This lesson contains 18 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
Welcome class V4
Welcome
class V2A
Slide 1 - Slide
Thursday
SO reading exam texts
Bring a laptop to work on your PO after.
Slide 2 - Slide
English Literature
PTA exam in VWO 6 This year: TheMiddle Ages (period 4)
Beowulf
Anglo-Saxon Chronicles
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Robin Hood: SKIP
Canterbury Tales
Slide 3 - Slide
Questions: 1. Do you know where Canterbury is? 2. Do you know what a pilgrimage is?
Slide 4 - Open question
Canterbury Cathedral
Pilgrims' destination from London
Slide 5 - Slide
Slide 6 - Video
Summary
Alquin pages 42-43
Geoffrey Chaucer
The Canterbury Tales
Frame story -> ?
Slide 7 - Slide
Some of the characters that share stories in the Canterbury Tales.
Slide 8 - Slide
Slide 9 - Video
Canterbury Tales
revision
1. Who wrote The Canterbury Tales?
2. Define 'frame story' and how Chaucer used it.
3. Where do the characters meet in the General Prologue? Why do they agree to tell each other stories?
Slide 10 - Slide
Who wrote The Canterbury Tales?
Slide 11 - Open question
Define 'frame story' and explain how Chaucer used it in this work.
Slide 12 - Open question
In the ' General Prologue', the characters meet each other. Where do they meet and why do they agree to tell each other stories?
Slide 13 - Open question
The Knight
Alquin 44
The Miller
Alquin 45-46
Slide 14 - Slide
Slide 15 - Video
The Knight: let's read out loud
QUESTION: The Knight is one of the few pilgrims who provide no personal Prologue. Why do you suppose that is?
The tale of the Knight follows straight on from the General Prologue. Many of the pilgrims use their personal Prologues to pass comment on the tales that precede their own, but there is no tale before the Knight’s. Furthermore, the Knight is presented as an intelligent, but calm and reserved man. He is not the type to talk at length about himself, as some of the others do in their Prologues.
Slide 16 - Slide
The Miller:
fabliau
let's read out loud: p. 45 (description of the miller) & 46 (story by the miller)
Answer the questions on page 46 (1-4): 10 minutes, then we will discuss in class.
Slide 17 - Slide
The Miller: answers
With an ugly warty nose, a big mount and a short, fat body, he cannot be said to be good looking, and his character is therefore likely to be as blemished as his appearance.
Yes. The Miller is not well behaved: he likes to fight, is argumentative and tells dirty stories. He also swindles his customers
a. When her husband is away, he grabs her and tries to kiss her. When she resists, he says he will die if he can’t have her and promises her all kinds of nice things. b. Alison is married to a dozy old man and was interested in Nicholas from the start; there was little conviction in her initial resistance to his advances. She threatens to scream, but doesn’t actually do so.
In the Prologue we are told that the Miller likes to tell dirty tales (‘tavern stories, filthy in the main’). Furthermore, he has red hair, which in the Middle Ages was often seen as a sign of a lecherous character.