ChaucerHarvester Press, 1986 - 121 pages |
À l'intérieur du livre
Résultats 1-3 sur 10
Page 30
... ruler's ' wille ' [ 1.2986 ] . ) Here the leader and his Parliament determine a foreign policy which includes total control of those whose city they had earlier destroyed , tearing down ' bothe wall and sparre and rafter ' ( 1.990 ) ...
... ruler's ' wille ' [ 1.2986 ] . ) Here the leader and his Parliament determine a foreign policy which includes total control of those whose city they had earlier destroyed , tearing down ' bothe wall and sparre and rafter ' ( 1.990 ) ...
Page 34
... ruler , she renounces all responsibility , moral or religious . The terrible consequences of such subjection are made clear . It actually encourages vicious tyranny and it leads the subject into unambiguously evil actions . Griselda ...
... ruler , she renounces all responsibility , moral or religious . The terrible consequences of such subjection are made clear . It actually encourages vicious tyranny and it leads the subject into unambiguously evil actions . Griselda ...
Page 35
... ruler's authority as derived from the community , the ruler as servant of the community , and the end of monarchy the well - being of human individuals , rather than of corporations or grand platonic abstractions.22 Chaucer's text ...
... ruler's authority as derived from the community , the ruler as servant of the community , and the end of monarchy the well - being of human individuals , rather than of corporations or grand platonic abstractions.22 Chaucer's text ...
Table des matières
Chaucers Representations of Society | 14 |
Chaucers Representations of Religion | 37 |
Chaucers Representations of Marriage | 62 |
Droits d'auteur | |
3 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Expressions et termes fréquents
Absolon Aers Arnold authoritative authority Book Cambridge U.P. Canterbury Canterbury Tales Chapter Chaucer Chaucer's art Chaucer's poetry Chaucer's text Chaucer's writing Church clerical Clerk's Tale contemporary contexts conventional critical culture discourse dominant Dorigen economic Emily evokes exploration female forms Franklin's Tale friar genre glosynge grace House of Fame human ideal ideology imagination interpretation judgement Kegan Paul Knight Knight's Tale Langland late medieval Later Middle Ages literary literature lovers marital sex marriage Medieval English Economy merchant Monk moral Nun's Priest's Tale official organisation orthodox Christian Oxford U.P. Palamon Pardoner Pardoner's Parson's Tale passage perspective Piers Plowman poem poem's poet political practices profit economy readers reading reflection relationship religious represented romance Routledge & Kegan ruler satire shal Shipman's Tale social society Summoner's swich Tale of Melibee Thanne ther Theseus Theseus's thyng traditional Troilus and Criseyde upper-class violence Wife of Bath woman women