O Cavaleiro Lascivo Official
O Cavaleiro Lascivo deserves recovery from obscurity not as a masterpiece of style but as a crucial document of ideological tension. It stands at the crossroads where the idealized knight gives way to the picaresque rogue, and where courtly love is unmasked as a rhetorical disguise for baser impulses.
This paper contends that the work is a deliberate anti-romance. By replacing the chaste Beatrice with a series of unattainable or deceptive objects of desire, the author deconstructs the very notion of chivalric transcendence. O Cavaleiro Lascivo
The chivalric genre traditionally celebrates amor cortês (courtly love) as a sublimated, ennobling force. The knight’s quest is directed towards spiritual or patriotic ends, with desire for a lady serving as a distant, platonic engine. O Cavaleiro Lascivo inverts this paradigm. The manuscript, attributed speculatively to an anonymous author possibly associated with the Portuguese Segunda Escolástica , presents Dom Fernando de Montemor, a knight whose journeys across the Alentejo and into Castile are catalyzed not by honor or faith, but by an insatiable, often comically disastrous, lust. O Cavaleiro Lascivo deserves recovery from obscurity not
