1 / 23

Introduction to Chaucer & The Canterbury Tales

Introduction to Chaucer & The Canterbury Tales. April Marshall ENG 12. Geoffrey Chaucer. Born between 1340-1345 in London, the only son of his family Most of what is known about Chaucer comes to us through public records documenting his professional life, not his personal life

kenley
Download Presentation

Introduction to Chaucer & The Canterbury Tales

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Chaucer&The Canterbury Tales April Marshall ENG 12

  2. Geoffrey Chaucer • Born between 1340-1345 in London, the only son of his family • Most of what is known about Chaucer comes to us through public records documenting his professional life, not his personal life • Chaucer’s father was a land owning wine merchant, but became very wealthy after the Black Death killed off several family members and he inherited their property • Chaucer died sometime around 1400

  3. The Black Death • The Black Death ravaged England during Chaucer’s childhood and remained widespread for years afterward • It wiped out an estimated 30-50% of the population • Created a lot of job opportunity/mobility • The increased wages of the lower classes caused a lot of tension between themselves and the upper classes • This tension fed into what we now recognize as estate satire

  4. Official Titles Held by Chaucer • Esquire of the Royal Court • Comptroller of Customs, Port of London • Soldier in the 100 Years War • Diplomat • Poet • Justice of the Peace • Member of Parliament

  5. Work Experience • Chaucer’s varied work experience granted him the opportunity to work with every level and class of people • This makes him a viable “authority” on Medieval society

  6. The Great Chain of Being • God • Closely followed by the King who ruled by divine right • The Clergy • The Nobility • Peasants • Women

  7. The Three Estates of Men • The Church • The clergy and those who pray • The Nobility • The Knights and those who fought • The Peasantry • Everyone else who produced the food for those who prayed and fought **Men are classified based on what they do for a living as well as what social class they were born into. **At the “top” of the classification was God and the King

  8. The Classification of Women • The Virgin • Never married, chaste • The Wife • Loyal to her husband • The Widow **Note that all three of these feminine estates are defined in terms of women’s sexual relationship with men they currently, no longer, or never did, sleep with.

  9. Satire • Satire (n): A literary manner which blends humor with criticism for the purpose of instruction; often serves as an exaggerated reflection of society

  10. Ingredients of Satire • Humor • Criticism: either general criticism of humanity or human nature or specific criticism of an individual or group. • Some kind of moral voice: simply mocking or criticism is not “satire.”

  11. The Manner of Satire • Ironic • Good natured criticism or bitterly cynical denunciation • More than a little bit prone to references to things society finds taboo or disgusting (bodily functions, sexuality, etc—think Family Guy, South Park, Futurama)

  12. Types of Satire • Parody • a work of literature that mimics another work of literature. • Caricature • An exaggerated portrayal of the weaknesses, frailties, or humorous aspects of an individual or group. • Exaggeration • The portrayal of something trivial or unimportant as very important, usually to emphasize its triviality. • Diminutization • The portrayal of something generally perceived as very important as trivial or unimportant.

  13. Recap – Part 1 • Get out a sheet of paper. Answer the following questions. 1. Why is Chaucer considered an “authority” on medieval society? 2. What are the three major divisions of medieval society? 3. What elements are necessary for effective satire? • Hold on to this, it is due along with Part 2 before you leave.

  14. Chaucer the Writer • Around 1378 he began to develop his vision of an English poetry that would be linguistically accessible to all people • At the time, the official language of the court was French, and that of the church was Latin

  15. Literary Works • The House of Fame (late 1370’s) • The Parliament of Fowls (1380) • Troilus and Creseyde (1382-86) • The Legend of a Good Woman (1385-87) • The Canterbury Tales

  16. This was a 13year project • Begun writing somewhere around 1387 • Most of the tales written between 1392-1395 • Final tales were written write up to his death, from 1396-1400

  17. Context • A series of stories told by individuals representing a cross-section of Medieval society • The group is pilgrimaging from London to the shrine of a Saint in Canterbury • The nature of pilgrimages made it possible for different classes of people to engage socially

  18. The Murder of Thomas Beckett • Friend of King Henry • Named Archbishop as means to control the Church • Murdered by King’s men when he defied King’s authority

  19. Pilgrimage to Canterbury • Beckett was very popular • Quickly made a saint • Many paid homage at his tomb

  20. About The Canterbury Tales … • Written as “estate satire” • Shows each of the three estates and portrays the ideal members of each, as well as the problems with the social structure • Character archetypes: the original pattern/model of which all other things are copied or based; • Publicly exposed corruption • Written in Middle English

  21. Structure and Theme • Over twenty characters traveling together to Canterbury (they meet and leave together from an inn in London) • Inn’s Host challenges them to each tell a story on the way to Canterbury • The best story wins a free dinner • Premise provides a “frame” narrative within which to hear the stories • A prologue precedes each pilgrim’s tale • The tale reveals the most through the character’s chosen subject and treatment of that subject

  22. The Prologue Whan that aprill with his shouressoote The droghte of march hath perced to the roote, And bathed every veyne in swichlicour Of which vertuengendred is the flour; Whanzephirus eek with his sweetebreeth Inspired hath in every holt and heeth Tendrecroppes, and the yongesonne Hath in the ram his halve coursyronne, And smalefowelesmakenmelodye, That slepen al the nyght with open ye (so priketh hem nature in hircorages); Thannelongen folk to goon on pilgrimages, And palmeres for to sekenstraungestrondes, To fernehalwes, kowthe in sondrylondes; And specially from every shires ende Of engelond to caunterbury they wende, The hoolyblisfulmartir for to seke, That hem hath holpenwhan that they were seeke

  23. Recap – Part 2 • Read about one character from the Prologue to The Canterbury Tales • Write down: • Two lines that show character’s Estate • Two lines regarding personality and ethics • Two lines that show what this character looks like • Due TODAY.

More Related