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The women in Chaucer's worksDraper, Gladys Charline. January 1930 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1930 D71
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Satire as an aspect of Chaucer's social criticismHinds, Cleatus Wilson. January 1956 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1956 H55 / Master of Science
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The Contribution of Scholarship Toward an Understanding and Appreciation of ChaucerCundiff, Virginia Riggs 06 1900 (has links)
In the more than five hundred years since the death of Geoffrey Chaucer, scholars have labored steadfastly to bring to light early criticisms of the poet's works, comments on his life and the customs of his time, and any recorded facts that would contribute in any way toward a better understanding and appreciation of the Canterbury Tales, the poet's life, and the practices of his age. It is the purpose of this study to show this contribution of scholarship; and the writer has relied heavily upon the publications made by T. R. Lounsbury, Caroline Spurgeon, and F. N. Robinson, each of whom has brought together the results of scholarship up to his own time and without whose works this writer's task would have been impossible.
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Chaucer's Devices for Securing Verisimilitude in the Canterbury TalesFelts, Marian Patricia 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis explores Chaucer's devices for securing verisimilitude by various methods in the Canterbury Tales.
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Or telle his tale untrewe : an enquiry into a narrative strategy in the Canterbury TalesChaskalson, Lorraine 13 January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis I discuss aspects of Chaucer's interest in
the relation of Language to the reality which it attempts
to express and the relation of poetic fiction to Christian
truth, and the type of readerly response invited by this
interest. The method employed includes analysis of the
structural development of the narrative frame and, to a
lesser degree, of the entirety of the poem, as well as
discussion of the historical context of the issues under
consideration. These issues are raised in the narrative
frame of the Canterbury Tales and are explored there and
in the individual tales. Their treatment in the narrative
frame is seminal and has provided the major focus of
discussion in what follows.
The narrative frame structure operates dually. In the
diachrony of a first reading of the poem, the frame
world provides a correlative to the actual world in
which man experiences serial time. The realignments
of interpretation necessary because of its changing
claims regarding its own nature — and hence its changing
demands upon its readers — are constant reminders of the
relativity of human judgment and experience in space
and time. "rn the synchrony inevitable in a second or
subsequent Lng, which comprehends the entirety of
the poem at each point in its linear progression, the
reader's position outside the poem's time span of past,
present and future, is analogous to the poet’s in his
original conception of the poem and to God's in relation
to the actual world, which the poem's world imitates.
After a first reading the reader sees that initially
Chaucer's truth claim has enabled him to trust the
authenticity of the account and to regard it not as
poetic invention but as a report of historical truth.
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A Comparison of Chaucer's and Shakespeare's Treatments of the Troilus-Cressida StoryTaylor, Merwin Elvin 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to trace the changes that the story of Troilus-Cressida underwent from age to age and to discover how these came about and how they influenced the form and concept of Chaucer's and Shakespeare's versions of the tale.
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The Man of Law's Tale and its AnaloguesGardner, Eva Delores 08 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines Chaucer's "The Man of Law's Tale" from the "Canterbury Tales," and includes a comparison of the narrative treatment of Chaucer's, Gower's and Trivet's tales of Constance.
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Cultural construction of monsters : The prioress's tale and Song of Roland in analysis and instructionComber, Abigail E. 15 December 2012 (has links)
This project begins by examining current trends in the study of medieval literature, particularly in the area of medieval literature dealing with religious conflict.
Literary review demonstrates that since the late 20th century, critical examination of
medieval literature has been dominated by postcolonial analyses. A dedication to
postcolonial analyses, in effect, has stagnated the field of medieval literary analysis,
particularly in regard to those texts representing religious differences. By focusing
examination on two seminal medieval texts, "The Prioress's Tale" from Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales and the anonymous Song of Roland, this dissertation argues that traditional, postcolonially-inspired analyses are ineffective and inconsequential for modern, post-9/11 audiences, particularly high school students. More substantial and authentic readings are revealed through an application of Jeffrey Jerome Cohen's monster theory, a hypothesis articulated in his essay "Monster Culture (Seven
Theses)" (1996) which, when coupled with conventionally psychoanalytic concepts of
psychical reality and jouissance, reveals that the cultural creation of monsters is unchanging across time and culture. By illustrating this phenomenon through the Christian creation of Jewish and Muslim monsters, through literary examinations of "The Prioress's Tale" and Song of Roland respectively, this project hints that the same cultural forces feeding monster creation in the Middle Ages are alive in our modern age in the
creation of terrorist monsters. The project culminates by arguing that the most effective
way to teach literature of the Middle Ages to post-9/11 students is to focus on literature
ripe with religious conflict in order to tap into affective connections to be found between
modern students and the people of the Middle Ages. This is a bond best forged through a
discussion-driven approach to literary instruction. / A future for medieval studies -- Monster Jews in the creation of the Christian psychical reality -- The necessity of Saracen monsters in the formation of the Christian self -- The future of medieval studies : teaching The prioress's tale and Song of Roland in contemporary high school classrooms. / Department of English
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Code-switching in medieval England : register variety in the literature of Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas Usk and Thomas HoccleveMcNamara, Rebecca Fields January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Rewriting Woman Evil?: Antifeminism and its Hermeneutic Problems in Four Criseida StoriesPark, Yoon-hee 05 1900 (has links)
Since Benoit de Sainte-Maure's creation of the Briseida story, Criseida has evolved as one of the most infamous heroines in European literature, an inconstant femme fatale. This study analyzes four different receptions of the Criseida story with a special emphasis on the antifeminist tradition. An interesting pattern arises from the ways in which four British writers render Criseida: Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Crisevde is a response to the antifeminist tradition of the story (particularly to Giovanni Boccaccio's II Filostrato); Robert Henryson's Testament of Cresseid is a direct response to Chaucer's poem; William Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida aligns itself with the antifeminist tradition, but in a different way; and John Dryden's Troilus and Cressida or Truth Found Too Late is a straight rewriting of Shakespeare's play. These works themselves form an interesting canon within the whole tradition. All four writers are not only readers of the continually evolving story of Criseida but also critics, writers, and literary historians in the Jaussian sense. They critique their predecessors' works, write what they have conceived from the tradition of the story, and reinterpret the old works in that historical context.
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