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Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales

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Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales Synopsis

Literary authors, especially those with other occupations, must come to grips with the question of why they should write at all, when the world urges them to devote their time and energy to other pursuits. They must reach, at the very least, a provisional conclusion regarding the relation between the uncertain value of their literary efforts and the more immediate values of their non-authorial social identities. Geoffrey Chaucer, with his several middle-strata identities, grappled with this question in a remarkably searching, complex manner. In this book, Robert J. Meyer-Lee examines the multiform, dynamic meditation on the relation between literary value and social identity that Chaucer stitched into the heart of The Canterbury Tales. He traces the unfolding of this meditation through what he shows to be the tightly linked performances of Clerk, Merchant, Franklin and Squire, offering the first full-scale reading of this sequence.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781108485661
Publication date:
Author: Robert J Agnes Scott College, Decatur MeyerLee
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 296 pages
Series: Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature
Genres: Literary studies: ancient, classical and medieval
Anthologies: general
History and Archaeology
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers