Medieval Romances, Trash Fiction and Rebel Women - Lydia Zeldenrust and Pamela Hartshorne (Chair)

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2021
  • Romance was one of the most popular and widely read literary genres of the medieval period, often seen as the forerunner of fairy tales, modern-day fantasy fiction, and the novel. These are fabulously entertaining stories about adventure, love, encounters with the supernatural, knights on daring quests, and women who are often perfectly capable of slaying a dragon themselves.
    But why were romances viewed as the ‘popular’ or ‘trash’ fiction of the Middle Ages, condemned as filling a reader’s head with strange and corrupting ideas? Why has popular fiction been characterised as a form of guilty pleasure throughout the ages?
    Join Lydia Zeldenrust of the University of York and discover why 'romance' originally had nothing to do with anything ‘romantic’, and how the genre took medieval Europe by storm. Lydia will explain how romance moved from an elite literary context to being seen as popular smut, and why its depiction of an idealised kind of love still influences our ideas of love today, especially in film and fiction.
    Find out why snobbery about popular culture turns out to be timeless, and how it is no coincidence that concerns over romances’ corrupting influence arose right around the time that more women started reading them. This is the start of a long tradition of snubbing women’s literary tastes. But Lydia will also look at the rebels - from saint Teresa to Chaucer’s granddaughter - who defied dictates that women should only read religious books, eagerly consuming these outrageous works.
    The event will be chaired by author and historian Pamela Hartshorne who has written a number of historical novels and, as Jessica Hart, 60 books for Harlequin Mills & Boon. Together, Lydia and Pamela will discuss the parallels between medieval romances and modern romance novels.
    This event is presented with the support of BBC History Magazine.

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