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    Lanvalry: The Green Knight

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    Chivalry is designed to be a code of honor upheld by European knights. It is designed to make them live life the way God would direct them and to treat women with the utmost respect. An ideal example in most people’s minds would be the knights of the round table, but were they really all that chivalrous, and if they were was it for the right reasons? Lanval, Sir Gawain, Lancelot, and Arthur are the men that will be examined to see if the knights of the round table were ever truly chivalrous.…

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    Throughout the Middle English chivalric romance poem, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Alan Markman describes the protagonist as “the very best knight who sums up…the very best traits of all knights who ever lived” (Markman 576), due to his courageous reputation during the Arthurian period. However, Victoria Weiss disagrees with Markman’s statement, commenting that Gawain’s courage in the poem is viewed as “a lack of concern for human life” (Weiss 363). For the purposes of this study, medieval…

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    Green Knight Rhetoric

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    Gawain and the Green Knight, the author's rhetorical purpose is to teach us about Feminism and masculism. To show men are not the other actors. In most stories with a knight the man is always the main character, in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight the main character is Lady Bertilak. In the book there are many rhetorical patterns from bob and wheel to alliteration. The first rhetorical pattern I found in the story is colors. Throughout the poem the colors green and gold repeat. Green I believe…

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    One might say that these last scenes represents Gawain’s judgment day because of the fact that he repented his “sins” to the Green Knight after their battle. According to John Burrow, “The clue to the intention behind these passages is, I believe, to be found in Gawain’s confession to the Green Knight. Here, in a semi-allegorical style which recalls the didactic literature of the period, he formally confesses to the three faults⸺”cowardyse,” “couetyse,” and “untrawbe” (or “trecherye”)” (Burrow).…

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    The green knight barged in on King Arthur while they were having a celebration. King Arthur greets the odd green skinned knight and offered him some food he rudefully declined it and said “No so help me God on high, my errand is hardly to sit at ease in your castle. Then the green knight challenges king Arthur and he says someone must volunteer to take the challenge. Nobody wanted to volunteer and King Arthur got really mad until one person named Sir Gawain wanted to volunteer. Arthur grants…

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    In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, a romantic poem by the Pearl Poet, a mysterious individual known as the Green Knight presents a challenge. With no one steps up to the challenge, Sir Gawain, a member of the Round Table, accepts it. Sir Gawain and the Green Knight exchange equal blows with a year and a day apart according to the deal. The journey follows after the beginning of the deal to test Gawain’s virtues of knighthood and prove that he is a model knight. Sir Gawain is an ideal knight…

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    In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Sir Gawain went through test’s to test his worthy and his knight traits. Gawain suffered through the tests. In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight there are three major tests references according to the theme; however, Gawain accepts the Green Knight challenge, also Gawain struggles by proving himself, but Gawain also didn’t allow the lord’s wife seduce him. Gawain accepts the Green Knight’s challenge and then tried to cut off the Green Knight head. However, it…

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    What you think the Green Knight was trying to prove? The major theme of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is the hero’s passage to maturity. The Green Knight took Sir Gawain through three tests to see how he would do and was he mature enough for them. Gawain took King Arthur’s place, turn down advantages, and knew his fate. The Green Knight wanted Gawain to be better. The Green Knight made Sir Gawain mature, and let him show his honor, by accepting the challenge, refusing gifts, and seeing his…

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    The Different Representations in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a storytelling that belongs to the Middle Ages and the Arthurian tradition. “the romance, like its literary descendant, was often used by writers from the twelfth century on to state in various ways some of the issues that then seemed currently important” (Silverstein 260). This type of literature introduces the romance through the courtly love and the chivalry. The story is based on motifs from…

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    Green Knight Ethics

    • 1657 Words
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    and legend into a captivating story. Undoubtedly the most popular manuscripts from this age are the Arthurian legends, poems written to commemorate the brave king, and his faithful knights. No exception is the alliterative poem “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight”, a tale that encompasses a man who maintains his honor in a sinful world. While the author of this work remains unknown it is clear his intent was to justify morality and exemplify the traits of men and women by providing examples of what…

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