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자연에서 은총으로: 선녀여왕 1권에 나타난 목가와기독교 인문주의From Nature to Grace: Pastoral andChristian Humanism in The Faerie Queene I

Other Titles
From Nature to Grace: Pastoral andChristian Humanism in The Faerie Queene I
Authors
임성균
Issue Date
Nov-2007
Publisher
한국중세근세영문학회
Keywords
목가; 스펜서; 양치기 달력; 선녀여왕; 휴식; 캘빈주의]; Pastoral; Edmund Spenser; Shepheardes Calendar; The Faerie Queene; Otium; Calvinism]; Pastoral; Edmund Spenser; Shepheardes Calendar; The Faerie Queene; Otium; Calvinism]
Citation
중세근세영문학, v.17, no.2, pp 207 - 227
Pages
21
Journal Title
중세근세영문학
Volume
17
Number
2
Start Page
207
End Page
227
URI
https://scholarworks.sookmyung.ac.kr/handle/2020.sw.sookmyung/14873
DOI
10.17054/jmemes.2007.17.2.207
ISSN
1738-2556
Abstract
Sung-kyun YimThis study is to examine and re-evaluate the pastoral tradition manifested in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene, Book One, so as to understand the nature of the poet's Christian humanism and its relationship to pastoralism. Pastoral, as a literary genre, often deals with shepherds' love affairs within the idealistic rural environments. The tradition is known to have started with Theocritus's Idylls, followed by Virgil's Ecologues, and after having had disappeared during the Medieval periods, resurfaced with Petrach's Ecologues as an influential literary genre to the early modern poets and courtiers. Strictly speaking, classical nature does not go well along with Christian world view. The idealistic rural world portrayed by classical pastoralists, however, is reviewed by Renaissance humanists and presented as a type of the paradise, now lost through human corruptions. The classical nature has transformed itself into the moral nature. Thus, nature in Renaissance literature is almost always related to the way that human beings achieve paradise within themselves, the salvation.Book One of The Faerie Queene shows that Spenser's portrayal of nature, or his pastoralism, is different from the nostalgia for the golden age and from the desire to restore the paradise. It is God's creation and given to haman beings as a present; nevertheless, it rarely protects, cures, and then returns human beings back to their civilizations. Rather, pastoral innocence (often synonymous with ignorance) and otium endanger and test the heroes, and therefore it becomes what the heroes must overcome. The Redcross knight must finish the race before he indulges in pastoral pleasure. Actually, his early failures to recognize the pastoral danger and his later realization that he must accept God's Grace while working hard constitute the plot and the meaning of the book.
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영어영문학부(대학) > 영어영문학부 > 1. Journal Articles

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