Something I only just realized about the Arthur Saga-

Nov 10, 2009 13:57

This is passed on from eleanor X, who had posted the video to her own livejournal. It really is a terrific song; I can't get it out of my head, and the lyrics (in spite of a couple of infelicitous words like "puppetile" - why not "puppet-like" or simply "puppet's"?) are pretty astonishing. If you watch this, consider the relationship described ( Read more... )

songs, recs, literarure, arthur, tv shows

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Comments 18

seductivedark November 11 2009, 09:54:45 UTC
I usually go with the reading that Mordred was yet another "orphaned" child in the stories. The theme repeats over and over - feelings of illegitimacy and the desire to overcompensate. There's a nice book out, modern, that shows this. It's called The Winter King by Bernard Cornwell. The thing that makes this book interesting is that Cornwell was an orphan and recognized certain similarities between his desire to please and Arthur's actions in the earlier stories. My mother was an orphan too and once it was mentioned and I started thinking about it, that reading seems to make sense ( ... )

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mary_j_59 November 11 2009, 18:21:09 UTC
Ygraine - definitely! I don't remember if you've been following Sigune's comic, but she tells Ygraine's story there, and the poor woman is treated barbarously. Further, her young daughters know it.

But the paragraph where you say, about Mordred's mistreatment: I suppose that wasn't such a big deal back in those days. - I have to say I disagree. I've seen this argued before; that people in earlier days, with higher rates of child mortality, did not love their children as we do now. And I don't see how or why we should assume this. After all, Arthurian Britain was as much a Christian society as Britain today - arguably more so - and I don't think human nature changes that much in historical times. People are people. But that Mordred was completely without any legal status, and that people would consider him particularly a sinner because he was conceived in sin - that part is sadly true. The poor kid! But that was the point of this post, anyway; he's a victim of both of his parents, who are acting out their own agenda through him ( ... )

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sigune November 11 2009, 18:47:19 UTC
Mordred was completely without any legal status, and that people would consider him particularly a sinner because he was conceived in sin

Correct me if I'm wrong, but - didn't Mordred pass for King Lot's son? I'd have to check Malory again, but I don't think it is generally known at court that he is Arthur's son. Consequently, he had the status of the youngest Lothian/Orkney prince. (In Geoffrey of Monmouth, he really is Lot's youngest.) That places him well behind Gawain in the line of succession, but still, there are worse situations.

Cornwell's trilogy is pretty good - I'd recommend it too. I mean, it's not T. H. White-good, but it's a very entertaining read, with a great Arthur and a strong Guinevere (and a silly little Gawain, but... *g*).

I'm curious about The Winter Prince; I'll look it up.

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seductivedark November 11 2009, 21:55:05 UTC
I've seen this argued before; that people in earlier days, with higher rates of child mortality, did not love their children as we do now.

I'm not suggesting that they didn't love their children (with the obvious legendary exception we're talking about) but that children were a necessary commodity that people pretty much had to have. Even if they didn't want kids, which would, I'm totally guessing here, be unusual due to cultural influences, they had to have kids. It was a duty to reproduce. It was necessary to the family business. It was necessary to the eventual declining years of Mom and Dad, given that they had declining years when they were too weak to work and didn't drop on the job. There was still a flavor of commodity somewhere even though they did love their kids.

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sigune November 11 2009, 18:35:26 UTC
Hee! Any idea where the song comes from? It's amazingly appropriate and kind of fascinating ( ... )

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mary_j_59 November 11 2009, 18:51:05 UTC
About the show, I must confess that I can't say, never having seen it! I have a friend who's crazy about it, but she seems to be into it for the Merlin/Arthur ship (in case you couldn't guess, Merlin is the thin dark teen and Arthur the husky blond who is talking to young Mordred at the end). So it obviously doesn't take Arthurian canon very seriously.

As to the song, I actually bought this one on iTunes. ) The singer is called Heather Dale, and she seems to have written a lot about the Arthurian characters.

The revenge motif, tragic though it is, does make sense of characters in the saga who would otherwise be blanks. Speaking of which - making sense, that is - I do highly recommend Elizabeth Wein's Winter Prince to you as well. IF you can find it, that is! It's astonishing to me that it's out of print; it is intense, intelligent, morally and emotionally coherent (though disturbing) and very well written.

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sigune November 12 2009, 22:16:06 UTC
Thanks! I'm going to try and get my hands on a copy :).

Wah! That song is catchy indeed!

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anne_arthur November 12 2009, 00:39:41 UTC
This is good, isn't it? I don't remember the song from the TV programme at all, though: was it actually written for it ( ... )

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mary_j_59 November 12 2009, 01:35:02 UTC
Oh, thanks for the info on the show, Anne! You are the second of my friends to recommend it highly, and it does sound like something Deirdre and I could get happily addicted to. Not sure how to find it here in the U.S. though - perhaps I'll check the SiFi lineup.

And what you say about Arthur as James - yes. I will never understand either why Rowling had to diminish her characters as she did, or how some fans can fail to see they are diminished. It would have been a relief to me if James had been as you describe Arthur.

About the song: I don't really know what inspired the artist to write it, but a fan of the show put the video together and it's just wonderfully apt. It certainly is a good ad both for this woman's music and for the episode!

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anne_arthur November 12 2009, 18:26:33 UTC
I hope you're not disappointed, if you do find it! But it's worth starting at the beginning - episodes do build on earlier ones. Arthur starts off as very unlikeable - but then rounds out and becomes considerably more complex. On the whole I think the characters are very well done - and generally well acted.

And that song is lovely!

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sigune November 12 2009, 10:43:11 UTC
Oh, it does sound interesting! If it's still on, I'll have to give it a try. *is curious*

Mind you, if I look at the story I'm not at all sure why the characters are called Arthur, Merlin, Morgana and Mordred. It sounds like a fantasy series that is just about entirely unrelated to anything Arthurian XD. That's not necessarily bad, of course. But my first impression is that the creators are using well-known names purely to draw the audience in...

I am quite in love with an Arthurian television series of which the last season has just been aired in France: Kaamelott. It started out as a very low-budget production, oddly enough formatted in 3-minute episodes of comical Pythonesque sketches, but meanwhile it has turned into a grand and occasionally moving saga (the last three "seasons" are scheduled to be films on the big screen) as the creator, who also plays Arthur, really got into his character. Kaamelott takes quite a few liberties with the Arthurian source material - for example, we haven't seen the faintest hint of Mordred yet, ( ... )

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anne_arthur November 12 2009, 18:47:13 UTC
As I've said above, it's probably worth trying to start at the beginning, if you can find a DVD or something. And you've made me curious about Kaamelott - I'll have to try and see if I can get hold of it. And your Gawain comic looks great - I've loved him since we read 'Sir Gawain and the Green Knight' at school (and he doesn't feature in 'Merlin') so I will find time to read it all ( ... )

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sigune November 12 2009, 22:02:34 UTC
But I've always thought of the Arthurian canon as a sort of medieval fandom, with different authors rewriting the story to suit themselves, or inventing new knights if they didn't like any of the existing ones

Oh, absolutely! It's a fandom complete with Gary Stus! :D It's difficult to argue one way or another about things which you'd expect to be basics - like, say, Mordred's parentage. In Malory Arthur is his father and in Geoffrey of Monmouth it's King Lot... What is canon? The challenge is to create a story with an inner coherence; it's clear that you can't ever get it all 'correct', because no single source can lay claim to being the ultimate version. I guess lots of people stick with Malory because his Morte is pretty complete in its scope. Pity he's so tough on poor Gawain. (But, okay, that's my own preference speaking *g*...) In any case, the variety of versions forms a wonderful playground!

I couldn't contain my curiosity and have ordered the first season of Merlin on Amazon... As for Kaamelott, English subtitling may be a ( ... )

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anne_arthur November 23 2009, 23:29:40 UTC
Sorry to take so long to reply - things have suddenly become very busy here! Yes, I do read French, and should be able to manage a French film with French subtitles. I will certainly investigate.

I hope 'Merlin' doesn't disappoint. Since you wrote, Morgause has appeared - she is Morgana's half sister, but Morgana doesn't know about her, and she clearly has some grudge against Uther and interest in Arthur - I suspect that she may turn out to be Arthur's half sister as well, the daughter of his mother and Morgana's father. And I do think that this version, though 'uncanonical' does have inner coherence and might potentially be going somewhere interesting.

I'm afraid I haven't got round to Gawain yet, but I hope to be able to do so soon!

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puckling November 15 2009, 06:51:59 UTC
Okay, knowing what variations on the Arthur mythos that Merlin is pulling and then watching that vid is a bit odd, not going to lie.

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mary_j_59 November 17 2009, 01:26:59 UTC
Oh, I believe you! I hadn't seen any of the show before I saw the video, though, and (perhaps for that reason) I thought it very interesting and well done. And it's a great song.

BTW, seeing this video confirmed me in my desire to see the actual show. Why is it not available on DVD in the U.S.? Aargh!

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puckling November 17 2009, 03:48:03 UTC
It's an absolutely lovely song and a vid that's proficient and well edited. Only in Merlin, Morgana isn't Mordred's mother and Arthur isn't his father and Morgana isn't the one who sets him against Arthur. So for me the cognitive dissonance is big here.

I guess this vid loses me a little because it's taking the admittedly very pretty images from Merlin and using them to tell a different version of the same story with out reflecting/commenting how their source material departs from traditional Arthurian legend and what's being said in the song. So on one hand I would call it a successful vid as it is well edited, with good clips and visuals, and does a very fine job of conveying the story which it wants to tell. But on the other, I think it could have been much more interesting if it were more ambitious in scope. Basically if it's going to play with the combination of traditional Arthuriana and Merlin I want it to be more like this vid* or this one (only Morgana centric) or at least pick up on some of those ideas. Admittedly this is ( ... )

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