The Culture of Knighthood in Medieval Romance Audiobook By Larissa (Kat) Tracy, The Great Courses cover art

The Culture of Knighthood in Medieval Romance

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The Culture of Knighthood in Medieval Romance

By: Larissa (Kat) Tracy, The Great Courses
Narrated by: Larissa Tracy
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About this listen

See the word knight and you’ll likely think of gallant men facing off on the field of battle, or rescuing fair maidens from danger, or jousting at tournaments. Since the early 19th century, poets, authors, painters, and playwrights have cultivated such images of medieval knighthood—images that continue to capture our imagination to this day.

But just how true to medieval history are these images? What do they tell us about how life was lived in the Middle Ages? What does our obsession with them tell us about who we are today?

In The Culture of Knighthood and Medieval Romance, join scholar of medieval literature Larissa Tracy for a fascinating dive into the deeper context of narratives about knights and their world. Her Audible Original takes you through the evolution of knighthood and courtly literature, dispelling prevalent myths about chivalry and romance with an eye to revealing just how textured and complex these ideas actually were. Blending historical scholarship and literary analysis, these lectures offer new ways to think about myths and legends, medieval manuscripts, epic tales, and even contemporary films.

This is an up-close-and-personal look at knights in shining armor and beautiful ladies—as they really were.

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Larissa Tracy- Creator

About the Creator and Performer

Larissa Tracy is a professor of medieval literature. Her work focuses on 13th-, 14th-, and 15th- century English literature that looks back to the pre-Conquest period in England and the Viking Age, with cross-cultural contacts in medieval French, Irish, and Welsh and a specific focus on social justice, law, medicine, and judicial punishment. She also researches and teaches on modern distortions of the Middle Ages by white supremacists, the Nazis, and the Confederacy. Her publications include Torture and Brutality in Medieval Literature (2012) and Women of the Gilte Legende (2003). She has appeared in several National Geographic and Discovery Channel documentaries, and her work has been published by Salon.com, Business Insider, Elite Daily, Entertainment Weekly, The Wrap, and The New York Times "Women of the World" supplement.

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This is an interesting connection between various portrayals of knighthood. Thank you for connecting the dots!

Unique and interesting.

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Tracy is interested in determining how the code of chivalry, which has become very important to modern understandings of knighthood, developed. To get there she starts with a survey of medieval soldiers and other warmakers up to the appearance of the knight, showing what they valued and how they differed from the mounted warriors which she argues really came into their own in the Central Middle Ages, in a large part due to the crusades. She then steps into the courtly love poetry sponsored by the court of Eleanor of Aquitaine before moving on to the ever changing romances of King Arthur which eventually created the foundations for what later generations imagined to be an age of chivalry. It's an interesting book and a very quick read.

An Interesting Look at the Idea of Chivalry

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The professor is obviously an incredibly knowledgeable person on this topic and manages to present it well to the non-historian or amateur historian. She goes into the historical context and gives specific literary examples that really prove her points and are not so obscure that a lay person can’t understand the references. I wish she would do more!

Really well done

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I found this interesting. It exemplifies how we keep repeating ourselves. For example, we’ve romanticized cowboys in a similar fashion. Society craves heroes.

Repeat

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Iit was hard in an audio format to keep track of all the authors, dates and characters the work contained. Cramming that much info into such a short audiobook isn’t necessarily a good thing.

It was okay.

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A fascinating introduction to the subject of chivalric literature, its formation, its influences, its uses and misuses, its deconstruction and reconstruction, and its endurance.

Fascinating overview

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I really enjoyed the content of this lecture series. I would have been interested to get the presenter’s take on the historicity of the films “The Last Duel” and “Kingdom of Heaven” - both directed by Ridley Scott - regarding knightly or chivalric conduct. Definitely worth listening to if you get the chance.

Very informative

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This audiobook is very informative and matter-of-fact course presenting much evidence for and criticism of knights and chivalry as represented in myth, literature, and history.

Worth 2hr

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It would be nice to have a PDF that lists at least all the books mentioned.

Okay

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A Good start, but felt a little too short. I had to go and research the topic more on my own. This was a good starting point though.

A Good start, but felt a little too short

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