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Duality In Sir Gawain And The Green Knight

Decent Essays

In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight pagan and Christian symbols are scattered throughout the poem. The cultural duality is represented through characters and objects in the poem. The duality is a result of a shift from pagan to Christian religion at the time. The holly and the oak, Sir Bertilak and the Green Knight, and Sir Gawain’s shield are some of the ways cultural duality are illustrated in the poem. The holly and the oak in the poem have culture significance in both pagan and Christian cultures. In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight the poet observes, “But in one hand he carried a holly-branch/ Into a dense forest, wondrously wild:/ Of massive grey oaks, hundreds growing together:/” (206,741,743). In pagan culture the holly represents the waning year when summer starts to turn to fall and winter, while the oak represents the waxing year when winter turns to spring and summer. The oak is a symbol of the wild …show more content…

In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight the poet describes the shield: “With the pentangle painted on it in pure gold./ That the mild Queen of Heaven found in her child./ Her image depicted on the inside of his shield,” (620,647,649). The pentangle, five-pointed star, that is on the front of Sir Gawain’s shield is a symbol commonly associated with pagan culture. The Pythagoreans used it to represent perfection, the Sumerians used it to represent the five known planets, to the Greeks it represents the goddess of the underworld. There are many other cultures that use that pentagram to represent aspects of their culture. The pentagram is representing the pagan culture while the Queen of Heaven on the inside of the shield represents the Christian culture. The queen of heaven is another name for the Virgin Mary. Mary is on the back of the shield with the pentagram on the front. The shield is a perfect representation of the cultural duality because it has both pagan and Christian symbols upon

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