Showing posts with label clothing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clothing. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Imitatio Transvesti: Margery Kempe as a Transgender Saint


"Why gost thu in white? 
Art thu a mayden?"

Book of Margery Kempe
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Vs. the Vicar of Norwich

Between 1415 and 1418, the trans virgin encounters regular conflicts on account of living out the Imago Transvesti, resulting in a series of struggles that offer a model of life for Christians and those called to live Imitatio Transvesti. Whereas the trans saint is lives in relative peace while abroad, where she is a stranger in a stranger land, once she returns to her home country of England, where knows the language, she begins to teach and debate. Abroad, people may merely observe her. At home, people hear her preaching the virtues of her Imitatio Transvesti and causing others to follow it. She moves beyond a wonder to be observed to a social revolution to be reckoned. Three episodes make up the primary contest between the trans virgin and local authorities, collectively producing a drama in the hagiography as the way of the world, the Imitatio Mundi, and the way of the trans saint, Imitatio Transvesti, are brought into contrast and conflict. The first event occurs in late 1415 in Norwich with a Vicar. The second event occurs in 1417 with the Mayor of Leicester. The third event occurs in late 1417 with the Archbishop of York. Through these conflicts, the Imitatio Transvesti of the Book of Margery Kempe follows in the late medieval scholastic tradition of dialectic argument. Whereas Marinos’s tale is more passive in its resistance to Imago Mundi, the model Kempe provides shows a more active way of living Imago Transvesti. Centuries later, whereas the passive trans monk is accepted as an official saint, the active trans virgin remains contentious. Yet too few medievalists know about Marinos, Kempe maintains a more active fame or infamy. The active Imitatio Transvesti refuses to go away, even by being quietly tolerated and integrated. In this way, Kempe’s model insists that even if society does not like who she is and what she does, it will have to deal with transvestism as a part of the world.

Arriving in Norwich in May 1415, Kempe visits the vicar of St. Stephan's Church, Richard Caister, who interrogates her on her trans identification as a virgin. The Vicar begins their relation combatively, asking, "wher sche had don hir chylde the whech was begotyn and born whil sche was owte, as he had herd seyde" (where she had her child, the one she had conceived and given birth to while she was away, as he had heard). [1] Inverting assumptions, the Vicar suggests that far from being a virgin, she has conceived a child while away. Above all, she is not what she says. Thus, he concludes, she should not present herself as a virgin or face further slander.[2] Ever Slander and scandal remains the cutting edge of the world's threat against trans saints. If she will not return to the gender norms asserted by the Imago Mundi, worse assignment will be made for her. Returning to England, Kempe is better prepared for the wonder of those living under other images of Creation than her Imago Dei. Openly reaffirming her testimony, "sche had in hym how it was owr Lordys wyl that sche schulde be clad in white clothyng" (she showed him how it was our Lord willed that she should be clad in white clothing), and says, “Ser, I make no fors so that God be plesyd therwyth” ('Sir, I make no falsehood and God is pleased with me).[3] Imago Dei may seem false to a world asserting contrary rules, yet the trans virgin commits no lie, laying out her history and revelations for all to see. When ever then the Vicar does not consent but asks for a fellow clergyman to asses her, she at last rejects their authority under the command from God, "I wil not that thu be governyd be hym" (I will not have you be governed by him).[4] A woman once with divided loyalty now affirms she is on the Imago Dei even if the world is not.

Indeed, in the years following her return to England, the trans virgin demonstrates her willingness to undergo struggles to inspire others to join in the Imitatio Transvesti. On Good Friday, 1415, Kempe prays to be vindicated and revived publicly. She asks that if it is God’s will that she be clad in white, that God should grant her a sign of lightning, thunder, and rain, "so that it hyndir ne noy no thyng that I unworthy may the rathyr fulfillyn thy wil" (so that no one can say nothing about me being unworthy, but rather that I fulfill your will).[5] God receives her prayer and confirms that it will be fulfilled on the third day. And so it was. On the next Friday, early in the morning, as she lay in her bed, she saw great lightning, she heard great thunder, and great rain following, and just as quickly it went away again. Kempe recieves this as a sign to once again take on her white clothes, "sche purposyd hir fullych to weryn white clothis," (she intended to fulfill wearing white clothes).[6] Eventually, Kempe keeps this promise. As with the show of the storm, the white clothes again attract attention. The Book accounts, "sche was howselyd al in white, and sithen hath sche sufferyd meche despyte and meche schame in many dyvers cuntreys, cyteys, and townys, thankyd be God of alle" (she was all in white, and suffered much despisement and shame in many counties, cities, and towns, thanks to the God of all).[7] Becoming sainted means to be set apart, a living image of God's diverse creation that inspires others into action. Yet this Imago Dei often contradicts the rules of the Imago Mundi. People have negative reactions causing her to become a target time and again. This is all a part of the imitation of Christ, who also suffered. In this way, the Imitatio Transvesti follows the Imitatio Christi, that by suffering may a saint face the persecution of the world in the name of grace.

The trans saint as an imitation of Christ draws others to follow likewise to see and enact such an image. Once she committed to wearing white in Norwich, the problem arouse that she had no money to buy clothes.[8] God promises to provide. Shortly, Kempe meets a good man of Norwich that welcomed her gladly and sat listening to her stories. Kempe shares with him her need for a loan to buy white clothes.[9] Not only does he offer financial assistance, he directly labors to make her Imago Transvesti materially possible. The Book accounts that this good man bought white clothe and from it made her a gown and a hood, a girdle, and a cloak.[10] By her contingent neediness, being marginalized by her poverty, the trans saint brings others along with her on her way. By his work, the man not only assists in Kempe's embodiment of the Imago Dei, he participates in it. When he arrives with the clothing, Kempe and the man share a revelry in the Imago Transvesti, "he browt hir this clothyng and gaf it hir for Goddys lofe, and meche mor goodnes dede to hir for owr Lordys lofe" (He brought her this clothing and gave it to her for God's life, and much more goodness did for her on behalf of our Lord's life).[11] By returning to the Imitatio Transvesti, the trans saints brings another to the Imitatio Christi. Both revel in God through the shared work of embodying Imago Transvesti. With Kempe and Marinos, Aristotle’s definition of tragedy succinctly describes how public contests of the Imitatio Transvesti inspire public resistance, “an imitation not only of a complete action, but of events inspiring fear or pity.”[12] Through the series of legal contest, the Imitatio Transvesti occurs to bring justice for the trans community and to liberate the cis community from destructive divisions and limits. 

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Vs. the Mayor of Leicester

A significant example of this occurs in the summer of 1417, when Kemp'e encounter with the Mayor of Leicester. Having witnessed the trans virgin in her white clothes, the Major begs her to tell him, "why thow gost in white clothys, for I trowe thow art comyn hedyr to han awey owr wyvys fro us and ledyn hem wyth the" (why you go about in white clothes, because I have truly heard that you come here to take away out wives from us and lead them with you).[13] The Imitatio Transvesti destablizes the rules asserted by the Imago Mundi, including the role of wives. If a wife can assert her identity as a virgin and liberate herself of her husband, others may follow. The danger she poses does not go unnoticed by those who hold privileged positions in the Imago Mundi and want society to continue to imitate its gender norms. As a result, the trans virgin begins to become the target for a wide variety of attacks. Because of the religious nature of her Imago Dei, Kempe refuses to divulge her story to a secular leader, even a patriarchy like the Mayor. Perhaps as the daughter of a prominent Mayor in Lynn may have made Kempe wary of the man's attempts to manage her. The trans virgin deflects the Major's moves by insisting that she would only share her Imago Transvesti with religious authorities. "Syr," she says, "ye schal not wetyn of my mowth why I go in white clothys; ye arn not worthy to wetyn it. But, ser, I wil tellyn it to thes worthy clerkys wyth good wil be the maner of confessyon " (Sir, you will not learn from my mouth why I go about in white clothes; you are not worthy to hear it. But, sir, I will tell it to these worthy clergymen in the manner of a confession).[14] By pivoting from a worldly to a religious authority, Kempe proves that she has nothing to hide nor is she afraid of speaking truth to the patriarchy.

The trans virgin is careful however to maintain the religious blessing over her mission as protection from secular threats. The story the trans saint tells is the same hagiography of the white clothes the Book describes. Kempe tells an Abbot, a Friar, a Clerk, and others about her transition while on pilgrimage, "how owr Lord be revelacyon warnyd hir and bad hir weryn white clothys er sche cam at Jerusalem" (how our Lord by revelation warned her and bade her to wear white clothes before she came to Jerusalem).[15] By couching the story of her transition within the physical journey of a pilgrimage, Kempe makes the embodiment of the Imago Dei easier to process. Furthermore, even if the clergy are not aware yet that Kempe (and her Book) are telling a hagiography, they will understand the religious narrative of pilgrimage.

By getting the clergy to hear her story and repeat it to others, the trans virgin not only authorizes herself within the Church against allegations from secular threats but trains members of the Church to imitate her storytelling. To be a trans virgin saint , Kempe not only needs to tell her own story, performing herself publically Imitatio Transvesti, but to get others to tell her story. This is what comes of the clergy hearing her tale of transition. Before the clergy, Kempe instructs, "therfor, serys, yyf the meyr wil wetyn why I go in whyte, ye may seye, yyf yow likyth, that my gostly faderys byddyn me gon so, and than schal ye make no lesynggys ne he schal not knowe the trewth" (therefore, sirs, if the Major will learn why I go in white, you may say, if you like, that my clergy bid me to go in such a way, and then shall you make no lies nor shall hide the truth).[16] By first embodying her Imitatio Transvesti, Kempe has elicited an audience of storytellers that might repeat (in imitation of her performance narration) the truths of her Imago Transvesti. Thus, the invisible revelation of the Image Dei will be repeatedly performed in imitated by others. By confirming the clergy as her apostles, like Christ sending his followers to tell the Good News, Kempe is no longer alone in an invisible truth or visible marginalization but has her sainthood affirmed by a multitude of sources. "So the clerkys clepyd up agen the meyr and teldyn hym in cownsel that hir gostly faderys had chargyd hir to weryn white clothis and sche had bowndyn hir to her obediens" recounts the Book (so the clerks went to the Mayor and told him in consul how the clergy had charged her to wear white clothes and that she should be obedient to her mission).[17] Once abandoned, Kempe is no longer on her own. Set apart by society, trans saints nonetheless can regain community through imitators, allies and storytellers.

With the clergy behind her, Kempe is able to assert the validity of her Imago Transvesti from God, telling anyone who questions, "thei han chargyd me that I schulde gon thus, for thei dar not don ageyn my felyngys for dred of God" (they have charged me that I should go thus, for they dare not go against my feelings of dread of God).[18] In the end, the Imago Dei validates the trans virgin not only as one set apart from the Imago Mundi but sainted so as to offer a unique a Imitatio Transvesti for others to follow. The conscience of Kempe is proven clean. She has told no lie, although she contradicts the known truth of the city and reveals more to God's creation. In response to overwhelming support, the Major is forced to concede his Imago Mundi to Kempe's Imago Transvesti. In reconciliation, the Mayor meets with Kempe once again. During the meeting, he offers her a hug. Then he offers her some words of comfort. From this time and for a while, the Mayor proves to be a good friend to the trans virgin.
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Vs. the Archbishop of York

The biggest test of the trans virgin comes in York, where Kempe call on allies who have shared in her story and may rehearse its validity. In late 1417, as Kempe was weeping in Church, the Archbishop of York, Henry Bowet inquires who she is. "Why gost thu in white? Art thu a mayden?" asks the Archbishop. [19] Kempe replies tactfully, "Nay, ser, I am no mayden; I am a wife." The Archbishop jumps to condemn her as a liar, ordering her to be taken away by his men to be manacled, "for sche was a fals heretyke" (for she was a false heretic)[20]. At this point, Kempe resists, "I am non heretyke, ne ye schal non preve me" (I am no heretic, nor will you prove me one). While in white, living as a virgin, she nonetheless answers truthfully about her history as a mother. This seeming contradiction is not the same as a lie. She is open and direct on the complexity of her life. She gave birth to children. She was a mother. These are facts of life that other virgins do not share; distinguishing how a trans virgin's life may differ from other virgins.  As a protector of the Imago Mundi, the Archbishop fears that allowing the trans virgin to move and speak freely in York will destabilize gender roles in medieval society. The Archbishop and his consul agree she must leave, "for the pepil hath gret feyth in hir dalyawnce, and peraventur sche myth pervertyn summe of hem" (for the people have great faith in her visions and by adventure she might pervert some of them).[21] They command that she swear on the Bible that she will leave and never return to York. Kempe refuses and insists on the freedom to travel freely to be among the people. Again, the danger of the trans virgin is not only that she embodies an Imago Transvesti outside the control of the Imago Mundi, but that she might inspire an Imitatio Transvesti thus creating more in the image of the trans saint.

In order to discredit the Imitatio Transvesti, the Archbishop summons a host of agents to imitate his version of the truth. Clerks as well as a monk and a doctor arrive. The doctor had examined Kempe before and knew her bodily state. With a party of authorities following the Archbishop’s Imitatio Mundi, York was sent into uproar against the woman in white. The Book accounts, "Sum of the pepil askyd whedyr sche wer a Cristen woman er a Jewe; sum seyd sche was a good woman, and sum seyd nay" (Some of the people asked whether she was a Christian or a Jew; some said she was a good woman and some said not).[22] The couple of lines here mirror one another, underlining the suspicion that she is a Jew with her being bad. The general effect was that Kempe became the subject of marvel and alien to the community. The force of Imago Mundi was forcing Kempe toward the margins, as a woman set apart not by grace but by exclusion.  To counter this, Kempe asked for permission to raise her own witnesses for her defense. When the Archbishop remains intrenched, she asks him to give some time in the city to collect evidence to support her, "for I must teryin and spekyn wyth good men er I go, and I must, ser, wyth yowr leve, gon to Brydlyngton and spekyn wyth my confessor, a good man, the whech was the good priowrys confessor that is now canonysed" (For I must go and speak with good men and I must, sir, with your leave, go to Brydlyngton and speak with my confessor, a good man, who recently became a Canon).[23] Kempe is successful in this request and is able to block some of the slander by mounting her own society of defense, including a letter from her old confessor validating the revelation of the Imago Transvesti and her living out the Imitatio Transvesti. Credits procured, Kempe is once again free to move about York. Trans saints inspire imitation in allies, who enact Mimesis by fighting “as if” the attack were on them.[24] As with Marinos, Augustine’s words reflect how the Imitatio Transvesti in the Book of Margery Kempe, “Let them be an example unto the faithful by living before them and stirring them up to imitation.”[25]

Thus, if the Archbishop cannot get rid of her, he moves to stop Kempe from telling her story, "ne techyn ne chalengyn the pepil" (not to teach nor to challenge the people).[26] Kempe flatly refuses. "Nay, syr, I schal not sweryn," she saus, "for I schal spekyn of God and undirnemyn hem that sweryn gret othys whersoevyr I go " (No sir, I shall no swear, for I shall speak of God and in His name sway others wherever I go).[27] Kempe then adds that scripture attests that women were allowed to hear Christ, follow Christ, speak of Christ, and Christ blessed them. Then the Clerks began attacking her on the grounds of her preaching the Word of God, citing letters from Saint Paul that forbids women to act as a priest, that no woman should preach.[28]  To this Kempe replied that she was not guilty of preaching because preaching is defined as reading from scripture and she was illiterate, unable to read. "I preche not, ser," she says, "I come in no pulpytt. I use but comownycacyon and good wordys, and that wil I do whil I leve" (I preach not sir, I came in no pulpit. I use but common knowledge and good words, as I am allowed).[29] Unable to read, Kempe’s mode of learning and teaching is through imitation. This truth confirms Kempe's previous statements when she was interrogated on the doctrines of faith and answered readily, "wythowtyn any gret stody so that he myth not blamyn hir" (without any great study so that he might not blame her).[30] Kempe's replies were unstudied. Rather, all her knowledge of scripture comes either from listening to clergy, especially her confessors, or by revelation. Indeed, time and again, Kempe's Imitatio Transvesti aims at justifying itself not by written authority but by embodied and experienced truths.

Through repeated performance and the imitation of allies, the trans saint wears down the Imago Mundi. After hearing her defense time and again, as well as the words of allies who authorize and repeat her story, at last the Archbishop surrenders his assault and gives her some money for her troubles.[31] Struggle after struggle, Kempe both imitates previous trans saints and creates a model of imitation. Over the centuries, readers continue to read trans hagiographies and become trans saints because of ongoing problems in the world’s limited definitions of gender, as well as through the continuation of a tradition of reclaiming the image and mode of life through the transitioning of gender identity and expression. This is especially true in the late Middle Ages, as women such as Margery Kempe look back to older stories in order to find alternatives to unlivable conditions. Indeed, by modeling itself on the trans hagiographies of the early Christian period, the Book of the Margery Kempe adapted an image and a model for later generations. “Such efforts to mold herself on the examples of holy women anticipate a practice that would become more common by the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries…” writes Verini. “Such acts suggest that Margery’s imitation of female exemplars was the forerunner of a practice of female imitation that adumbrated a larger web of female interconnections.”[32] Yet this interconnection goes beyond femaleness, existing in the space between and across. The trans monk and the trans virgin share commonalities, even similar genitalia, but what bonds them is a shared struggle, a mutual liberation, and a continuing narrative that builds on those that have come before and lay the seeds for future transitions.

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Notes

[1] BMK 2419-21.
[2] Ibid.
[3] Ibid. 2427-9.
[4] Ibid. 2430-1.
[5] Ibid. 2433-4.
[6] Ibid. 2436-41.
[7] Ibid. 2453-6.
[8] Ibid. 2433-56.
[9] Ibid.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Ibid. 2447-56.
[12] Aristotle Poetics. I.xi.
[13] BMK 2727-28
[14] Ibid. 2720-31.
[15] Ibid. 2732-5.
[16] Ibid. 2737-40.
[17] Ibid. 2740-2.
[18] Ibid. 2735-40.
[19] Ibid. 2923-4
[20] Ibid.
[21] Ibid. 3023
[22] Ibid. 2934.
[23] Ibid. 2960-3.
[24] Gebauer and Christoph Wulf 1.
[25] Augustine. Confessions. XXI.xiii
[26] BMK 2963-4.
[27] Ibid. 2964-72.
[28] Ibid. 2972-3031.
[29] Ibid. 2975-7.
[30] Ibid. 2943-9.
[31] Ibid. 3023-3028.
[32] Verini 384.
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Lynn Festival Fringe Production
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Monday, March 23, 2015

Mad Romance: Sir Tristans Gender & Neoplatonic Logos


“I tell you that he had 
suffered such hardships for her ...he was already a madman”

Roman de Tristan
Beroul

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Introduction to English Literature 1 
A Genealogy of Gender and Genre 

In this course, we explore gender and genre through literature produced in and around the early British Isles, from the elegiac poetry of the Anglo Saxons to the Epic poetry of John Milton’s Paradise Lost. In this survey of medieval and early modern texts, we trace how forms of narrative were informed by and acted on the construction of concepts of sex and sexuality. We study how debates around nature and nurture, essential and artificial, eternal and mutable came to produce later notions of transgender, queerness, disability, race, and religious difference.

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King Mark's Logos

The second section of our course centered around two Chivalric Romances about Knights of Cornwall, the 12th century Roman de Tristan by Beroul and the 13th century Roman de Silence. The movement from an Anglo-Saxon to French language follows cultural changes in and around England after the Norman Conquest. After William the Conquerer invaded England, he launched a census project over all his domain, collected in the Domesday Book. The significance of tomb goes beyond its tactical uses. Suddenly, the disparate land inheritance rights honored by the Anglo-Saxon lords were now nullified, centralizing all property in the kingdom under the sign of the King. Power was located in the center and moved outwards through intermediaries to the peripheries, following the rising theological structure of Neo-Platonism. Structured around a hierarchy of concentric circles, the Norman Neo-Platonic Logos became well represented by one of the conquerer's tools: the castle.

The chief castle of Cornwall is Tintagel, where King Mark sits in the center of power. We began by examining Beroul's Tristan from the point of view of the King's supposed (and humorously faulty) god-eye view. In Neo-Platonism, the greatest of all things is the unified and the unifier. Difference and particularity marks someone as lower in rank of perfection. This may be one explanation why King Mark is such a flat character. He lacks the charisma of Tristan or Yseult because he lacks their madness, their characterizing marks. King Mark marks others as Other, but works to remain above demarkation. He represents an exacts he Law and the Truth - as they would be traditionally defined. When Mark enacts power and information, he does so through intermediaries. The unmoved mover must remain above the fray. Often Mark shows anger and compassion, but even these emotions represent the wider unrest in Cornwall and Tintagel. The characteristic scene with King Mark is sitting in his castle, on his throne, listening to his advisors.

Sitting in the earthly counter-part to the seat of the Neo-Platonic unmoved mover, Mark is far from omniscient and omnipotent, yet is supposed to represent the logos that his castle orders. In Tintagel, there are designated chambers for the King, the Queen, Knights, and Ladies where life is organized according to rules of gender and genus. When rumors of sexual impropriety emerge about his Queen Yseult and nephew Sir Tristan, they center around the male knight breaking the spatial code of the castle that ordered their bodies, entering the lady's chamber at night. When the King orders his hunchback dwarf, Frocin, to spy on the lovers and determine whether or not they are committing treasonous adultery, he perpetuates the securitization of bodies that the castle is designed to enact. Frocin covers Yseult's chamber in a fine dusting of flour after she goes to sleep in order to catch any footprints of men walking in and out. Through the flour, the castle's floors gains the ability to perceive and report the sexual trespasses of the bodies it contains. While Tristan spots the trap and leaps over the flour-covered floor, his strain rips open a wound and pours his blood over the floor. This is significant event represents and sets into motion the unmaking of Tristan's physical, mental, and social integrity at the hands of the state apparatus of King Mark's castle and logos.



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Sir Tristan's Madness

The counter-point to King Mark's logos is Sir Tristan's Madness. Tristan's madness is a characteristic feature of his romance that remains throughout iterations of the character from Beroul's 12th century version to Thomas Malory's 15th century Book of Tristan. The story of Tristan's madness is often marked off, as it is with Beroul, as a self-contained scene, and yet it contains all the central themes of his romance as contrast's to King Mark's constancy. Whereas King Mark works towards Neo-Platonic Unity, Sir Tristan points towards 13th century Nominalistic Division (or at very least Realism). Whereas the King is a monotonous presentation of universal kingship, Tristan works to emphasize radical particularity. The King is a conservative force that retains identity and truth, while Tristan is constantly changing his identity and dissembling matter from meaning. If the King's symbol (and weapon) of logos is the castle, then Tristan's symbol (and weapon) of madness is the sword. This sword enacts the work of Ockham's Razor, cutting bodies free from the presumptions of gender and rationality which confine them.

Beroul's Tale of Tristan's Madness exists in a fragment of its own, but continues the theme of ecstatic particularity from other tales. King Mark is always King Mark, but Tristan us also Tantris, a leper, a black knight, and the madman Picous. In most of these versions of himself, Tristan emphasizes the mutability of the body through wounds, open sores, or fragmented mental states. In the process, Tristan changes his clothes, skin, and hair to become his new persona. "He did not want anyone to think he was in his senses," writes Beroul, "so he tore his clothes and scratched his face. He struck any many who crossed his path. He had his fair hair shorn off... he was carrying a staff in hand" (153-154). Madness is not merely a mental characteristic, but involves a whole body transformation. The objects he carries become integral to his being mad. So too when Tristan became a leper, "He wore woollen garments and no shirt. He wore a rough woollen tunis and his shoes were patched. He had made a wide cloak made of coarse wool, which was blackened with smoke... his face was well covered with bumps" (127-129). Disability is embodied through physical differences as well as changes in the vestments of class, from a supposedly sealed body whose mind and body emphasize porousness and dependency. King Mark's powerful masculinity can suppose universality and self-sufficiency, but the leper and the madman bears their vulnerable physical and social bodies to put pressure on the systems that make them particular yet intermeshed in wider networks. Just as a knight is no knight without armor and a horse, so too the madman requires specific material assemblages.

This constant transformation becomes essential to Tristan's being. Just as when becomes a leper but cannot resist wearing his signature sword, Tristan remains himself even when he becomes other, "he had extremely well made arms, hands and feet, and a shapely waist" (157). Yet he is also "not at all like Tristan" as the Queen condemns him. "He is a fine man and you are a wretch. You have taken on a strange task - beggary makes you deceitful" (161). Picous may share similar body parts as Tristan but his use of them is other. The physical transformation coincides with a social transformation. Yet there is more to the condemnation of deceit that a mere classism. Tristan is always Tristan because Tristan is always changing - always deceiving. The primary motivation for many of these changes however are a lack of power. If Tristan was King, like Mark, he could afford to be truthful in traditional manners. But because he lacks power, his beggary makes him deceitful and encourages change not only in his body but in a wide range of social positions. Neo-Platonism is oriented towards the middle and works towards preserving unity, like the walls of a castle, with everything in its proper place. Nominalism, however, like Tristan's sword or Ockham's razor, cuts through the presumptions of embodiment, gender, and class to open up uncharted possibilities for life, love, and truth. Truth is constantly made anew. Truth itself becomes mad(e).



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Queen Yseut's Ambiguity

While King Mark sits in the central logos of power and Sir Tristan's madness cuts through presumptions with radical particularity, Queen Yseut finds herself constantly caught between warring powers. While a King and a Knight have the ability to suppose themselves to be self-contained universal or particular bodies, Yseut is rarely ever alone, depending on men (Mark or Tristan) to enact power for her. As a relational being, caught between systems, Yseut is able to play both sides through the power of ambiguity. In terms of Christian metaphysics, Yseut embodies (like the protagonist in Roman de Silence) John Duns Scotus's theory of "thatness" (categorical relations structuring power dynamics between like beings) and "thisness" (the ever changing specific conditions that break off to create an alternative logos). While Tristan acts like a sword that cuts and reconstructs his relations between identities with his costume changes, Yseut is more like the fabric of the tunic to which she is regularly compared - at once revealing and veiling, conforming and subverting her liminal position within the Neo-Platonic hierarchy of King Mark.

In "the Tale of Yseut's Ambiguous Oath," Beroul describes how Yseut manipulates King Mark's Neo-Platonic desire to expose the Truth and Sir Tristan's Nominalistic desire to produce new truths by calling for a public declaration of her innocence that will play upon the ambiguity of meaning to present multiple T/truths at once. Specifically, the truths that are competing revolve around the state of Yseut's chastity to King Mark. Previously, Yseut had avoided consummating her marriage by slipping out of bed on her wedding night and having her servant woman, Brangain, take her place, "the unfortunate girls was at first reluctant, but finally acquiesced" (44-45). Here bodies are exchanged, given and withdrawn in a move that would become a trademark of Yseut's ambiguity. When Yseut becomes nervous that her maid would reveal her duplicity, she plots to have her servant killed. Yet when the knights employed to carry out the task ask Brangain why she is sentenced to death, she confesses her own ambiguous truth, "she answered that her only misdeed was to lend Yseut a clean white tunic when Yseut's was soiled" (46). This metaphorically laden confession persuades the knights and the queen to preserve Brangain's life. The servant, like Yseut, know how to use the ambiguity of clothing and language to manipulate truth in ways that at once reveal and conceal bodily states.

When Yseut's mad romance with Tristan is made an accusation of treason to King Mark's laws ordering sex and loyalty, Yseut insists that her trial be staged as a public declaration where royal dignitaries, lords, clergy, and commoners will be present to witness the proceedings. In effect, Yseut transforms a private confession of sin into a public spectacle where she can play upon the metaphorical power of clothes and language to at once reveal and alter the truth. The location chosen for the event is a muddy clearing near the forest, where Tristan is hidden as a leper and Yseut arrives dressed in pure white clothes befitting a queen representing all the cardinal neoplatonic virtues. "The queen was wearing robes of silk brought from Bagdad," writes the narrator, "lined with white ermine. Her cloak and tunic hung down behind her. Her hair fell over her shoulders in a linen headscarf worked with fine gold. She was wearing a gold circlet on her head which showed off her fresh rosy and white coloring" (135). These valuable, precious, and white materials suggest the delicate royal body they enfold. The length of the garments also introduce a problem which Yseut bends to her advantage. Because they drag on the ground behind her, it is improper for her to walk through the mud. Getting off her horse, Yseut calls over the leper (Tristan) and has him carry her to the stage. This contrived situation compels this embarrassing but justifiable humiliation of a mad lower class body under the service of his royal superior. The neoplatonic order is being affirmed on the surface. Yet the event also allows Yseut to speak truthfully and in apparent innocence when she confesses, "I swear that no man ever came between my thighs except the leper who carried me on his back across the ford and my husband, King Mark" (142). Here, as before, Yseut uses clothes and words to at once speak a truth which is demanded by the King and will be safely received because of other truths it obfuscates and reconstructs. Yseut is presented as white, chaste, and pure by contrasting with Tristan's dirty, dark, and diseased costume. Yet by playing with these public appearances, Yseut is able to arrange events to acknowledge a sexual relationship with Tristan that becomes recast as the benign service of a lower member of society to a higher. "That" category of divine and court law is fulfilled to the letter, while the meaning of "that" letter is made ambiguous so as to serve the needs of "this" circumstance.



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