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Emotion und Handlungsmotivation in Sir Tristrem

  • Eva von Contzen
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Emotion und Handlung im Artusroman
This chapter is in the book Emotion und Handlung im Artusroman

Abstract

The anonymous poem Sir Tristrem, dating to the late thirteenth century, is the earlier of the two surviving Tristan romances from the Middle English period. The romance has often been passed over on the grounds of its abbreviated, almost breathless narrative style and the absence of psychological and emotional depth in characters. I suggest in my article that these seeming weaknesses of Sir Tristrem belong to a strategy of plot motivation that capitalises on the audience’s input and on a chain of imbalances created between episodes. Here the characters’ emotions are of key significance as they propel the narrative forward. Two strategies are of particular importance: an emphasis on the materiality of the world, which allows the characters to rely on monetary influence, and a comic emphasis on carnal love.

Abstract

The anonymous poem Sir Tristrem, dating to the late thirteenth century, is the earlier of the two surviving Tristan romances from the Middle English period. The romance has often been passed over on the grounds of its abbreviated, almost breathless narrative style and the absence of psychological and emotional depth in characters. I suggest in my article that these seeming weaknesses of Sir Tristrem belong to a strategy of plot motivation that capitalises on the audience’s input and on a chain of imbalances created between episodes. Here the characters’ emotions are of key significance as they propel the narrative forward. Two strategies are of particular importance: an emphasis on the materiality of the world, which allows the characters to rely on monetary influence, and a comic emphasis on carnal love.

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