The Holy Grail: Imagination and Belief

Couverture
Allen Lane, 2004 - 463 pages
The Holy Grail is an image familiar to us all as an almost unattainable, infinitely desirable goal. The idea has passed into everyday speech and the legends behind it are as current in today's culture as they have ever been. And yet the Grail has no real religious meaning and is nowhere mentioned in the Bible. What is the truth behind this elusive symbol? beginning with Chretien de Troyes, who in the twelfth century first imagined the famous scene in which a mysterious golden vessel adorned with jewels was paraded before the eyes of an untested youth. The author died before he could complete his tale, and the unsolved mystery of the grail has haunted us ever since. By a long series of imaginative transformations, the grail has moved from the sphere of romance to religion, and in twentieth century popular culture has become an emblem of mysticism and man's highest aspirations, intimately linked with the central ritual of the Christian faith. history, literature and art, and ranging across most of western Europe and the Near East. The diversity of concepts involved shows the wealth of the Grail's cultural influence: from the beginning of prose romances ? precursors of the modern novel ? to the hotly disputed theological ideas of the medieval period and the passions of popular religion. In later centuries, the grail leads us through the rise of literary scholarship and the fashionable ideas that shaped it, the nineteenth-century enthusiasm for all things medieval, and twentieth-century New Age. The search for the grail has always been described as a quest; in this book, Barber goes on his own quest, exploring the richness of the Holy Grail's cultural impact.

À l'intérieur du livre

Table des matières

CREATING THE GRAIL
7
Chrétien continued
27
Robert de Boron
39
Droits d'auteur

24 autres sections non affichées

Autres éditions - Tout afficher

Expressions et termes fréquents

À propos de l'auteur (2004)

Richard Barber helped to found The Boydell Press, which later became Boydell & Brewer Ltd. one of the leading publishers in medieval studies, and he has been managing director since the outset.

Informations bibliographiques