Personified Gemstone: A New Interpretation of the Pearl Maiden
Personified Gemstone: A New Interpretation of the Pearl Maiden
Author(s): Barbara KowalikSubject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, British Literature
Published by: Towarzystwo Naukowe KUL & Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawła II
Keywords: medieval; human; lithic; liquid; liminal
Summary/Abstract: This paper reinterprets the central character of the Middle English dream poem Pearl, the Pearl Maiden, observing that she is nearly as bewilderingly elusive and multifaceted a figure as the green challenger of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, another famous poem attributed to the same unknown fourteenth-century author. The paper’s argument draws upon the pre-modern perception of gemstones as animate beings and on modern thing theory as developed by Bill Brown. I argue that, before the Maiden begins to speak in the dream-vision, correcting the Dreamer’s errors and false assumptions and revealing her status of a heavenly queen, the poem underscores her identity as a precious stone, confronting the Dreamer, and the reader, with an intriguing gemstone persona, a marvel of the Terrestrial Paradise. The poem’s allegory rests, therefore, not exactly on a jewel or a human child at the literal level of allegorical exegesis but, more precisely, on the fluid image of a half human, half lithic figure. The paper demonstrates that the modern conceptual network of binaries like human–nonhuman, human–lithic, or animate–vegetative might not be commensurable with the typically more labile pre-modern perception of things and objects.
Journal: Roczniki Humanistyczne
- Issue Year: 73/2025
- Issue No: 11
- Page Range: 91-103
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English
