In Our Time

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

6 snips
Dec 13, 2018
An analysis of the epic poem 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight', focusing on bravery, honor, and temptation. The historical context of the poem and the challenges faced by Sir Gawain. The significance of the color green and the hunting scenes. The exploration of themes, transgressions, and intertextuality in the poem.
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INSIGHT

Chivalric Code

  • Chivalry is defined as the successful pursuit of being a warrior aristocrat, encompassing prowess, Christian values, and elite social values.
  • It's a paradoxical attempt to portray the hedonistic warrior lifestyle as an ethical vocation blessed by God.
ANECDOTE

The Beheading Game

  • The Green Knight disrupts Camelot's Christmas feast, challenging the court to a beheading game.
  • Gawain accepts, beheads the knight, who then picks up his head and promises to return in a year for Gawain's blow.
ANECDOTE

Alliteration in Sir Gawain

  • The poem "Sir Gawain" uses alliteration as its core structural element, binding the verses together.
  • Simon Armitage emphasizes the importance of this in his translation, aiming to recapture the poem's acoustic patterns.
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