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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
111

Chaucer's <i>Knights's tale</i> and the <i>Teseida</i> of Boccaccio

Schladen, G. Fredric January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
112

Chaucer the Love Poet: A Study in Historical Criticism

Treilhard, John 09 1900 (has links)
<p> This thesis is an historically based inquiry into the aesthetic function and moral significance of the themes of marriage, fornication, and adultery in Chaucer's poetry about sexual love. Its first aim is to construct a philosophic and historical framework within which to study Chaucer as a love poet and thereby to help dispel the common but fallacious idea that Chaucer's poetic compositions on the subject of love are archetypally and thematically similar to those of the romantic poets of the nineteenth-century. Chaucer's attitude toward love is interpreted as a composite product of the influences of Ovid, St. Augustine, and the Christian Church of the Middle Ages and is shown to be morally incompatible with the idea, popular in the romantic literature of another era, that the world is well lost for love. </p> <p> The first chapter of the thesis is mainly devoted to an investigation of the salient differences between Chaucer's conception of love, which is in essence abstract moral, and impersonal, and the romantic conception, which tends to be emotional, amoral, and highly subjective. This chapter describes the intellectual background of the distinctively medieval traditions of cosmological love, married love, and Ovidian love and attempts to interpret the influence of these traditions on the mind and art of Chaucer. </p> <p> After the first chapter, the focus of discussion becomes much narrower, and descriptive treatment of the history of ideas gives way to close analysis of specific cruxes in love poems like Troilus and Criseyde, the Knight's Tale, and the Parliament of Fowls. These cruxes, which include the problematic function of Chaucer's various apostrophes and invocations to Venus, and the complex moral relationship of Venus to Nature,are examined for their relevance to the question of how Chaucer actually views erotic passion in his great love poetry. The conclusion reached in the second chapter is that the various cruxes treated here can all be resolved by showing that Chaucer consistently subscribes to Augustinian doctrines of nature, grace, and sexual morality. </p> <p> The third and last chapter of the thesis departs from the conceptual approach to love taken in the previous two in that it adopts a more formalistic and aesthetically orientated mode of criticism. However, this chapter, like the preceding one, concentrates on the elucidation of cruxes and supports its generalizations about Chaucer's artistry through close analysis and attention to poetic detail. Chapter 3 deals solely with Troilus and Criseyde, analyzing the concept of "love as an art" to which the poem repeatedly alludes; interpreting dynamics of response in the poem's audience; and discussing the metaphoric association of verbal prevarication with amorous enslavement in the behaviour of Troilus, Criseyde, and Pandarus. The general conclusion of this chapter, as of the others, is that Chaucer was unquestionably a man of his time -- an orthodox member of the Church and a firm follower of the teachings of St. Augustine in matters of art as in ethics. </p> / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
113

Love, marriage and salvation in Chaucer's Book of the duchess and Parlement of foules

Kooper, Erik. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht, 1985. / "Stellingen" slip inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. 274-287) and indexes.
114

Medieval English domestic life and amusements in the works of Chaucer

Whitmore, Mary Ernestine, January 1937 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1937. / Bibliography: p. 262-274.
115

Love, marriage and salvation in Chaucer's Book of the duchess and Parlement of foules

Kooper, Erik. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht, 1985. / "Stellingen" slip inserted. Includes bibliographical references (p. 274-287) and indexes.
116

Medieval English domestic life and amusements in the works of Chaucer

Whitmore, Mary Ernestine, January 1937 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1937. / Bibliography: p. 262-274.
117

Chaucer and the Rhetorical Limits of Exemplary Literature

Youmans, Karen DeMent 05 1900 (has links)
Though much has been made of Chaucer's saintly characters, relatively little has been made of Chaucer's approach to hagiography. While strictly speaking Chaucer produced only one true saint's life (the Second Nun's Tale), he was repeatedly intrigued and challenged by exemplary literature. The few studies of Chaucer's use of hagiography have tended to claim either his complete orthodoxy as hagiographer, or his outright parody of the genre. My study mediates the orthodoxy/parody split by viewing Chaucer as a serious, but self-conscious, hagiographer, one who experimented with the possibilities of exemplary narrative and explored the rhetorical tensions intrinsic to the genre, namely the tensions between transcendence and imminence, reverence and identification, and epideictic deliberative discourse.
118

The dream as problem-solving method in Chaucer's The book of the Duchess and The parliament of fowls /

Shnider, Marilyn January 1987 (has links)
No description available.
119

The indebtedness of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde to Guido delle Colonne's Historia trojana

Hamilton, George L. January 1903 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1903.
120

The indebtedness of Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde to Guido delle Colonne's Historia trojana

Hamilton, George L. January 1903 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Columbia University, 1903.

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