Letter of Cupid

E282142

Letter of Cupid is a Middle English poetic work, adapted from Christine de Pizan, in which Thomas Hoccleve presents a satirical epistle on love and gender relations.

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Label Occurrences
Letter of Cupid canonical 1

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Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Middle English poem
epistle
satirical poem
adaptationType translation and adaptation
addresses male readers
writers of love literature
aimsTo correct abuses in love discourse
reform attitudes toward women
author Thomas Hoccleve
basedOn Epistre au dieu d’Amours
basedOnAuthor Christine de Pizan
circulation manuscript culture
countryOfOrigin England
criticizes anti-feminine literature
misogynistic writers
genre didactic literature
love poetry
satire
hasCharacter Cupid
women wronged by slander
historicalContext debates on women in late medieval Europe
influencedBy Christine de Pizan’s defence of women
language Middle English
literaryForm verse epistle
literaryMovement late medieval English literature
literarySignificance early English adaptation of Christine de Pizan’s pro-woman writing
literaryTradition courtly love tradition
epistolary tradition
mainTheme courtly love conventions
critique of misogyny
defence of women
gender relations
love
meter rhymed verse
narrativeVoice Cupid
originalWorkCountryOfOrigin France
originalWorkLanguage Middle French
period late Middle Ages
perspective pro-feminine
relatedWork Epistre au dieu d’Amours
subjectMatter behaviour of men toward women
conduct of lovers
moral instruction in love
tone didactic
moralizing
satirical
workOfAuthor Thomas Hoccleve

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Thomas Hoccleve notableWork Letter of Cupid