Chaucer and the Energy of Creation: The Design and Organization of the Canterbury Tales

Chaucer and the Energy of Creation: The Design and Organization of the Canterbury Tales

by Edward I. Condren
Chaucer and the Energy of Creation: The Design and Organization of the Canterbury Tales

Chaucer and the Energy of Creation: The Design and Organization of the Canterbury Tales

by Edward I. Condren

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Overview

"A remarkably accessible account of individual tales, tellers, and the poem-as-a-whole, with a voice of such authority and appreciative command that it could be recommended to any undergraduate or graduate student. . . . To anyone who doubted the survival of practical criticism in the current sea of theory, this book will come as a tonic."—Dolores Warwick Frese, University of Notre Dame

Arguing from the evidence of extant manuscripts, Edward Condren describes the overall design of the Canterbury Tales—one of the most enigmatic puzzles in Chaucer studies—as a structural parallel to Dante’s Commedia. Through close analysis of the text, he shows how individual tales support this design and how the design itself confers rich meaning, in some instances investing with new complexity tales that otherwise have been little appreciated.
Dividing its focus between the underlying unity of the poem as a whole and the discrete tales that create this unity, Chaucer and the Energy of Creation advances several startling interpretations—the progressive dislocation and displacement in Fragment I; a new claim for the unity of the "marriage group"; the survey of the poet’s literary career in Fragment VII; and the merging of Chaucer’s professional and spiritual lives at the end of the poem. Overall, Condren shows that the famous pilgrimage to Canterbury has three sections corresponding to Dante’s Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. He maintains that Chaucer’s poem depicts human nature deriving its energy from the tension of equal and opposite forces and then resolving this tension in one of three ways, as illustrated in the poem’s three large sections. By converting Dante’s vertical, cosmic structure to a horizontal, earthly plane, Condren argues, Chaucer is able to portray human beings, rather than souls as in Dante, struggling between disintegration and transcencence.
Chaucer and the Energy of Creation celebrates the Canterbury Tales as a work of literary art executed according to a unified plan. It is expressed in a voice that will remind readers of Donaldson’s close readings and unfolds with methods and arguments that belong to a tradition from Kittredge to the finest of the moderns.

Edward I. Condren is professor of English at the University of California, Los Angeles. His articles have appeared in the Chaucer Review, Viator, Philological Quarterly, Studies in English Literature, and elsewhere.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780813018560
Publisher: University Press of Florida
Publication date: 06/30/1999
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.69(d)
Lexile: 1490L (what's this?)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsviii
1.The Energy of Creation1
2.The Organization of the Canterbury Tales12
Part I
3.The First Fragment25
4.The Imperfect Knight and His Perfect Tale28
5.The Miller, the Reeve, the Cook52
6.The Man of Law's Tale62
Part II
7.Stability and the Language of Agreements73
8.Two Weavers from Bath82
9.Two Witty Glosses: Friar's Tale and Summoner's Tale113
10.Two Kinds of Agreement: Before God and Before Man124
11.Two Versions of Magic: Squire's Tale and Franklin's Tale148
Part III
12.From Flesh to Spirit169
13.Fragment VI: The Physician's Tale, The Pardoner, His Prologue, and His Tale178
14.Fragment VII: The Craft of Letters203
15.Fragments IX and X: Poetic Fruition/Spiritual Apotheosis241
AppendixThe Chaucer Portrait at the University of California, Los Angeles253
Notes257
Works Cited275
Index289
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