1986
DOI: 10.2307/2929848
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Chretien's Yvain and the Ideologies of Change and Exchange

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…38 Indeed, the initial episode at the Château de Pesme Aventure-which describes the horrific conditions of labor of some three hundred female indentured servants-reads as "a thinly veiled criticism of the exploitation of labor in a nascent textile industry." 39 Yvain's final battle equally bears on the theme of consent. In this great showdown with Gawain, neither combatant realizes he is fighting against his closest ally, prompting the narrator to digress at length on how these men can simultaneously love and hate each other (5994-6101).…”
Section: Rubbing Consent All Overmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…38 Indeed, the initial episode at the Château de Pesme Aventure-which describes the horrific conditions of labor of some three hundred female indentured servants-reads as "a thinly veiled criticism of the exploitation of labor in a nascent textile industry." 39 Yvain's final battle equally bears on the theme of consent. In this great showdown with Gawain, neither combatant realizes he is fighting against his closest ally, prompting the narrator to digress at length on how these men can simultaneously love and hate each other (5994-6101).…”
Section: Rubbing Consent All Overmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They not only transform the earlier "service" of Yvain [to Lunete] into a spontaneous abundance of new commodities, but they disguise and conceal repugnant actions (Yvain's slaying of Esclados) so that their perpetrator may reappear in a new social context, clean, beautiful, and useful as a potential spouse and protector of Esclados's widow. 63 Like consent, Lunete and her magical ring "cleanse" otherwise "repugnant," even assaultive actions. They also effect this transformation in a broadly similar way.…”
Section: Contradictory Consent: Medieval/modernmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Egyrészt azért, mert az "order position" és az "order" kifejezések a történettudományban széles körben használatos kifejezések a szóban forgó klasszikus fogalmak jelölésére (lásd pl. : Witt 1971;Duby 1980;Vance 1986;Fischer 1992;Dewald 2001). Másrészt az "order position" és az "order" hagyományos jelentéstartománya felel meg legnagyobb mértékben az általunk meghatározandó fogalmaknak.…”
Section: Bevezetésunclassified
“…I, however, use the terms order position and order (or order stratum) to denote both the classic concepts in question and the concepts I have defined. The reason for this is partly that the terms order position and order are widely used in history to denote the classic concepts in question (see e.g., Dewald, 2001; Duby, 1980; Fischer, 1992; Vance, 1986; Witt, 1971), and partly that the traditional range of meaning of order position and order corresponds to the concepts I am to define to the largest extent. Namely, traditionally the term order also means conformity with norms or principles, and I define the concept and types of order position in comparison with an assumed system of norms.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%