Monday, May 1, 2017

20 - GEOFFREY CHAUCER and his CANTERBURY TALES













The medieval narrative poem
In the medieval narrative poem, there is a narrator, a story, a setting, the description of characters, the purposes of entertainment and instruction and linked with the views of the society of that time. The most famous is Chaucer’s works.


Geoffrey Chaucer (ca. 1340-1400)
The father of English literature
Chaucer is considered the father of English literature. His London dialect became the standard English and then the basis of Modern English. He travelled a lot between 1368 and 1378. In Italy he became interested in Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio. His works can be divided into three periods: the French, the Italian and the English.
-The French period includes poems modeled on French romances. He wrote “The Boke of the Duchesse” and “The Romaunt of the Rose”.
-The Italian period includes more complex poems, for example “The Parlement of Foules”, The House of Fame” and “Troylus and Criseyde”.
-The English period illustrates realism and includes his masterpiece “Canterbury Tales” (1387).
Canterbury Tales (ca. 1387)
The plot
It is the spring and thirty people from different social classes, also Chaucer, go on a pilgrimage to Thomas Becket’s shrine in Canterbury. They meet ad the Tabard Inn in London and the host suggests that each pilgrim tell two stories while going to Canterbury and two coming back.
The structure
The work is uncompleted and it consists of a General Prologue, where the characters are introduced, and twenty-four tales, which have a prologue with the main theme of tale. The inn represents worldly pleasures while the destination, Canterbury, is holy, making the journey an allegory of course of human life.
Realism and allegory
Chaucer used rhyming couplet of iambic pentameters. Realism is the most distinct characteristic of the work, but the pilgrimage is a metaphor for life. We are all pilgrims on the way to the heavenly city and every journey reflect the basic pattern of existence.
Chaucer narrator
The tales are narrated by the pilgrims but the reporting pilgrim is Chaucer. He ironically describes what he sees and thinks.
Characters
Chaucer wanted to illustrate English society of that time, for example, the feudal society, members of the clergy and the middle classes. He does not portray the aristocracy or peasants because they did not go on pilgrimages. Chaucer does not follow the social hierarchy of that time and mixes female and male characters.
The new element which exists in “Canterbury Tales” is individualization. The character exists because he has reactions and is in movement. He is the antithesis of the conventional medieval character. Chaucer does not give them names but refers to them by their profession and illustrates the individual’s view of the world.

Summary
“Canterbury Tales” talks about a pilgrimage to Thomas Beckett’s Shrine with thirty pilgrims from different social classes. During the voyage to and from the shrine these pilgrims have to tell four stories. But the work was unfinished. (It only has 24 tales.)  “Canterbury Tales” has a General Prologue that introduces the characters. The twenty-four stories have a prologue and followed by an epilogue. Canterbury is the symbol of the celestial city and the end of life. The journey is the allegory of human life.
Chaucer uses rhyming couplets made up of iambic pentameters (10 syllable lines with 5 stresses). Realism is the most distinctive feature of the “Canterbury Tales”, but he also uses conventions of exaggeration, caricature and grotesque.
The tales are narrated by the different pilgrims but reported by Chaucer himself. He ironically talks about how he sees society.
The characters of the Canterbury Tales belong to the clergy and the middle class (also women) to render the pilgrimage realistic. (Because the noble and the peasants did not go on pilgrimages). Chaucer describes the clothes and personal qualities of all the characters. Every character is a dynamic individual which breaks medieval conventions.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

REVIEW for TEST 8th April 2017

The Literature questions on your next test will be based on:

1) The Norman conquest and King William I
2) Reign of Henry II and the most important aspects of his time
3) The Magna Carta and the first Parliament
4) The Black Death
5) Abstract made concrete
6) Medival Drama

19 - THE ENGLISH BALLAD

Read about the history of the ballad, watch video and for a class project prepare a video on the ballad "Lord Randall"

















THE MEDIEVAL BALLAD:  "Lord Randall"


Watch video and then prepare a video on "Lord Randall":





The medieval ballad
The ballad is composed of four-line stanzas. There is repetition, no moral aim, rapid flashes, mixture of dialogue and narration with real and supernatural characters. The main themes are: the supernatural, war, love and family tragedies.
The most famous medieval ballad is by an anonymous author called “Edward”. It talks about a man who kills his father and wants to exile to sea. His mother asks him what he will do with his property and he answers her with a curse sending her to hell.
Medieval ballads were orally transmitted through the ages. They are short, anonymous narrative poems or songs set to music and they would change from country to country. They are simple in form and language, made up of quatrains with a repeated refrain in order to be easily remembered.
Ballads usually tell a particular story of some tragic event (a murder or death) and includes supernatural elements. Some are based on well-known legendary figures (like Robin Hood) or real historical events.

Summary - Lord Randal - Anonymous
Lord Randal is an anonymous medieval ballad based on Scottish traditions and it began to be diffused in the Middle Ages. It is said to have analogues in German and Italian. It was set to music because it was meant to be sung rather than read and also to increase its poetic quality. It is simple in language and structure.
It is made up of 10 quatrains with a rhyme scheme abab. It is an equally-divided, direct question-and-answer dialogue between a mother and her son. The setting is Lord Randal’s home. It is divided into two parts.
The first part contains the first 5 stanzas and it is about a mother who asks her son where he has been and what he has done. He answers that he has been in the greenwood to meet his true-love. Through this first part, there is the repeated refrain in the last part of the first three lines and the whole fourth line.
In the second part, there is a turning point in the 6th stanza, in which the mother discovers that her son has been poisoned by his true-love. The second part is a sort of will in which the mother asks her son what he will leave to her, his sister, his brother and his true-love. He answers he will leave his mother 24 cattle; he will leave his sister silver and gold; he will leave his brother his lands; and finally, he will leave his true-love hell and fire. In this part, there is the repeated refrain in the last part of the first three lines and the whole fourth line.
 The most important aspect is not the death of Lord Randal, but his tragic story with the magical and mysterious atmosphere surrounding his pending death.