Tomorrow we go to the Center for the Arthurian Imaginary with Gretchen and Oliver and Iris (Mac and Eleanor will stay to watch Barbabapa and nap and have adventures of their own). I have been waiting for this place to open up ever since we arrived!!! First of all, the setting: in the legendary Broceliande/Paimpont Forest (where Merlin is buried, where Viviane held him ensnared for all eternity, where the Lady of the Lake gave Lancelot his sword!); secondly, the lore (this forest is the setting for countless Breton Fairy Tales of the day); and thirdly, the potential for my "Love and War in Medieval Art and Literature" class which I am teaching this fall. The forest is such an important literary and representation space (it had its own laws, especially when it was a nobleman's hunting forest, and it was, of course, a place of outlaws as well - Robin Hood was not the first) - it's also a space of the imagination, of korrigans and wild men, of magical fountains and willful Nature. I'll need Mac to take the really good pictures that evoke all of this, but in the meantime, I hope to get some of my own tomorrow. Is a medieval forest a black hole? Does one spaghettify (I've been waiting all night to conjugate that word!) around its edges? We'll find out!
Wherein two art historians and their three kids live in a small town in Brittany for a semester.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Spaghettification
Tomorrow we go to the Center for the Arthurian Imaginary with Gretchen and Oliver and Iris (Mac and Eleanor will stay to watch Barbabapa and nap and have adventures of their own). I have been waiting for this place to open up ever since we arrived!!! First of all, the setting: in the legendary Broceliande/Paimpont Forest (where Merlin is buried, where Viviane held him ensnared for all eternity, where the Lady of the Lake gave Lancelot his sword!); secondly, the lore (this forest is the setting for countless Breton Fairy Tales of the day); and thirdly, the potential for my "Love and War in Medieval Art and Literature" class which I am teaching this fall. The forest is such an important literary and representation space (it had its own laws, especially when it was a nobleman's hunting forest, and it was, of course, a place of outlaws as well - Robin Hood was not the first) - it's also a space of the imagination, of korrigans and wild men, of magical fountains and willful Nature. I'll need Mac to take the really good pictures that evoke all of this, but in the meantime, I hope to get some of my own tomorrow. Is a medieval forest a black hole? Does one spaghettify (I've been waiting all night to conjugate that word!) around its edges? We'll find out!
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