Animal Body, Literary Corpus: The Old French "Roman de Renart" |
Contents
1 | |
Sexuality and Its Consequences | 33 |
Liminality | 87 |
Law and Government | 131 |
Recapitulation | 167 |
Conclusions | 203 |
213 | |
239 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Abbreviation Andreas Capellanus animals appears argues attack beast Bernard Bernard of Clairvaux bien Bloch body branches Capetian chanson de geste Chantecler chapter characters Cistercian Coart confession context court courtly cous death Dérision Derrida discourse discussion dist Dufournet Durendal edition epic episode example fabliau fait Fiere fox's grant Gravdal Hermeline Hersent Howard Bloch Isengrin Jauss Jean Scheidegger joie jongleur Jugement justice Kenneth Varty king language lion literary Literature manuscripts Maupertuis Medieval Middle Ages monastery monastic Moniage monks Mort Renart Moyen Age narrative nature Noble Noble's Old French parody possible Premières Aventures present problem provides Puits qu'il rape reading reference reflection Renardian Renart empereur Renart jongleur Renart médecin Renart parfist reveals rois Roland Rolandslied Roman de Brut Roman de Renart Roques satire scene sexual she-wolf Siège sins Sire spiritual structure tale theme Tibert vilain Walter Map wolf Ysengrimus
Popular passages
Page 13 - And, though all other animals are prone, and fix their gaze upon the earth, he gave to man an uplifted face and bade him stand erect and turn his eyes to heaven.
Page 13 - Thus morality arises from a useless crime which in fact kills nobody, which comes too soon or too late and does not put an end to any power; in fact, it inaugurates nothing since repentance and morality had to be possible before the crime. Freud appears to cling to the reality of an event, but this event is a sort of non-event, an event of nothing or a quasi-event which both calls for and annuls a narrative account. For this "deed" or "misdeed" to be effective, it must be somehow spun from fiction.