TY - JOUR AU - Hinton, Thomas PY - 2016/06/30 Y2 - 2024/03/28 TI - Troubadour Biographies and the Value of Authentic Love: Daude de Pradas and Uc de Saint Circ JF - Interfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures JA - Interfaces VL - IS - 2 SE - Individual Articles DO - 10.13130/interfaces-7010 UR - https://riviste.unimi.it/interfaces/article/view/7010 SP - 132-163 AB - <p>The idea of an essential connection between the quality of a song and the sincerity of the emotion it expresses ("I sing because I love") is a <em>topos</em> used in various ways by troubadours, one which lent itself naturally to discussion of their relationship to audiences and to other poets. The <em>topos</em> transferred across to the thirteenth-century biographies (<em>vidas</em>) found alongside the songs in numerous manuscripts, as in the arresting claim, made in the <em>vida</em> about Daude de Pradas, that his songs "did not spring from love and therefore did not find favour with audiences." Elsewhere, however, the biographies give a different account of inauthenticity, as the edge which allows troubadours to exercise control over their social environment; significantly, this version of the <em>topos</em> appears in the <em>vida</em> for Uc de Saint Circ, who is believed to be the main author of the corpus. In these contrasting accounts of poetic inauthenticity, we can see the biographies wrestling with questions of control and definition of the cultural capital of troubadour lyric: patron and poet, cleric and lay. The thirteenth century saw authors and their audiences increasingly asserting the lasting cultural value of vernacular literature in general, and (through its association with troubadour production) Occitan in particular. Accordingly, these texts reflect the poets' engagement with the court audiences for whom they were writing, at the same time as they look ahead to the enduring record of posterity.</p> ER -