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Alle Thyng Hath Tyme recreates medieval people's experience of
time: as continuous and discontinuous, linear and cyclical,
embracing Creation and Judgement, shrinking to 'atoms' or
'droplets' and extending to the silent spaces of eternity. They
might measure time by natural phenomena such as sunrise and sunset,
the motion of the stars or the progress of the seasons, even as the
late medieval invention of the mechanical clock was making
time-reckoning more precise. Negotiating these mixed and competing
systems, medieval people gained a nuanced and expansive sense of
time that rewards attention today.
Geoffrey Chaucer wrote at a turning point in the history of
timekeeping, but many of his poems demonstrate a greater interest
in the moral dimension of time than in the mechanics of the
medieval clock. Chaucer and the Ethics of Time examines Chaucer's
sensitivity to the insecurity of human experience amid the temporal
circumstances of change and time-passage, as well as strategies for
ethicising historical vision in several of his major works. While
wasting time was sometimes viewed as a sin in the late Middle Ages,
Chaucer resists conventional moral dichotomies and explores a
complex and challenging relationship between the interior sense of
time and the external pressures of linearism and cyclicality.
Chaucer's diverse philosophical ideas about time unfold through the
reciprocity between form and discourse, thus encouraging a new look
at not only the characters' ruminations on time in the tradition of
St Augustine and Boethius, but also manifold narrative sequences
and structures, including anachronism.
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