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Hardcover Medieval Outlaws: Ten Tales in Modern English Book

ISBN: 0750918624

ISBN13: 9780750918626

Medieval Outlaws: Ten Tales in Modern English

Accounts of ten different medieval outlaws, including William Wallace, Robin Hood and Eustache the Monk, who were driven to lives of crime by political intrigue or legal injustice, translated here... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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A good collection of medieval outlaw tales in the context of their times

In Medieval Outlaws: Ten Tales in Modern English, Ohlgren works to put the medieval outlaw tale in context so that we can understand both why they were popular and how they fit in the times in which they were told. To this end, he has selected ten tales, each translated from the original language (Norman French, Middle English, Icelandic, etc) and then presented in its historical and literary context by a different author (though Ohlgren himself does the chapter on Robin Hood). The ten tales covered in this collection are: 1. The Outlawry of Earl Godwin from the Vita Aedwardi Regis 2. The Deeds of Hereward 3. Eustache the Monk 4. The Outlaw's Song of Trailbaston 5. Fouke fitz Waryn 6. The Tale of Gamelyn 7. The Saga of An Bow-bender 8. A Geste of Robyn Hode 9. Adam Bell, Clim of the Clough, and William of Cloudesley 10. The Acts and Deeds of Sir William Wallace There are only two facets that I think are lacking in this presentation. The first is, while we are told about some of the tales having come from ballads and some having rhyming meters, here we only see the tales in their translated form in which those conventions have been lost. I would have liked at least a few examples of the tales in their original form so that I could see for myself how they were originally told and how some of the forms described were actually executed. The second is that I would have liked a bit more depth on the context of the audiences these tales were intended for, specifically on details like who listened to or read them, who didn't, what they thought of them, and so on. I learned quite a bit from reading this work. One thing I learned is that the creators of the original tales, most of whom are unknown to us, borrowed freely from other tales, to the point that certain characteristics or events in the tales were so widely shared that they became a staple of the outlaw tale, i.e. the outlaw was usually almost supernaturally skilled at archery, dwelled at least part of the time in a forest, had an arch-enemy among the nobility who had wronged him somehow, disguised himself as a seller of pots to spy on his enemy, used the trick of having his horse's shoes put on backwards to throw his pursuers off the track, and others. Another thing I learned is that the Robin Hood of modern legend, particularly of film and television, is substantially changed from the original Robyn Hode of the medieval tales. For example, Robyn Hode was originally an outlaw during the reign of Edward III, but the Robin Hood stories that most people know nowadays are set during the reigns of Richard the Lionheart and his brother John. It was actually Fouke fitz Waryn (my personal favorite in this collection and a story I was not familiar with) who was the bane of King John's reign. Ohlgren's Introduction to the collection is particularly good as it gives an overview of the medieval outlaw tale as a form, pointing out how all of these outlaw tales fell into one or more of three thematic cat

Epic tales of lawlessness, bawdiness, and yes . . . dragons

As an informal student of medieval history, I've been hearing for years of the impressive body of literature from that age, tales of dragon slayers, romance, and highwaymen. Until recently, most of what I'd read had been "adaptations" that felt so "modern" that I thought they must be considerably distanced from the original works. Thanks to Mr. Ohlgren and the translators whose work appears in _Ten Tales_, I have now come as close to experiencing the real thing as I ever will without learning Latin and Old French. Reading the stories of Hereward the Wake, Robin Hood, and William Wallace, I was struck by the myriad ways classic mythic structure -- the same structure that defines everything from _The Odyssey_ to _The Terminator_ -- can be put to work by writers. There really are no new stories under the sun; yet some writers have that gift of making the ancient new again, and we keep coming back for more. Anyone who thinks medieval literature was as sanitized and full of subtlety as its Victorian counterpart will be in for a shock. Don't read these tales if graphic violence, blatant innuendo and sexual situations offend you. Stylistically, the _Ten Tales_ have more in common with _The Odyssey_ than they do with _The Terminator_. Stories are narrated straight through without dialogue or direct action, and this leaves it to the reader to flesh out the details for himself. A certain amount of reading between the lines is essential, and this can make reading tough at first. But by the time I'd finished the first story, I had the knack of it and was too riveted to care that I wasn't being spoon-fed. In addition, these are poems translated, usually as prose, so you won't get the same reading experience a medieval would have had. Much of the original cadences and their dramatic effects are sacrificed in favor of the most accurate literal translations. In much the same way a modern historical novelist "fills in" gaps in known facts about real historical figures, medieval chroniclers took considerable license with those areas of their real-life subjects' lives about which little was known or nothing interesting happened. During the years Fulk FitzWarin was exiled from England, we "learn" that he visited Spain and north Africa, as well as distant northern isles, where he slaughtered dragons, saved fair maidens, and fought as the champion of a Saracen king, whom he also converted to Christianity. (Never mind that it's more likely Fulk spent all that time just across the Channel in France.) Strip away the mythological divergences, however, and these stories are much closer to reality than modern interpretations of the same characters. Robin Hood wasn't a noble; the execution of William Wallace ("Braveheart") was far more grisly than in Mel Gibson's version. These _Ten Tales_ will be engrossing reading for any adventure fan who doesn't mind thinking while she reads, and, paired with scholarly commentary, they add new dimensions to the medieval
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