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Four Contemporary US Long Poems: Pinsky, Dove, Dorn, and Seuss

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A Literary Seminar at The Cornwall Library

Stories of Arthur’s round table arose at a time of great change across France and England: as Celtic myths become the gold standard of storytelling, as the landscape was increasingly war-torn, as the crowns of England and France battled for supremacy, as Eleanor of Aquitaine brokered her infamous dowery, and as the Middle Ages gave way to the modern world. We’ll look at four of the earliest Arthurian legends: two tales written by a French court poet who single-handedly invented the stories as we now know them and two tales found as solitary manuscripts in estate collections long after their composition. Arthur, Guinevere, Lancelot, and the other knights show us distinct fractures in personal expression and political power as the medieval became the modern, rifts that still trip us today.

 Reading: Chrétien de Troyes, LANCELOT: THE KNIGHT OF THE CART (c. 1180 CE), first half

Text: Burton Raffel (translator), LANCELOT: THE KNIGHT OF THE CART (Yale University Press, 1997) ISBN-13: 978-0300071214 (preferred); or Ruth Harwood Cline (translator), LANCELOT; OR, THE KNIGHT OF THE CART (University of Georgia Press, 1990) ISBN: ‎ 978-0300071214

Format: Mostly lecture with some discussion