Abstract This article examines the representation of the forests as ideological spaces in The Jeaste of Sir Gawain (c. 1450) and The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle (c. 1450) through an analysis of female characters’ actions within these settings. By exploring the adventures, challenges, combats, and encounters experienced by Arthurian knights and women in the forests, this article argues that the romance forest is constructed in alignment with the principles of medieval chivalric ideology. Thus, it functions as a crucial site for the knight’s quest and moral development. However, despite the forest’s association with the knight’s chivalric pursuit, it is also inhabited by women whose roles are often subordinated to the knight’s narrative. These female figures are usually positioned as ancillary characters whose presence reinforces the chivalric ethos by facilitating the knight’s journey towards self-realization and perfection. Consequently, it is argued that the forests of these romances operate as gendered and ideological spaces that privilege the knight’s chivalric identity and self-aggrandisement while they marginalize and trivialize women’s actions.
Azime Pekşen Yakar (Wed,) studied this question.