Chaucer's Agents: Cause and Representation in Chaucerian NarrativeChaucer's Agents draws on medieval and modern theories of agency to provide fresh readings of the major Chaucerian texts. Collectively, those readings aim to illuminate Chaucer's responses to two greta problems of agency: the degree to which human beings and forces qualify as agents, and the equal reference of "agent" to initiators and instruments. Each chapter surveys medieval conceptions of the agency in question-- allegorical Realities, intelligent animals, pagan gods, women, and the author--and then follows that kind of agent through representative Chaucerian texts. Readers have long recognized Chaucer's interest in questions of causation; Van Dyke shows that his answers to those questions shape, even constitute, his narratives. --Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 49
Page 15
... of her earlier marital debates.13 Leicester knows of course that to ask how the Wife of Bath got ac- cess to the literary sources of her prologue is no more legitimate than it would be to wonder how Troilus came upon 1 / INTRODUCTION 15.
... of her earlier marital debates.13 Leicester knows of course that to ask how the Wife of Bath got ac- cess to the literary sources of her prologue is no more legitimate than it would be to wonder how Troilus came upon 1 / INTRODUCTION 15.
Page 16
... literary studies but more broadly . Agency and agent appear in hundreds of recent publications on ( for instance ) anthropology , archaeology , computer science , economics , history , law , linguistics , 16 CHAUCER'S AGENTS.
... literary studies but more broadly . Agency and agent appear in hundreds of recent publications on ( for instance ) anthropology , archaeology , computer science , economics , history , law , linguistics , 16 CHAUCER'S AGENTS.
Page 17
... literary scholars , that thing is normally a human being . A book titled Agency and Structure can be assumed , correctly , to concern the relationship between individual people and social structures . " Chaucerians who call for ...
... literary scholars , that thing is normally a human being . A book titled Agency and Structure can be assumed , correctly , to concern the relationship between individual people and social structures . " Chaucerians who call for ...
Page 18
... literary scholars use agency to mean something like " the power to execute one's own intentions . " In his frequently cited 1971 essay " Agency , " Donald Davidson acknowl- edges that agents may produce results contrary to their ...
... literary scholars use agency to mean something like " the power to execute one's own intentions . " In his frequently cited 1971 essay " Agency , " Donald Davidson acknowl- edges that agents may produce results contrary to their ...
Page 19
... literary scholars imply that agents initiate acts ( or try to ) : Robert R. Edwards , Leicester , and others identify agency with " desire and intention . " Even the bureaucratic agency is regarded more as an initiator than as ...
... literary scholars imply that agents initiate acts ( or try to ) : Robert R. Edwards , Leicester , and others identify agency with " desire and intention . " Even the bureaucratic agency is regarded more as an initiator than as ...
Contents
13 | |
Dreaming the Real Chaucer Does Allegory | 40 |
Beyond Canacees Ring Animal Agency in Three Canterbury Tales | 73 |
He that alle thing may bynde The Agency of Chaucers Pagan Gods | 108 |
Goode women maydenes and wyves Exemplary Agency and Its Discontents | 148 |
That Am Nat I The Wife of Bath Criseyde and the Possibility of Subjective Agency | 180 |
Other editions - View all
Chaucer's Agents: Cause and Representation in Chaucerian Narrative Carolynn Van Dyke No preview available - 2006 |
Common terms and phrases
acknowledges acts agent allegory animals auctor authorial agency authorship beast birds Boccaccio Boethian Book Cambridge Canterbury Canterbury Tales Cecilia characters Chau Chaucer Review Chaucerian Chauntecleer Christian citing Clerk's Tale Criseyde's critics crow Custance Delany discourse divine Donaldson Dorigen dream edited female fictional Franklin's Tale Gender Geoffrey Chaucer Griselda herte House of Fame human Ibid individual instance irony Jill Mann Knight's Tale L. D. Benson Law's Tale Leicester literary Literature Manciple's Mann Mars Medieval Melibee Middle Ages Minnis moral narrative narrator narrator's natural notes Nun's Priest's Tale Ockham Oxford Guides pagan gods Pandarus Parliament of Fowls particular Patterson Pearsall persona personification philosophers pilgrims poem poet Poetics Poetry Prioress Prologue readers representation represents rhetorical Riverside Chaucer Romance sexual shal similarly SNPro social Squire's Tale story suggests tale's textual thyng tion Troilus and Criseyde Troilus's University Press Venus vision voice WBPro Wife of Bath Windeatt women writes
References to this book
Singing the New Song: Literacy and Liturgy in Late Medieval England Katherine Zieman No preview available - 2008 |