akehurst, Stephanie Cain Van D’Elden (eds.)
Whether welcome or unwelcome, voluntary or involuntary, strangers appear in every society; they leave their own communities, venture into new environments, confront differences, and often spark changes. the first collection in medieval studies to concentrate on the notion of the stranger, these essays show how outsiders influenced the culture of Europe in the Middle Ages.
Among the topics explored are Edward III and Sir Gain and the Green Knight as historical and literary instances of chivalric skill and courage; political conflict in the late French epic Renaut de Montauban; and a group of people who were doubly strangers: some thirty thousands Jews, who after being expelled from France in 1306 returned under an experimental agreement a few years later.
Among the topics explored are Edward III and Sir Gain and the Green Knight as historical and literary instances of chivalric skill and courage; political conflict in the late French epic Renaut de Montauban; and a group of people who were doubly strangers: some thirty thousands Jews, who after being expelled from France in 1306 returned under an experimental agreement a few years later.
Категории:
Год:
1997
Издательство:
University of Minnesota Press
Язык:
english
Страницы:
164
Серия:
Medieval Cultures, 12
Файл:
PDF, 1.15 MB
IPFS:
,
english, 1997