Thursday, September 6, 2007

I Have to Keep Reminding Myself that They're Monsters

While l0oking over some of the medievalist blogs linked to this one, I came across a classroom anecdote relevant to this course, and particularly relevant, I think, to The Song of Roland. Briefly, in a discussion of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, a student remarked about the Green Knight, "I have to keep reminding myself he's a monster," which (apparently) prompted further discussion off of the question, "What happens when something occupies the place where a monster should go but isn't in fact that monstrous?"

I think this connects to Roland insofar as in this text, the "Paynims" occupy the place where a monster should go but aren't, to some extent, that "monstrous," that is, that unfamiliar and profoundly differentiated. I, for one, often had to remind myself that they are meant to be effectively monsters; what is more, the poet also has to periodically remind himself of this fact.

Another way of possibly getting at this is via Beowulf (sorry to be continually getting ahead of our reading list in this post...). In that poem, Beowulf, and the Geats and Danes generally, confront two classes of enemies: supernatural opponents like Grendel, his mother, and the dragon, who are very definitely monstrous and almost otherworldly, and merely human opponents, rival tribes like the Swedes or the Heathobards, who part of the same culture and society.

Roland telescopes these two classes of "other" into one. Obviously, the Saracens take on a monstrous role: they are the postulated enemies of God, diametrically opposed to the Christian French in that sense. The poet attributes to them an extravagantly demonic religion that periodically acquires associations of Satanism and dark sorcery. Some of their champions get explicitly labeled as evil, followers of sin and vice as an apparent moral imperative: "Then first rides out a Saracen, Abisme..../ Better he loves murder and treachery / Than all the gold that is in Galicie" (108). From time to time, something like a racial differentiation appears; Abisme is "black...as melted pitch," and the "accursed tribesmen" from "Ethiope, a land accursed and vile" who swarm up against the last French survivors are likewise "Negro tribes," "black as ink from head to foot" (125). In such instances, the poem marks its oppositional figures as a different order of humanity, if not almost entirely inhuman.

And yet, while being in certain instances so profoundly "othered," the Paynims simultaneously participate in the same social context as the French. If in some ways they are more weird and demonic than real 11th-century Muslims would have been, in other ways they are far closer to the French and have more in common with them. They share the same feudal codes and institutions, the same tactics, weaponry, and conventions of battle, and many of the same standards of behavior. For every near-monstrous Saracen peer, there is at least another who is "a good knight and gallant" (114). More than once, the poet has to near-audibly stifle his explicit admiration and avowal of kinship with these Paynim foes and remind himself that they are "monsters": "Were he but Christian, right knightly he'd appear" (87), or, as the poet says of Baligant, Charlemagne's double as the leader and exemplar of the entire Saracen world, "Were he but Christian, God! what a warrior" (172).

I think it's safe to say, then, that this dynamic of mingled "othering" and commonality with the "Paynims" problematizes Roland considerably, or (a better way to put it) makes it a lot more interesting. In reading about the Crusades, for example, I have come across the idea that the Franks persistently made Islam out to be such a bizarre, polytheistic demonic mishmash (even after they had been living in the Middle East for some time and could no longer plead ignorance in the way that the poet of Roland presumably could) in order to outwardly project their own awareness of some of the polytheistic aspects of Christianity as they practiced it- the Trinity, the cult of the saints, and so forth. (On that note, it's interesting, as Dorothy Sayers points out in her introduction, that Roland depicts a rather austere Christianity in which the saints or the Virgin are relatively downplayed and characters, even layman like Roland, speak to God directly, without mediation or intercession.) We "other" or project outwards aspects of ourselves with which we are uneasy or cannot come to terms. The question I want to ask, then, is whether (in what ways, or in what degree) the Paynims in Roland act as a mirror to 11th-century French society , embodying both the aspects of that society that its members wished to celebrate and those that they wanted to deny or obscure?

2 comments:

Annie said...

Ok, I wrote this out and then my computer didn't let the post go through, so I'm writing it again, but it won't be as well articulated as prior. I wanted to follow a thread from what was already posted and add some ideas to the question at the end of the post.

There is an interesting "mirroring" if you will, of the "Paynims" to the French. It seems that the only actual difference between these two groups is their faiths, which makes for a big deal in this story.

As stated, this story's narrator is a Christian, and sees the Christians as the good and right. However, the "Paynims" are depicted to be good warriors too-but they're not Christian. Several instances in the story the narrator speaks of the Saracens' potential to be noble knights if only they were Christian. For example, talking about one Emir, "Were he but Christian, right knightly he'd appear" (87).

The reason for the narrator's mirroring of the Saracens to the French is to emphasize that these people have the potential to receive the salvation of Christianity. Christian teachings were for men to make disciples of others. Christians are to spread their faith to everyone, because everyone has the chance to be in the Christian "right" and then go to heaven. It is a Christian's duty to help others who have not yet converted.

In answering the post's question at the end, it seems the French are supposed to celebrate in their nationality and "right" faith. The only thing for them to deny or obscure is going against the "right" faith. That being relative to the hegemonic power of the time (in this case, the French).

This is an interesting question, because there is a desire in Christianity to be a martyr, and therefore go straight to heaven. However, if we look at the other Saracen group, they also die for their faith. Does that mean you should only be a martyr for your faith if you are the hegemonic side at the moment?

amelia said...

What I question here is that with all of this mirroring what are we as the audience intended to take with us? If as modern readers of reasonable intelligence we can see this as a case of "it could just as easily go the other way," what is the author's intent? Is the story meant for us, or does it truly belong to another time which we are given a glimpse of through the tale? It seems as though the "other" in this story is the audience. Surely the period audience would have been looking at these issues as well, reading/hearing this primarily for entertainment, then for history, but at some point, certainly, some would be questioning what they were hearing. I find that between the dynamic of the two shifting others, I begin to see the whole as satire, which is certainly a more modern view than I am certain the one which was intended.