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"Chaucerian Aesthetics" examines "The Canterbury Tale" and
"Troilus and Criseyde" from both medieval and post-Kantian vantage
points. These sometimes congruent, sometimes divergent perspectives
illuminate both the immediate pleasure of encountering beauty and
its haunting promise of intelligibility. Although aesthetic
reflection has sometimes seemed out of sync with modern approaches
to mind and language, Knapp defends its value in general and
demonstrates its importance for the analysis of Chaucer's narrative
art. Focusing on language games, persons, women, humor, and
community, this book ponders what makes art beautiful.
Time-Bound Words argues that changes in English society and the
English language are woven together, often in surprising ways, and
investigates this claim by following eleven words from Chaucer's
time to Shakespeare's. Middle English words like corage, estat,
thrift , and virtu come to serve the logic of new social discourses
by 1611. Language from Chaucer, Wyclif, More, Spenser, Shakespeare,
Jonson and others is examined both as current and emerging usage,
and as verbal play that accomplishes cultural work.
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