Many of the stories found in the works of Geoffrey Chaucer are adapted from other sources, a common practice amongst Medieval authors. But Chaucer often draws attention to his derivations by explicitly naming a source for the stories he uses. This strategy is employed in different ways. In Troilus and Criseyde, a false source is cited, but in the Clerk's Tale, Chaucer names the actual source of the story. In this thesis, identification and close examination of Chaucer's source materials reveal his changes to the derived texts, and an analysis of the role of the narrator in each case demonstrates the different narrative strategies he employs. Although Chaucer is clearly using different strategies in the two works, both raise questions about ...
The Nun\u27s Priest\u27s Tale is less a tale about the significance of dreams than it is a stateme...
grantor: University of TorontoTaking as its starting point Wittgenstein's dictum "the mean...
Modern narrative theory has provided new ways of analysing stories and a new critical vocabulary for...
Throughout the twentieth century, various Chaucer scholars have worked to achieve the now-consensus ...
This dissertation studies the ways that Chaucer and his French contemporaries, Guillaume de Machaut,...
This dissertation studies the ways that Chaucer and his French contemporaries, Guillaume de Machaut,...
Re-telling Old Stories situates Chaucer within a classical and Italian tradition of intertextuality....
In this project, I explore both the textual and material histories of Chaucer\u27s *Troilus & Crisey...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
A divide exists between those who view the Canterbury Tales as a series of self-contained texts and ...
Models of medieval reading often describe a process that divorces emotion from intellect or that see...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
In Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, the meaning behind Criseyde' s words and silences has be...
I trace Chaucer's increasingly complex use of the Arthurian legend. In his early dream visions, Chau...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 79-99.Introduction -- Chapter One. Cultural and critical cont...
The Nun\u27s Priest\u27s Tale is less a tale about the significance of dreams than it is a stateme...
grantor: University of TorontoTaking as its starting point Wittgenstein's dictum "the mean...
Modern narrative theory has provided new ways of analysing stories and a new critical vocabulary for...
Throughout the twentieth century, various Chaucer scholars have worked to achieve the now-consensus ...
This dissertation studies the ways that Chaucer and his French contemporaries, Guillaume de Machaut,...
This dissertation studies the ways that Chaucer and his French contemporaries, Guillaume de Machaut,...
Re-telling Old Stories situates Chaucer within a classical and Italian tradition of intertextuality....
In this project, I explore both the textual and material histories of Chaucer\u27s *Troilus & Crisey...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
A divide exists between those who view the Canterbury Tales as a series of self-contained texts and ...
Models of medieval reading often describe a process that divorces emotion from intellect or that see...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
In Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, the meaning behind Criseyde' s words and silences has be...
I trace Chaucer's increasingly complex use of the Arthurian legend. In his early dream visions, Chau...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 79-99.Introduction -- Chapter One. Cultural and critical cont...
The Nun\u27s Priest\u27s Tale is less a tale about the significance of dreams than it is a stateme...
grantor: University of TorontoTaking as its starting point Wittgenstein's dictum "the mean...
Modern narrative theory has provided new ways of analysing stories and a new critical vocabulary for...