This lesson contains 27 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.
Items in this lesson
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Slide 1 - Slide
Today's learning goal
After the lesson you can:
summarize the story "Gawain and the Green Knight" in three sentences.
Slide 2 - Slide
How:
watch a little film in which the story is told: MAKE NOTES!
Answer some multiple choice questions about the film.
Look at the original text
Answer questions page 31
Slide 3 - Slide
Slide 4 - Video
When does the story begin?
A
Christmas Eve
B
Christmas Day
C
New Year's Eve
D
New Year's Day
Slide 5 - Quiz
A huge green knight enters the castle and challenges the knights. What is the challenge?
A
He wants them to take a swing at him with his own axe
B
He wants to hit them with an axe
C
He wants them to follow him to the Green Chapel
D
He wants to see them again a year and a day later
Slide 6 - Quiz
Why does Gawain volunteer?
A
Because King Arthur tells him to
B
Because he is in love with Queen Guinevere and wants to impress her.
C
Because he thinks he is useless and expendable
D
Because he wants to show off his bravery
Slide 7 - Quiz
What happens after Gawain decapitates the Green Knight?
A
The Green Knight dies
B
The Green Knight gets up and leaves without his head.
C
The Green Knight gets up, picks up his head and leaves
D
The Green Knight picks up his head, promises to meet Gawain a year and a day later and leaves.
Slide 8 - Quiz
Which word best describes the arrangement Gawain and the lord of the castle make?
A
Reciprocity
B
Cowardice
C
Insanity
D
Arrogance
Slide 9 - Quiz
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Read the information on page 26
Answer the questions, except question 4
Slide 10 - Slide
Page 31
Question 1. How does Gawain behave towards the lady of the castle?
He is very chivalrous. In other words, he behaves exactly as one would expect of a knight: he is polite towards her, he flirts with her a little and he promises to serve her.
Slide 11 - Slide
Page 31
Question 2. What is the most striking aspect of the lady's behaviour?
She leads the conversation, actively trying to seduce Gawain. However, she does not seem disappointed that he rejects her advances
Slide 12 - Slide
Page 31
Question 3. Why does Gawain resist her advances?
His quest matters more than anything else, ‘[he] had little love / To spare from his sorrowful quest, which he might not / forestall.’
he has made a vow of chastity, which he is not prepared to break.
It might also be that he doesn’t dare accept the lady’s advances, because of his agreement with the lord of the castle.
Slide 13 - Slide
Question 4. Do you think the lady's behaviour is in keeping with (in overeenstemming met) the context of the poem? Why (not)?
You can skip this question.
Slide 14 - Slide
Question 5a . write down an example of alliteration from lines 1-15
Slide 15 - Mind map
Question 5a . Identify the alliterative words in lines 1 to 15
line 3 snug/streams, while/walls
line 4 coverlets/canopied
line 5 drowsing/dimly
line 6 small/sound
line 8 lifts/little, corner/curtain
line 10 lady/lovely/look
line 11 draws/door
line 13 sinks/soundlessly
line 14 steps/steals
line 15 brushes/back, curtain/cautiously/creeps
Slide 16 - Slide
Page 31 Question 5b. Which famous mediaeval poem is alliterative throughout?
Slide 17 - Open question
Page 31
Question 5c. Explain: in this poem the 4 short rhyming lines are used as a cliffhanger.
Like the closing scene of a soap opera, the final four lines leave the audience wondering what is going to happen in the next part.
Slide 18 - Slide
Question 6. How does Gawain behave when he meets the Green Knight?
At first, he is not very chivalrous: despite his magic belt, he is scared and he fails to keep the agreement, insofar as he flinches when the Green Knight swings his axe. Only once the belt has done its job does Gawain become talkative again. When it comes to light that the belt belongs to the Green Knight, Gawain recognises that he hasn’t behaved nobly and regrets what he has done.
Slide 19 - Slide
Question 7. What parallels are there between Gawain's encounter with the lady and his meeting with the Green Knight?
In both encounters, Gawain shows reluctance: first to be seduced by the beautiful lady, and later, to be slain by the Green Knight. In both cases, his reputation is consequently questioned and he is goaded for his reluctance: the lady challenges Gawain by referring to his reputation as a lover, while the Green Knight challenges him by drawing attention to his reputation as a knight
Slide 20 - Slide
Page 31 Question 8. How is is that the Green Knight is able to recognise the belt Gawain is wearing?
Slide 21 - Open question
Page 31 Question 9. The Green Knight thinks that Gawain is the most faultless warrior that walks on foot. Do you agree after reading the two fragments?
Slide 22 - Open question
Question 10. Compare Sir Gawain with King Horn.
In both romances, the story revolves around the central character reaching maturity by overcoming challenge and adversity.
Magic also plays an important part in both stories.
However, the stories are products of contrasting traditions: King Horn springs from the folk culture of the day, while Sir Gawain is based on French Arthurian romances.
There are also important differences in the style and length of the two poems
Slide 23 - Slide
Question 11. Why did the Green Knight want to test Gawain and why did he send his wife to Gawain?
The Green Knight says that he was bewitched by the famous witch Morgan le Fay. She wanted to know whether the reputation of Arthur’s knights was deserved, and to frighten Guinevere by
confronting her with the Green Knight. The Green Knight probably wanted to help Gawain by sending his wife to give him the magic belt. It is not clear whether the spell is broken once Gawain has passed the test.
Slide 24 - Slide
Today's learning goal
After the lesson you can:
summarize the story "Gawain and the Green Knight" in three sentences.