Geoffrey Chaucer was a religious poet-diplomat in 14th century England and as such was in a unique position at court. He used his work, The Canterbury Tales, to critique certain church officials and their practices, which he believed had become more for monetary gain than for the service of the people
A brief commentary prepared by Miriamne Ara Krummel, PhD, Associate Professor, English, on the follo...
This thesis is a discussion of how Geoffrey Chaucer uses four of his Canterbury Tales to show how th...
The city of Canterbury is prominently known for its historical attributes on the religious front of ...
Geoffrey Chaucer was a religious poet-diplomat in 14th century England and as such was in a unique p...
Chaucer is a great humanist who gently unmasks the roguery, foolishness and corruption of the mediev...
Includes bibliographical references.When one considers The Canterbury Tales, which is generally acce...
The Man of Law, The Wife of Bath, and The Pardoner all have their identities mired in medieval cleri...
A Study of the English Church in the Fourteenth Century reveals a dichotomy: on the one hand we find...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
This paper analyzes Geoffrey Chaucer’s Pardoner in The Canterbury Tales as a vehicle used by Chaucer...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
This study reads some Middle English poetry in terms of crusading, and it argues that the most promi...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
This essay is a reading of Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale as an anti-clerical satire, following other...
This paper was grouped with two others in a panel called “Pedagogies, some perverse.” To better refl...
A brief commentary prepared by Miriamne Ara Krummel, PhD, Associate Professor, English, on the follo...
This thesis is a discussion of how Geoffrey Chaucer uses four of his Canterbury Tales to show how th...
The city of Canterbury is prominently known for its historical attributes on the religious front of ...
Geoffrey Chaucer was a religious poet-diplomat in 14th century England and as such was in a unique p...
Chaucer is a great humanist who gently unmasks the roguery, foolishness and corruption of the mediev...
Includes bibliographical references.When one considers The Canterbury Tales, which is generally acce...
The Man of Law, The Wife of Bath, and The Pardoner all have their identities mired in medieval cleri...
A Study of the English Church in the Fourteenth Century reveals a dichotomy: on the one hand we find...
It is thought that Chaucer began composing The Canterbury Tales as a dramatic whole around 1387. Thi...
This paper analyzes Geoffrey Chaucer’s Pardoner in The Canterbury Tales as a vehicle used by Chaucer...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
This study reads some Middle English poetry in terms of crusading, and it argues that the most promi...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
This essay is a reading of Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale as an anti-clerical satire, following other...
This paper was grouped with two others in a panel called “Pedagogies, some perverse.” To better refl...
A brief commentary prepared by Miriamne Ara Krummel, PhD, Associate Professor, English, on the follo...
This thesis is a discussion of how Geoffrey Chaucer uses four of his Canterbury Tales to show how th...
The city of Canterbury is prominently known for its historical attributes on the religious front of ...