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Chaucer and his contemporaries and forebears

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Chaucer and his contemporaries and forebears Dante: 1265-1321 Boccaccio: 1313-1375 Petrarch: 1304-1374, Chaucer went to Italy at least twice, knew Italian, and read ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chaucer and his contemporaries and forebears


1
Chaucer and his contemporaries and forebears
  • Dante 1265-1321
  • Boccaccio 1313-1375
  • Petrarch 1304-1374,
  • Chaucer went to Italy at least twice, knew
    Italian, and read Dante, Boccaccio, and
    Petrarchs lyric poetry
  • Gawain-poet wrote 1370-90
  • Chaucer 1340-1400
  • follows continental more than English models

2
Chaucer vs. the Gawain-poet
  • Chaucer
  • follows Italian model
  • rhyming verse
  • iambic pentameter
  • frame tale
  • see derivations from
  • Dantes pilgrimage
  • Boccaccios tales
  • establishes English as a literary language
    throughout Europe
  • Gawain-poet
  • follows English model
  • alliterative verse
  • romance epic
  • see derivations from
  • Marie de France
  • Beowulf
  • Song of Roland
  • looks to imitate best of past English literature
    no European audience

3
Chaucers Marriage Tales ask big questions
  • What do women/men really want?
  • What is the best balance of power in marriage?
  • What should bring people together?
  • physical attraction
  • courtly love conventions
  • admiration for the others talents and abilities
  • natal rank

4
The Nuns Priests Tale
  • Similarities between Chanticleer and the Priest
    himself
  • both only males in female-run households
  • both rely on the authority of the written word
  • Contrast between language of the tale and its
    subject matter
  • language of learning and of courtly love
  • for Petes sake, theyre just chickens!
  • What insights into marriage do we gain?

5
G S in Nuns Priests Tale
  • Gentility
  • Does gentility reside in the language Chanticleer
    and Pertelote use towards one another?
  • Does gentility reside in physical surroundings of
    wealth, beauty?
  • Sovereignty
  • Chanticleer rules the roost
  • Source of his power
  • wit and cunning to outwit fox
  • narrowness of world he inhabits
  • ease of impressing Pertelote

6
The Wife of Baths Tale
  • Romance tale of a knights adventure
  • Knights sin of rape failure to understand what
    women want and to obey women
  • Since rape seen here as a sin against women, the
    women of the court punish it.
  • Knight shows himself redeemable because he spends
    a year trying to learn about women and what they
    want.
  • Tale suggests that any sin can be forgiven

7
Wife of Baths Mini Sermon
  • Preaches against
  • idea that social class determines virtue
  • upper class people not necessarily better
  • despising poverty
  • despising age
  • elevating book learning above actual experience
  • misogyny
  • Old womens bargain
  • gives the knight two choices
  • old, ugly wife who will be sexually faithful
  • young, beautiful wife who may be adulterous
  • knight declines to choose, putting his happiness
    in her hands
  • she rewards him for understanding that women want
    the power

8
Gentility Sovereignty in Wife of Bath
  • Gentility
  • what is gentility?
  • who ought to be genteel?
  • from whence does it come?
  • Sovereignty
  • who ought to exercise sovereignty?
  • who is actually exercising sovereignty?
  • from whence does this power to rule come?
  • Fairy Wife both acts with gentility and exercises
    sovereignty.

9
G S in The Clerks Tale
  • What is the source of gentility?
  • God rather than ancestral birth
  • Who is genteel?
  • Griselda always, Walter from time to time
  • Who exercises sovereignty in the marriage?
  • Walter always, despite his lack of gentility
  • Who most successfully exercises sovereignty over
    the people of Saluzza?
  • Griselda, who is wiser than Walter

10
G S in The Merchants Tale
  • Who acts with gentility?
  • Not January, whos an old lecher
  • Not May, who is an eager adultress
  • Not Damian, who is a bad Squire
  • Not Pluto, who is eager to catch May in adultery
  • Who has sovereignty in marriage?
  • May, because her youth and sexual beauty make
    January believe her lies

11
G S in The Franklins Tale
  • Who has sovereignty in this marriage?
  • Ostensibly Dorigen, because she is to be his
    courtly lover and his wife
  • Actually Arveragus because Dorigen forces him to
    make the difficult decisions.
  • Who behaves with gentility?
  • Gentility is a commodity which moves about
  • Gentility is detected in actions, not birth
  • The magician is the most genteel because he asks
    nothing in return for his learning

12
The Millers Tale
  • Fabliau a short tale in rhyming couplets that
    must be humorous.
  • 2nd tale told on pilgrimage follows a very long,
    highly-exalted and refined courtly love romance
    about a two men/one woman triangle solved by
    older, wiser ruler.
  • The miller disrupts social hierarchy of tale
    telling by insisting on telling his love story
    as a response to the knights courtly love tale.

13
Two triangles in Millers tale
lust
  • Allison
  • Control and Lust triangles among John, Nicholas,
    Alison, and Absalom
  • all three men lust after and try to control
    Allison's sexuality
  • Nicholas controls John by getting him to believe
    in the flood
  • Nicholas tries to control Absolom by shaming him

control
John
Nicholas
Absolom
All would-be controllers punished
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