King Rother and His Bride: Quest and Counter-Quests

by Thomas Kerth

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Book cover for King Rother and His Bride

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King Rother, a twelfth-century bridal-quest epic, occupies an important place in the history of German literature. The earliest surviving and structurally most sophisticated of the so-called minstrel epics, verse narrativesonce assumed to have been recited by itinerant minstrels before a courtly audience, it has its roots in German folklore and documents the transition from orality to the culture of the book. The text belongs to the subgenre of theperilous bridal quest, in which the disguised wooer deceives the bride's father and abducts her with her consent. This simple quest structure is doubled, if the wooer must win his bride a second time from her father, who has rescued her. The bride is almost always a passive figure in these events, the main conflict being the disparity in status between the wooer and his prospective father-in-law. King Rother is structurally complex, as the presentstudy is the first to recognize: the quest structure is doubled not only in the wooer's second quest, but also in the bride's own actions -- including her use of deception in a parallel quest for her wooer. This underscores her equality in status, which is her essential qualification to be his wife. The study includes an important English-language summary of scholarship on King Rother, on the minstrel epics, and on the bridal quest.

Thomas Kerth is Associate Professor of German at Stony Brook University.
  • ISBN10 1571134360
  • ISBN13 9781571134363
  • Publish Date 1 May 2010
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher Boydell & Brewer Ltd
  • Imprint Camden House Inc
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 264
  • Language English