Originally published in 1986. This study asks 'What problems confront the narrator of a religious story?' and 'What solutions to those problems are offered by the religious narratives of the Canterbury Tales?' It explores the relationship between commitment to the authority of a story and narrator's need to assert himself over it.
Originally published in 1986. This study asks 'What problems confront the narrator of a religious story?' and 'What solutions to those problems are offered by the religious narratives of the Canterbury Tales?' It explores the relationship between commitment to the authority of a story and narrator's need to assert himself over it.
Preface 1. Introduction Part 1: The Narrator as Translator 2. The Clerk's Tale 3. Saint's Tales: The Prioress's Tale 4. Saints Tales: The Second Nun's Tale 5. Chaucer's Melibee Part 2: Religious Subjects, Literary Interests and the Sense of a Performance 6. The Man of Law's Tale 7. The Monk's Tale 8. The Physician's Tale Part 3: Towards a Conclusion 9. The Pardoner's Tale 10. The Nun's Priest's Tale
Preface 1. Introduction Part 1: The Narrator as Translator 2. The Clerk's Tale 3. Saint's Tales: The Prioress's Tale 4. Saints Tales: The Second Nun's Tale 5. Chaucer's Melibee Part 2: Religious Subjects, Literary Interests and the Sense of a Performance 6. The Man of Law's Tale 7. The Monk's Tale 8. The Physician's Tale Part 3: Towards a Conclusion 9. The Pardoner's Tale 10. The Nun's Priest's Tale
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