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Charles Moorman

Autor von Editing the Middle English manuscript

10+ Werke 45 Mitglieder 2 Rezensionen

Werke von Charles Moorman

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Chaucer's Canterbury Tales: The Prologue (1387) — Text and Collations, einige Ausgaben318 Exemplare
Malory's Originality: A Critical Study of Le Morte Darthur (1964) — Mitwirkender — 9 Exemplare
Arthuriana vol 5 no 2: Special issue on editing Malory. (1995) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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There are two kinds of knights: Real ones and fictional ones.

This is a book about the fictional ones -- in particular, those found in the literary medieval romances. Author Charles Moorman sets out to trace the history of these not-very-real knights. He begins with the knights of the epic (e.g. the Song of Roland), then moves on through Chrètien de Troyes, the Gawain-Poet, Chaucer, and even late authors like Shakespeare and Spenser. The conception certainly does change: Roland is mostly a fighting machine, Gawain mostly a courtier. Spenser still has some respect for the courtier model; Shakespeare reflects the obvious fact that knights came in all shapes, sizes, and degrees of morality.

This general trend can hardly be denied. The details, though, strike me as dubious. Moorman, for instance, argues that Gawain in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight -- contrary to the general view that he was a very noble man with a minor flaw -- was instead a flawed man from an even more flawed court, who barely survived his ordeal, went back to Camelot bearing one last chance for Arthur's court, and, when they ignored him, decided to go back to his bad old ways.

I'm not as familiar with Chrètien's romances as with Sir Gawain, but the plot structure Moorman described didn't seem quite right to me. And when he got to Chaucer, he seemed to really be mucking around in the underbrush of philosophy rather than looking at the pure, crystalline morality of stories like The Knight's Tale. I didn't realize it as I was reading the book, but in trying to review it, it seems to me that Moorman has quite consistently deflated the Romance knight. In one sense, this is fair -- very few actual people resembled Sir Gawain, or Chaucer's Knight (let alone Roland). But Chaucer's Knight, in particular, seems to be intended to be just about the ideal example of chivalry, gentilesse, and trouthe. Moorman might have done better to let him be that.
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waltzmn | Jan 21, 2014 |
It's not just people who lose a little something as they get older. It can happen to books, too.

This was for long the standard manual for editors of Middle English documents. And it deserved its reputation; it had information on all the major topics needed by students: Middle English itself, paleography (dating the age and source of the manuscript), collating the text, textual criticism (seeking the ancestral text behind the manuscript), publishing an edition, and more. All were explained clearly and well.

But consider this: the method of collation involved three by five cards and hand-written notes. No computers. Not only was it vastly more work than doing it on a computer, there was no way to get statistics about the results, and making corrections was a horrid task. Almost everything about the collation and preparation of a published edition suffers from the fact that the book was written before personal computers. So a student must find a new method to deal with these tasks.

When this book came out, it deserved four or five stars. The advance of technology has cost it a lot. It's still worth having, though.
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½
 
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waltzmn | Mar 13, 2012 |

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10
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45
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