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Chaucer, Ethics, and Gender (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,473
Discovery Miles 14 730
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Chaucer, Ethics, and Gender (Paperback)
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Total price: R1,493
Discovery Miles: 14 930
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This book makes a vigorous reassessment of the moral dimension in
Chaucer's writings. For the Middle Ages, the study of human
behaviour generally signified the study of the morality of
attitudes, choices, and actions. Moreover, moral analysis was not
gender neutral: it presupposed that certain virtues and certain
failings were largely gender-specific. Alcuin Blamires - mainly
concentrating on The Canterbury Tales - discloses how Chaucer
adapts the composite inherited traditions of moral literature to
shape the significance and the gender implications of his
narratives. Chaucer, Ethics, and Gender is therefore not a
theorization of ethical reading but a discussion of Chaucer's
engagement with the literature of practical ethical advice. Working
with the commonplace primary sources of the period, Blamires
demonstrates that Stoic ideals, somewhat uncomfortably absorbed
within medieval Christian moral codes as Chaucer realized,
penetrate the poet's constructions of how women and men behave in
matters (for instance) of friendship and anger, sexuality and
chastity, protest and sufferance, generosity and greed, credulity
and foresight.
The book will be absorbing for all serious readers or teachers of
Chaucer because it is packed with commanding new insights. It
offers illuminating explanations concerning topics that have often
eluded critics in the past: the flood-forecast in The Miller's
Tale, for example; or the status of emotion and equanimity in The
Franklin's Tale; the "unethical" sexual trading in The Shipman's
Tale; the contemporary moral force of a widow's curse in The
Friar's Tale; and the quizzical moral link between The Wife of
Bath's Prologue and Tale. There is even a newhypothesis about the
conceptual design of The Canterbury Tales as a whole. Deeply
informed and historically alert, this is a book that engages its
reader in the vital role played by ethical assumptions (with their
attendant gender assumptions) in Chaucer's major poetry.
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