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Medieval Literature: Love, Sex, and Marriage

21L.460 · Literature · Undergraduate · Spring 2015

Dr. Emily Griffiths Jones

MIT · Tier 1

It is easy to think of love as a “universal language” - but do ideas about love translate easily across history, culture, and identity? In this course, we will encounter some surprising, even disturbing ideas about love and sex from medieval writers and characters: For instance, that married people can never be in love, that the most satisfying romantic love incorporates pain and violence, and that intense erotic pleasure can be found in celibate service to God. Through Arthurian romances, Chau…

LiteratureHumanities

The syllabus, on MIT OpenCourseWare

The full course — syllabus, assigned readings, problem sets, exams, and lecture notes — lives on OCW. These open the real thing:

Attribution

Dr. Emily Griffiths Jones. 21L.460 Medieval Literature: Love, Sex, and Marriage. Spring 2015. Massachusetts Institute of Technology: MIT OpenCourseWare, https://ocw.mit.edu. License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

Course materials are © their authors and licensed CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. CurrMana links to the source and does not re-host them.