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Postcolonial Fictions in the 'Roman de Perceforest'
Cultural Identities and Hybridities
Sylvia Huot

The Roman de Perceforest was composed about 1340 for William I, Count of Hainaut. The vast romance, building on the prose romance cycles of the thirteenth century, chronicles an imaginary era of pre-Arthurian British history when Britain was ruled by a dynasty established by Alexander the Great. Its story of cultural rise, decline, and regeneration offers a fascinating exploration of medieval ideas about ethnic and cultural conflict and fusion, identity and hybridity. Drawing on the insights of contemporary postcolonial theory, Sylvia Huot examines the author's treatment of basic concepts such as 'nature' and 'culture', 'savagery' and 'civilisation'. Particular attention is given to the text's treatment of gender and sexuality as focal points of cultural identity, to its construction of the ethnic categories of 'Greek' and 'Trojan', and to its exposition of the ideological biases inherent in any historical narrative.
Written in the fourteenth century, revived at the fifteenth-century Burgundian court, and twice printed in sixteenth-century Paris, Perceforest is both a masterpiece of medieval literature and a vehicle for the transmission of medieval thought into the early modern era of global exploration and colonisation.

SYLVIA HUOT is Reader in Medieval French Literature and Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge.

 

DETAILS

248 pages
Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm
13 digit ISBN: 9781843841043
Binding: Hardback
First published: 18/Jan/2007
Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: D. S. Brewer
Series: Gallica
Subject: French Studies

BIC class: CTCF1

STATUS: Available
Details updated on 18/11/2008

Contents
1   First Encounters: Gadifer in the deserts d'Escoce
2   Testing Boundaries: Colonial Culture and Indigenous Nature
3   The King, His Law, and His Kingdom
4   Compulsory Love
5   Marriage and the Management of Difference: Between Incest and Miscegenation
6   Sexual Violence, Imperial Conquest and the Bonds Between Men
7   Lest We Forget: The Trojan War as a Cultural Matrix
8   Lest We Remember: The Artifice of History

Reviews
A comprehensive, well written, and very compelling study of Perceforest. MEDIUM AEVUM
Well-researched, documented and copy-edited, the book has little to reproach. [...] Pushes boundaries and forces medievalists to ponder on the directions and aims of their own discipline. ARTHURIANA
An important book [that] enables us to recognize Perceforest as a masterpiece of medieval literature. THE MEDIEVAL REVIEW Huot's excellent study merit's a broad readership in both medieval and early modern studies of cultural difference, conquest and empire, and in wider reflection on the history of identity politics. FRENCH STUDIES, 62, no. 3, July 2008



 

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