This study explores the way in which one circumstance of daily life in the twelfth to fourteenth centuries—the relative scarcity of private space—influenced the literature of courtly love. It presents the argument that because access to spatial privacy was difficult, although desirable, stories of illicit love affairs carried on under these precarious circumstances had a special appeal. In these narratives we can observe a tendency for emotional privacy to be invested in trusted confidants and servants, and for spies and meddling figures to pose a special danger. Both of these character types are frequently shown to have privileged access to private space as well as to private knowledge. The framework for this study is provided by a discus...
This dissertation examines the representation of domestic space in Gilles Corrozet’s Blasons domesti...
Grounded in a multi-faceted theoretical framework that examines the dynamic interaction between the ...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...
This study explores the way in which one circumstance of daily life in the twelfth to fourteenth cen...
As a result of the growth of cities and the rise of a merchant class in later medieval England, the ...
(in English): Intimacy and solitude in Chrétien de Troyes' works and in the Czech courtly romance Th...
The thesis is a contribution to the social history of the Middle Ages. It investigates a phenomenon ...
The bed, and the chamber which contained it, was something of a cultural and social phenomenon in la...
Medieval man lived his life in a series of practically defined and segregated domestic spaces which ...
The art of courtly love is difficult to pinpoint because there are many facets that extend into diff...
In the era of ladies and lords, French troubadours sang the tales of the late twelfth-century mediev...
This project examines the ways in which twelfth-century romance authors used literature to explore t...
"The Shape of Intimacy" explores the significance of a growing material culture of privacy to sevent...
Courtly love, masculine society and figures of power Several features which characterize courtly lo...
This dissertation offers a reevaluation of the Old French romance genre on the basis of gender and a...
This dissertation examines the representation of domestic space in Gilles Corrozet’s Blasons domesti...
Grounded in a multi-faceted theoretical framework that examines the dynamic interaction between the ...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...
This study explores the way in which one circumstance of daily life in the twelfth to fourteenth cen...
As a result of the growth of cities and the rise of a merchant class in later medieval England, the ...
(in English): Intimacy and solitude in Chrétien de Troyes' works and in the Czech courtly romance Th...
The thesis is a contribution to the social history of the Middle Ages. It investigates a phenomenon ...
The bed, and the chamber which contained it, was something of a cultural and social phenomenon in la...
Medieval man lived his life in a series of practically defined and segregated domestic spaces which ...
The art of courtly love is difficult to pinpoint because there are many facets that extend into diff...
In the era of ladies and lords, French troubadours sang the tales of the late twelfth-century mediev...
This project examines the ways in which twelfth-century romance authors used literature to explore t...
"The Shape of Intimacy" explores the significance of a growing material culture of privacy to sevent...
Courtly love, masculine society and figures of power Several features which characterize courtly lo...
This dissertation offers a reevaluation of the Old French romance genre on the basis of gender and a...
This dissertation examines the representation of domestic space in Gilles Corrozet’s Blasons domesti...
Grounded in a multi-faceted theoretical framework that examines the dynamic interaction between the ...
This paper explores how the medieval romance introduces the concept of female voluntary love both as...