Chaucer's preoccupation with love and marriage has been a focus of criticism for more than a century. Here, the love relationships and marriages in six of the Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde, and the Legend of Good Women are reappraised from a fresh direction, using late medieval letter collections and advice literature for women to shed new light on the competing cultures of love and marriage that troubled both Chaucer himself and hiscontemporaries. Beginning with a concise summary of the history of marriage in fourteenth-century England, and making use of recent research in social history, the volume goes on to analyse letter collections and advice books inorder to reconstruct late medieval ideology and practice. Among other elements, the author discusses the flirtatiousness of court culture, the anti-love discourse of advice literature, courtship conventions, rival models of marriage among the bourgeoisie and aristocracy, and the pathos of arranged marriages.
Dr Cathy Hume is currently a visiting scholar at Northwestern University.
Author(s): Cathy Hume
Series: Bristol Studies in Medieval Cultures, 3
Edition: 1
Publisher: D. S. Brewer
Year: 2012
Language: English
Pages: 252
City: Bristol
Frontcover
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 ‘The name of soveraynetee’: The Franklin’s Tale
2 ‘Humble servant to youre worthynesse’: The Clerk’s Tale
3 Domestic Opportunities: The Social Comedy of the Shipman’s Tale
4 Love in confinement in the Merchant’s Tale
5 The Medieval Marriage Market and Human Suffering: The Man of Law’s Tale
6 Chain of Love or Prison Fetters? The Knight’s Tale and Emily’s Marriage
7 ‘Nyce fare’: The Courtly Culture of Love in Troilus and Criseyde
8 Beyond the Bounds of Good Behaviour: Imprudent Fidelity in the Legend of Good Women
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
Backcover