Titre | Mabrien ou le cheminement d'un chevalier du XVe siècle en route vers le roman d'aventures | |
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Auteur | Bernard Ribémon | |
Revue | Le Moyen Age | |
Numéro | tome 113, no 2, 2007 | |
Page | 335-359 | |
Résumé anglais |
Mabrien or the progression of a knight of the 15th Century toward the
romance.
Mabrien is the last part of the written Montauban cycle, dated 1462. This text describes
a hero, who could be considered a “hero of closure”. In a cycle that includes the romance form, it can be supposed that this hero must have particular characteristics
making him not just “an additional hero”. We will therefore start from the hypothesis
that such a character is connected in a number of ways to the origin, to the foundation, which implies being inscribed in the myth: having to “bring the adventures
to a close”, the hero of closure is “mythic” in the sense that he has a privileged
relationship with the forces of nature, with the society he is remodelling, possibly
with the Other-World. Furthermore, in order for this culmination to be legitimate,
the hero must be shown to be profoundly integrated into the cycle; and his journey
must be one of culmination which cannot simply be measured by the success of his
exploits. The hero of closure must have what the others have, even if it means reliving
adventures that are identical to those of his predecessors – inscribing him into the
cycle, while giving him a post-position justifying his bearing a higher dimension in
these adventures – but he must go further and in particular resolve all the tensions
generated during the course of the cycle. These different elements of investigation
will be discussed in this article. Source : Éditeur (via Cairn.info) |
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Article en ligne | http://www.cairn.info/article.php?ID_ARTICLE=RMA_132_0335 |