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Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales (Bloom's Modern Critical Interpretations) PDF

295 Pages·2008·1.49 MB·English
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Bloom’s Modern Critical Interpretations Alice’s Adventures in Frankenstein Persuasion Wonderland The Grapes of Wrath Portnoy’s Complaint The Adventures of Great Expectations A Portrait of the Artist Huckleberry Finn The Great Gatsby as a Young Man All Quiet on the Hamlet Pride and Prejudice Western Front The Handmaid’s Tale Ragtime As You Like It Heart of Darkness The Red Badge of The Ballad of the Sad I Know Why the Courage Café Caged Bird Sings The Rime of the Beloved The Iliad Ancient Mariner Beowulf Jane Eyre The Rubáiyát of Omar Billy Budd, Benito The Joy Luck Club Khayyám Cereno, Bartleby the The Jungle The Scarlet Letter Scrivener, and Other Long Day’s Journey A Separate Peace Tales Into Night Silas Marner Black Boy Lord of the Flies Song of Myself The Bluest Eye The Lord of the Rings Song of Solomon Cat on a Hot Tin Love in the Time of The Stranger Roof Cholera A Streetcar Named The Catcher in the Macbeth Desire Rye The Man Without Sula Catch-22 Qualities The Sun Also Rises Cat’s Cradle The Metamorphosis The Tale of Genji The Color Purple Miss Lonelyhearts A Tale of Two Cities Crime and Moby-Dick The Tales of Poe Punishment Night The Tempest The Crucible 1984 Their Eyes Were Darkness at Noon The Odyssey Watching God Death of a Salesman Oedipus Rex Things Fall Apart The Death of Artemio The Old Man and the To Kill a Mockingbird Cruz Sea Ulysses The Divine Comedy On the Road Waiting for Godot Don Quixote One Flew Over the The Waste Land Dubliners Cuckoo’s Nest White Noise Emerson’s Essays One Hundred Years of Wuthering Heights Emma Solitude Young Goodman Fahrenheit 451 The Pardoner’s Tale Brown Bloom’s Modern Critical Interpretations Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales New Edition Edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom Sterling Professor of the Humanities Yale University Editorial Consultant, Holly A. Crocker Bloom’s Modern Critical Interpretations: Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales—New Edition Copyright ©2008 by Infobase Publishing Introduction ©2008 by Harold Bloom All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher. For more information contact: Bloom’s Literary Criticism An imprint of Infobase Publishing 132 West 31st Street New York NY 10001 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales / edited with an introduction by Harold Bloom—New ed. p. cm. — (Bloom’s modern criticial interpretations) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-7910-9618-5 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Chaucer, Geoffrey, d. 1400. Canterbury Tales. 2. Tales, Medieval—History and criticism. 3. Christian pilgrims and pilgrimages in literature. I. Bloom, Harold. II. Title: Canterbury tales. PR1874.G456 2008 821’.1—dc22 2007049158 Bloom’s Literary Criticism books are available at special discounts when purchased in bulk quantities for businesses, associations, institutions, or sales promotions. Please call our Special Sales Department in New York at (212) 967-8800 or (800) 322-8755. You can find Bloom’s Literary Criticism on the World Wide Web at http://www.chelseahouse.com. Cover design by Ben Peterson Printed in the United States of America Bang BCL 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on acid-free paper. All links and Web addresses were checked and verified to be correct at the time of pub- lication. Because of the dynamic nature of the Web, some addresses and links may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. Contents Editor’s Note vii Introduction 1 Harold Bloom “As just as is a squyre”: The Politics of “Lewed Translacion” in Chaucer’s Summoner’s Tale 3 Fiona Somerset The Opening of Chaucer’s General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales: A Diptych 23 Colin Wilcockson Chaucer’s Parson and the Specter of Wycliffism 31 Katherine Little “The Living Witnesses of Our Redemption”: Martyrdom and Imitation in Chaucer’s Prioress’s Tale 59 Lee Patterson The “Elvyssh” Power of Constance: Christian Feminism in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Man of Law’s Tale 109 Elizabeth Robertson “Mark him wel for he is on of þo”: Training the “Lewed” Gaze to Discern Hypocrisy 143 Fiona Somerset vi Contents “Of Goddes pryvetee nor of his wyf”: Confusion of Orifices in Chaucer’s Miller’s Tale 163 Louise M. Bishop Changing Chaucer 179 Richard Firth Green The Creation of Consent in the Physician’s Tale 203 Lianna Farber Thirteen Ways of Listening to a Fart: Noise in Chaucer’s Summoner’s Tale 217 Peter W. Travis Symkyn’s Place in the Reeve’s Tale 239 William F. Woods Chronology 265 Contributors 269 Bibliography 271 Acknowledgments 275 Index 277 Editor’s Note My brief, but pungent, Introduction brings together Chaucer and Shakespeare, partly by the prompting of that great master of paradox, Gilbert Keith Chesterton. Famous for its opening, the General Prologue is investigated for its numerology by Colin Wilcockson, while Katherine Little discovers in Chaucer’s Parson a shadow of Wycliff’s Lollard Heresy. The learned Lee Patterson discourses ably in Chaucer’s anti-Semitic Prioress Tale, which is held to be a masterpiece of authorial self-restraint, while Elizabeth Robertson enables herself to analyze “Christian Feminism” in the Man of Law’s Tale. Fiona Somerset praises Chaucer’s slyness in employing lewdness to expose hypocrisy, while Louise M. Bishop charmingly explores the delightful confusion between female orifices in the Miller’s Tale. In Richard Firth Green’s witty reading, the Canon Yeoman’s Tale demonstrates Chaucer’s dismissal of alchemy, after which Lianna Farber fashionably finds in the voice of the virtuous Virginia, in the Physician’s Tale, a political as well as a personal aspect. The Summoner’s Tale’s version of the Dantesque “making a trumpet of the breech” is ingeniously expounded by Peter W. Travis, after which William F. Woods studies psychic emptiness in the Reeve’s Tale. vii HAROLD BLOOM Introduction Geoffrey Chaucer’s The CanTerbury Tales (1386) E xcept for Shakespeare, whom he profoundly influenced, Chaucer is the major literary artist in the English language. My favorite Chaucer critic still remains G. K. Chesterton, who wrote many years before the critics included in this volume. Chesterton—poet, storyteller, ironist—was himself a Chaucerian pilgrim. His wonderful book Chaucer (1932) is popular and simple, as he intended, and seems to me to embody the spirit of Chaucer. I like it that there are more than fifty references to Shakespeare in the book, because only Shakespeare (in English) deserves to set the measure for Chaucer. Chesterton, a fierce Catholic polemicist, had a tendency to baptize Chaucer’s imagination but I think (contra Chesterton) that Shakespeare learned from Chaucer how to achieve a purely secular kind of transcen- dence. Chesterton liked to think of Chaucer as a continuator of Dante, but Chaucer’s true original was Boccaccio. Chaucer the Pilgrim is a sly parody of Dante the Pilgrim, an irony that Chesterton did not want to see. Yet Chesterton wonderfully observed that “the Chaucerian irony is sometimes so large that it is too large to be seen.” Chaucer’s mastery of psychological realism was grounded upon his ironic sense that the chivalric ideal was a lost illusion, to be affirmed only in the mode of nostalgia. Everything that existed represented a falling away from a more generous vision, though Chaucer, profoundly comic in his genius, declined to become a master of regret. Chesterton’s own fictions and poems move me because he had learned from Chaucer to long for this abandoned field of romance. Acutely paradoxical as he always was, Chesterton may have missed Chaucer’s irony when it is directed against precisely such longing. The 1

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