Monday, January 26, 2015

The Steamy Beach Read Including Prejudice and Creepiness


After two paragraphs of Capellanus’, The Art of Courtly Love, I felt like I just read the classification of a stalker. The examples of what torments a man before “love becomes equally balanced on both sides” (Capellanus, 30) are obsessive and superficial. One fear made me shake my head more than the others: “[I]f he is rich, he fears that his parsimony in the past may stand in his way” (Capellanus, 30). The ugly man and the poor man’s fears are valid but superficial; however, the rich man’s seems like an obsessive person purposely creating reasons to torment himself.

The rest of the book implicates how the rules of courtly love are distasteful and delusional. First, courtly love appears to be homophobic: “Whatever nature forbids, love is ashamed to accept” (Capellanus, 32). I instantly thought that according to the rules of courtly love, a man raping a woman will shame love less than a homosexual couple. Then, love has an age criteria. While men have a minimum age requirement, women have a cut off age. The ages fall into the age ranges for procreation. While I think there should be a minimum age to fully understand love, a woman is capable of having a passionate relationship after the age of fifty. The book ends with the story of the knight and his British lady. It is in the style of a bad role-playing game with ridiculous quests for reciprocated love. By the end of the story, King of Love proclaims the thirty-one rules of courtly love. The thirty-one rules support adultery and obsession, and they are mainly based on superficial grounds. My favorite one could possibly kill a person: “He whom the thought of love vexes eats and sleeps very little” (185).


Courtly love stories appealed to the rich, who were literate and could afford leisurely activities. Many wealthy couples were married based on status rather than attraction or love; therefore, many unhappy marriages existed. The story in Capellanus’ book illustrates a woman able to persuade a man to do anything to please her. This tells me that the tales of courtly love were written mainly for a female audience. The audience is not interested in reading stories similar to their own mundane marriages. Instead, they are interested in indulging in stories about a fantasy life within social acceptance. This is why the love is never between homosexuals and the main characters are within the higher social classes (lady and knight). What more could a woman want than a man tormenting himself until he is willing to do anything for his lady love? Who wants to read a story about a man wooing an old lady?


Courtly love stories seem comparable to the romantic steamy beach reads with a twist of prejudice and obsession.





3 comments:

  1. I agree with you when you said that most of these rules were absurd and stalkerish. I was bothered when it talked about how jealously increased love (Capellanus, 185). That kind of mindset would cause people to become overly possessive and controlling, and that is just plain disturbing.
    However, I have to disagree with some of what you said in your second paragraph. Capellanus did actually give a minimum and maximum age for men and women on page 32. He said that the appropriate age for women was between 12 and 50, while the range for men was between 14 and 60 (Capellanus, 32). He then said that boys couldn’t truly love someone until they were 18 because before that they would be too embarrassed to do anything (Capellanus, 32-33). But you were absolutely right when you said they were the age where procreation was possible.

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  2. I too agree with how the actions of these men in the beginning were quite stalker-ish, however I see where these men are coming from when they are trying to win the hearts of their beloved. Certainly I would not take so many drastic measures, but love is hard and fills guys with a lot of pain when they overly worry about how they might lose their beloved. I think reading this kind of thing we definitely think "what the hell?!?!" but I also think this being the norm back then, it truly spoke out to how desperate the knights were for love and they thought they were taking the necessary actions to try and win them over.

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  3. Ah yes Aynslie, I worded the age part poorly in my blog. I was just trying to say it seems like courtly love is really focused between procreation ages. (Since men are able to procreate basically until whenever and woman do go through menopause.) The jealousy part made me cringe. Rory, I do think it is neat how Knights fight for their love as they fight for honor. They were probably pretty lonely guys.

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