Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title A companion to Gottfried von Strassburg's Tristan / edited by Will Hasty
Published Rochester, NY : Camden House, ©2003

Copies

Description 1 online resource (vi, 319 pages) : 3 illustrations
Series Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
Studies in German literature, linguistics, and culture
Contents Introduction: the challenge of Gottfried's Tristan / Will Hasty -- Humanism in the high Middle Ages: the case of Gottfried's Tristan / Alois Wolf -- Gottfried's Strasbourg: the city and its people / Michael S. Batts -- Gottfried's adaptation of the story of Riwalin and Blanscheflur / Danielle Buschinger -- This drink will be the death of you: interpreting the love potion in Gottfried's Tristan / Sidney M. Johnson -- God, religion, and ambiguity in Tristan / Nigel Harris -- The female figures in Gottfried's Tristan and Isolde / Ann Marie Rasmussen -- Performances of love: Tristan and Isolde at court / Will Hasty -- Duplicity and duplexity: the Isolde of the white hands sequence / Neil Thomas -- Between epic and lyric poetry: the originality of Gottfried's Tristan / Daniel Rocher -- History, fable and love: Gottfried, Thomas, and the matter of Britain / Adrian Stevens -- The medieval reception of Gottfried's Tristan / Marion E. Gibbs -- The modern conception of Gottfried's Tristan and the Medieval legend of Tristan and Isolde / Ulrich Müller
Summary The legend of Tristan and Isolde -- the archetypal narrative about the turbulent effects of all-consuming, passionate love -- achieved its most complete and profound rendering in the German poet Gottfried von Strassburg's verse romance Tristan (ca. 1200-1210). Along with his great literary rival Wolfram von Eschenbach and his versatile predecessor Hartmann von Aue, Gottfried is considered one of three greatest poets produced by medieval Germany, and over the centuries his Tristan has lost none of its ability to attract with the beauty of its poetry and to challenge -- if not provoke -- with its sympathetic depiction of adulterous love. The essays, written by a dozen leading Gottfried specialists in Europe and North America, provide definitive treatments of significant aspectsof this most important and challenging high medieval version of the Tristan legend. They examine aspects of Gottfried's unparalleled narrative artistry; the important connections between Gottfried's Tristan and the socio-cultural situation in which it was composed; and the reception of Gottfried's challenging romance both by later poets in the Middle Ages and by nineteenth- and twentieth-century authors, composers, and artists -- particularly Richard Wagner. The volume also contains new interpretations of significant figures, episodes, and elements (Riwalin and Blanscheflur, Isolde ofthe White Hands, the Love Potion, the performance of love, the female figures) in Gottfried's revolutionary romance, which provocatively elevates a sexual, human love to a summum bonum. Will Hasty is Professor of German at the University of Florida. He is the editor of Companion to Wolfram's "Parzival, " (Camden House, 1999)
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Gottfried, von Strassburg, active 13th century. Tristan.
Tristan (Legendary character) -- Romances -- History and criticism
SUBJECT Tristan (Legendary character) fast (OCoLC)fst01157190
Gottfried von Straßburg -1200 Tristan und Isolde gnd
Tristan (Gottfried, von Strassburg) fast (OCoLC)fst01356831
Subject Arthurian romances -- History and criticism
POETRY -- Continental European.
Arthurian romances.
Romances.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
Author Hasty, Will.
ISBN 9781571136046
1571136045