Geoffrey ChaucerHumanities Press International, 1991 - 222 pages |
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Page 13
... Fame ' that Dido claims entrance to Chaucer's House of Fame ; she is the suffering human subject who must bear to be represented by the accounts of others - accounts that are circulated not only in oral form ( ' songe ' ) but also in ...
... Fame ' that Dido claims entrance to Chaucer's House of Fame ; she is the suffering human subject who must bear to be represented by the accounts of others - accounts that are circulated not only in oral form ( ' songe ' ) but also in ...
Page 15
... House of Fame , as critics have long agreed . In Book II , Chaucer comically protests a faith in bookish authority so extreme that it can entirely dispense with experiential proof : to the Eagle's offer to show him the stellar ...
... House of Fame , as critics have long agreed . In Book II , Chaucer comically protests a faith in bookish authority so extreme that it can entirely dispense with experiential proof : to the Eagle's offer to show him the stellar ...
Page 35
... House of Fame ; the good - humoured irony becomes even more apparent as he goes on to claim for the writer the poetic equivalent of a licence to print money . Than mote we to bokes that we fynde , Thurgh whiche that olde thinges ben in ...
... House of Fame ; the good - humoured irony becomes even more apparent as he goes on to claim for the writer the poetic equivalent of a licence to print money . Than mote we to bokes that we fynde , Thurgh whiche that olde thinges ben in ...
Table des matières
AntiFeminism | 48 |
The Surrender of Maistrye | 87 |
Suffering Woman Suffering God | 128 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Abelard Aeneas Allas anti-feminism anti-feminist Arveragus Arveragus's Bath's Prologue betrayal Canterbury Tales Chaucer Clerk's Tale Constance Constance's Criseyde's Dido Dido's dissuasio doon Dorigen emotional experience female feminine feminist Franklin's Tale Griselda hath Heloise Heloise's Heroides herte hire Historia Calamitatum housbonde human husband irony Jankin's Jean de Meun Jehan Jerome knight Knight's Tale lady lament Law's Tale Legend literary lover maistrye male marital marriage masculine Matheolus's medieval Melibee Merchant's Tale myght narrative Ovid Pamphilus Pandarus passage patience pitee pity Pluto poem Proserpina question quod rape reader realise relationship represents response role Romance routhe seith sexual seyde seyn shal shows speech stereotypes story submission suffering surrender swich thanne Theophrastus ther Theseus Theseus's thou thow thyng tion traditional trans trewe Troilus and Criseyde Troilus's tyme victim Walter whan Wife of Bath's Wife's wolde woman womanly women wyves