ENGL 321A -- Autumn Quarter 2010

CHAUCER (Chaucer) Vaughan TTh 9:30-11:20 13357

This course will introduce you to a range of Chaucer’s works, focusing particularly on the Troilus and Criseyde and selections from The Canterbury Tales. We will begin, however, with a couple of his shorter, earlier texts (Book of the Duchess and Parliament of Fowls) and will take up the Legend of Good Women after the Troilus
The aims of the course will be to develop our competence in the reading and understanding Chaucer’s Middle English so that we can appreciate the variety and liveliness of his poetry. To help inform the latter, we will look at some of the sources he drew from (and altered) for his narratives; consider a variety of critical approaches to his works; and examine aspects of medieval culture which may illuminate his complex social and artistic sensibilities.

My classroom preference is for discussion, but in its absence (or in attempts to stimulate it) I will resort to (more or less informal) lecturing.

Requirements for the course will include – in addition to attendance and participation in class discussions – weekly response papers, some translation exercises and quizzes, a few longer (3-5, 5-8 pp.) critical papers, and a final exam.

Recommended:

Bisson, Lillian M. Chaucer and the Late Medieval World. New York: Macmillan, 2000. ISBN: 978-0-312-22466-0,

Texts:

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