Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe

This project explores connections between hero and history, text and context. By engaging Postcolonial theories about the roles that invasion and oppression, play in developing national identity and how colonized people respond to such encounters in literature, I examine how experiences of invasion...

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Main Author: Labossiere, Jessica Trant
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6289
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7485&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-74852017-09-20T05:26:20Z Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe Labossiere, Jessica Trant This project explores connections between hero and history, text and context. By engaging Postcolonial theories about the roles that invasion and oppression, play in developing national identity and how colonized people respond to such encounters in literature, I examine how experiences of invasion and hostile interaction as represented in medieval and early modern English literature influenced the creation of specific heroic values. In my first chapter, I analyze The Battle of Maldon and Beowulf as exemplars of the Anglo-Saxon culture, observing that Byrhtnoth and Beowulf work as fictional embodiments of a fantasy of power: men of super-human strength and exceptional resoluteness who, through remarkable sacrifices, inspire men to accomplish phenomenal deeds of their own. Next, I explore Arthur in The Alliterative Morte Arthure and Le Morte Darthur, who embraces his hybridity, fluidly moving between the Anglo-Saxon warrior tradition and the French romance tradition. Last, I consider Shakespeare’s Henry V, which depicts a conquering hero who possesses the prowess and nobility of his heroic predecessors and the ability to succeed where they failed, securing England’s continental dominance. In each era, I contend that the authors created heroes on whom they could project a fantasized identity which defied the realities of their time, heroes who changed based upon the type of threat faced by England. This study samples five hundred years of literature and uses this breadth to explore cross-periodic continuity, finding that the heroes of these texts respond not only to their historical context, but also to each other. This scope allows one to see how the emblem of the hero responds to the reality of the authors and audiences of these texts. The figure of the hero develops over centuries, demonstrating that as the needs of the authors and audiences change, so, too, does the character who represents them. These literary figures provide a unique window into the culture and concerns of the authors and audiences during the medieval and early modern eras. They represent desire for strength, inspiration, glory and triumph. They reflect the agony of anxiety, vulnerability, defeat, and hopelessness. Most importantly, they reimagine, reframe, and redress reality. 2016-03-31T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6289 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7485&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Postcolonial Medieval Henry V Arthur Beowulf Arts and Humanities Medieval Studies
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Postcolonial
Medieval
Henry V
Arthur
Beowulf
Arts and Humanities
Medieval Studies
spellingShingle Postcolonial
Medieval
Henry V
Arthur
Beowulf
Arts and Humanities
Medieval Studies
Labossiere, Jessica Trant
Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
description This project explores connections between hero and history, text and context. By engaging Postcolonial theories about the roles that invasion and oppression, play in developing national identity and how colonized people respond to such encounters in literature, I examine how experiences of invasion and hostile interaction as represented in medieval and early modern English literature influenced the creation of specific heroic values. In my first chapter, I analyze The Battle of Maldon and Beowulf as exemplars of the Anglo-Saxon culture, observing that Byrhtnoth and Beowulf work as fictional embodiments of a fantasy of power: men of super-human strength and exceptional resoluteness who, through remarkable sacrifices, inspire men to accomplish phenomenal deeds of their own. Next, I explore Arthur in The Alliterative Morte Arthure and Le Morte Darthur, who embraces his hybridity, fluidly moving between the Anglo-Saxon warrior tradition and the French romance tradition. Last, I consider Shakespeare’s Henry V, which depicts a conquering hero who possesses the prowess and nobility of his heroic predecessors and the ability to succeed where they failed, securing England’s continental dominance. In each era, I contend that the authors created heroes on whom they could project a fantasized identity which defied the realities of their time, heroes who changed based upon the type of threat faced by England. This study samples five hundred years of literature and uses this breadth to explore cross-periodic continuity, finding that the heroes of these texts respond not only to their historical context, but also to each other. This scope allows one to see how the emblem of the hero responds to the reality of the authors and audiences of these texts. The figure of the hero develops over centuries, demonstrating that as the needs of the authors and audiences change, so, too, does the character who represents them. These literary figures provide a unique window into the culture and concerns of the authors and audiences during the medieval and early modern eras. They represent desire for strength, inspiration, glory and triumph. They reflect the agony of anxiety, vulnerability, defeat, and hopelessness. Most importantly, they reimagine, reframe, and redress reality.
author Labossiere, Jessica Trant
author_facet Labossiere, Jessica Trant
author_sort Labossiere, Jessica Trant
title Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
title_short Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
title_full Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
title_fullStr Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
title_full_unstemmed Chosen Champions: Medieval and Early Modern Heroes as Postcolonial Reactions to Tensions between England and Europe
title_sort chosen champions: medieval and early modern heroes as postcolonial reactions to tensions between england and europe
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2016
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/6289
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7485&context=etd
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