L305 2071 INGHAM
Chaucer
9:30a-10:45a TR (30) 3 CR.
This course will serve as an introduction to the work of the
fourteenth century English poet, Geoffrey Chaucer. While our primary
objective will be reading and understanding Chaucer’s Canterbury
Tales, we will also examine a few of his other works and a number
of interpretive questions that continue to circulate around the poet
and his work. A notoriously complex and slippery writer, Chaucer’s
own position is often difficult to track: Is Chaucer’s Knight a brave
hero, or a cynical soldier we are meant to critique? Are we meant to
celebrate the Wife of Bath’s ability to use the Bible to her own
ends, or are we to be horrified at what a bad reader she is? Is
Chaucer’s Prioress’s Tale a sign of the poet’s own anti-
Semitism, or does it signal his interest in analyzing the psychology
of racism? Does the Man of Law’s Tale demonize Islam or show
the similarities between Syria and England? As these questions
suggest, the interpretive issues that continue to challenge Chaucer
critics are utterly pertinent to our own time. Despite the
differences in time and language, Chaucer’s concerns and his response
to those concerns have much relevance in our own day. While we will
keep an eye on the particularities of Chaucer’s fourteenth century,
responsible to historical distinctions between then and now, we will
also attend to the commonalities between his concerns and ours,
engaging Chaucer without jettisoning our own personal and critical
interests.
In addition to Chaucer’s texts (in Middle English), the course
includes collateral background and critical material. Attendance is
required. Course requirements include short reading and language
quizzes, two critical essays, a mid-term and a final.