Module Identifier | ENM1720 | ||
Module Title | CHAUCER & GOWER:POETICS & POLITICS IN THE REIGN OF RICHARDII | ||
Academic Year | 2000/2001 | ||
Co-ordinator | Dr Diane Watt | ||
Semester | Available Semesters 1 And 2 | ||
Pre-Requisite | good honours degree | ||
Co-Requisite | ENM0120 and ENM0220 plus three other MA option modules | ||
Course delivery | Seminars / Tutorials | 5 x 2 hours | |
Assessment | Essay | 1 x 5,000 words | |
Resit assessment | 1 x 5,000 words |
Brief description
This module looks in detail at some of the works of two major late medieval authors, Geoffrey Chaucer and his contemporary, associate, and literary executor, John Gower. It focuses on those works by Chaucer which tend to be overlooked, or to be studied in insufficient depth on undergraduate courses, either because they are generically unfamiliar (the dream poems) or because of their sheer length (the romance, Troilus and Crideyde). It also considers John Gower's neglected long English poem, Confessio Amantis. Reference will, however, be made to other work by these authors, including the Canterbury Tales, Vox Clamantis, and Miroir de l'homme. Both Chaucer and Gower were poets in the court of Richard II, although Gower notoriously swapped his allegiance to the future Henry IV (a political manoeuvre which is reflected in the changes he made to the prologue og the Confessio). The works of both writers examine, if to varying extents, the political, religious, social and ethical systems of their day. Chaucer only occasionally or indirectly alluded to contemporary catastrophes, such as the Black Death. Gower, in contrast, frequently referred to conflicts in the Church, such as the Great Schism or the spread of Lollardy, as well as in the State, and his vivid depiction of the Peasants' Revolt in Vox Clamantis is well known. This module will consider these poems by Chaucer and Gower in their wider historical and ideological contexts.
Reading Lists
Books
Geoffrey Chaucer. (1997)
Chaucer's Dream Poetry. Longman
Geoffrey Chaucer. (1999)
Troilus and Criseyde. Everyman
John Gower. (1981)
Confessio Amantis. University of Toronto Press
David Aers (ed.). (1986)
Medieval Literature. Harvester
David Aers (ed.). (1988)
Community, Gender and Individual Identity. Routledge
Caroline Dinshaw. (1989)
Chaucer's Sexual Poetics. Wisconsin
A.J.Minnis (ed.). (1983)
Gower's Confessio Amantis. Brewer
A.J. Minnis. (1995)
The Oxford Guides to Chaucer: The Shorter Poems. Open University
Peter Nicholson (ed.). (1991)
Gower's Confessio Amantis. Brewer
Kurt Olson. (1992)
John Gower and Structures of Conversion. Brewer
David Wallace. (1999)
Chaucerian Polity. Stanford
Barry Windeatt. (1995)
The Oxford Guides to Chaucer: Troilus and Criseyde. Oxford University Press
Robert Yeager. (1999)
Revisioning Gower. Pegasus