The natural world in the Middle Ages was a place both benign and fraught. It could instruct but it could also damage.
We shall approach the broad scope of this topic from an interdisciplinary perspective. We will explore the natural world thematically, introducing the didactic approach of fables and bestiaries, exploring the evocations of landscapes found in dream vision poetry such as the Roman de la Rose and Pearl, reading the well-ordered and fantastic treatment of nature in the calendar pages of Books of Hours, and navigating the liminality and the ambivalent appeal of the natural world in romances such as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Sir Orfeo and Apollonius of Tyre.
We will conclude by looking at ecocritical perspectives on medieval art and literature and the way these have been applied to modern re-imaginings in film.
All works will be read in translation and extracts for close reading will be provided in advance of each session.
This course is part of the Oxford University Summer School for Adults (OUSSA) programme.