About this item
Highlights
- This popular and important romance in the Middle Ages was written in Picard, one of the more difficult regional dialects of Old French.
- About the Author: Leslie A. Sconduto is a French professor at Bradley University.
- 266 Pages
- Literary Criticism, Medieval
Description
About the Book
The romance Guillaume de Paris represents the fullest treatment of the medieval werewolf tale: the small child Guillaume, prince of Sicily, is kidnapped by a werewolf who, years later, helps Guillaume win his love and overcome his enemies. It then transpires that the werewolf is in fact the bewitched son of the King of Spain.Book Synopsis
This popular and important romance in the Middle Ages was written in Picard, one of the more difficult regional dialects of Old French. Guillaume de Palerne is a non-Arthurian romance offering a different vision of the medieval world, one in which we find the hero in a more realistic setting confronting the obstacles that fate--not his quest for fame--has set in his path. It is the story of a young prince of Sicily who is kidnapped by a werewolf at the age of four. Woven into the story of the eponymous hero is the parallel story of Alphonse, the Spanish prince who was transformed into a werewolf by his stepmother when he was still a toddler. The anonymous poet has woven humor, contemporary allusions, reworkings of traditional motifs and a hidden moral lesson into the story's engaging plot. The romance also presents the reader and scholar with a complex portrayal of the constancy and changeability of identity that provides new insight into the medieval attitude toward individuality.
Based primarily on Alexandre Micha's 1990 edition, this translation is intended as a guide to reading the original rather than as a substitute. The editor has attempted to be as literal as possible and to remain faithful to the register and tone of the original, including its original word order and grammatical structure. In addition to the translation, the finished text includes an introduction, notes and a select bibliography.
Review Quotes
"[Sconduto] has made the fascinating story of Guillaume de Palerme better known, for which she is to be commended"-French Review.
About the Author
Leslie A. Sconduto is a French professor at Bradley University. Her previous work includes a study of the literature that created the traditional image of the werewolf as a savage beast. She lives in Hendersonville, North Carolina.