Historical English Literature: The Canterbury Tales
Recap
What do you remember about last week's session:
Epic tale of Beowulf
Old English
Runes/ scribes
Literature
Alliteration
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volgende
Slide 1: Tekstslide
LiteratureHBOStudiejaar 2
In deze les zitten 34 slides, met interactieve quizzen, tekstslides en 1 video.
Onderdelen in deze les
Recap
What do you remember about last week's session:
Epic tale of Beowulf
Old English
Runes/ scribes
Literature
Alliteration
Slide 1 - Tekstslide
Lit Session 2
Page 101-58 reader
The Later Middle ages
Middle English
period 1100-1500
Geoffrey Chaucer's
Canyterbury tales: e.g. The miller's tale
Slide 2 - Tekstslide
When does the story of Beowulf take place?
A
ca 750 AD
B
100 BC
C
1250 AD
D
pre-history
Slide 3 - Quizvraag
Who does Beowulf not fight?
A
Grendal
B
Grendal's Mother
C
The king of the Danes
D
A dragon
Slide 4 - Quizvraag
After Beowulf defeats Grendel’s mother, how long does he rule over the Geats?
A
10 years
B
20 years
C
8 years
D
50 years
Slide 5 - Quizvraag
Beowulf contains both pagan and Christian elements, can you name a few?
Slide 6 - Tekstslide
Middle English Period
Late Middle Ages 1066 - 1500
1066: William the Conqueror - Norman Conquest
Tapestry of Bayeux: portraying the battle of Hastings
Changes in language and culture:
Political: feudalism
Cultural: from saxon (germanic) to norman (french)
Language: French dominant until late 14thC
Slide 7 - Tekstslide
Slide 8 - Tekstslide
Middle English Literature
Slide 9 - Woordweb
Middle English literature
During 13th & 14th centuries English was gaining ground as a language
Also led to the development of distinct English literature (nationalism);
Allegory = extended metaphor; has underlying political, religious or political significance. Characters are often personifications of vices and virtues
e.g. Piers Plowman (1360 – 1387), William Langland
Fabliau = short, funny, often bawdy tale in low style. Often about cuckolded husbands and foolish peasants
Slide 10 - Tekstslide
Middle English Period
Major classic texts:
Romance > Arthurian Legends (from 12thC to Mallory’s Morte D’Arthur: 1470)
Sir Gawain and the Greene Knight (knight is challenged to meet courtly ideals)
Popular Ballads (sir Patrick Spense; Robyn Hode)
Moral(ity) plays: Everyman
William Langland: Piers Plowman
Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (14thC)
Slide 11 - Tekstslide
Geoffrey Chaucer
(1340-1400)
Key author
known primarily for The Canterbury Tales (1387-1399)
framework narrative about a group of pilgrims who travel to Canterbury
Slide 12 - Tekstslide
The Canterbury Tales
written in Middle English by Geoffrey Chaucer between 1387 and 1400
a collection of 24 stories
tales are part of a story-telling contest by a group of pilgrims as they travel together from London to Canterbury
Slide 13 - Tekstslide
Why were these pilgrims travelling to Canterbury? What were they going to visit?
Slide 14 - Tekstslide
Canterbury Cathedral
Became popular pilgrimage site after the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket in 1170
Slide 15 - Tekstslide
The Wife of Bath
You've read The Wife of Bath's Tale and have answered the questions in the syllabus.
In groups, discuss your answers.
Slide 16 - Tekstslide
Slide 17 - Video
In The Wife's Tale, what does the Knight do to merit punishment?
A
lies to the king
B
rapes a girl
C
steals from the Queen
D
cheats on his wife
Slide 18 - Quizvraag
What is the Knight's original sentence by King Arthur?
A
beheading
B
banishment
C
imprisonment
D
he has to apologize
Slide 19 - Quizvraag
Who decided that the Knight should have a different sentence?
A
His victim
B
The knights
C
The Queen
D
An old hag
Slide 20 - Quizvraag
Why does he have trouble in his quest?
A
because every answer he receives is different
B
because he is unable to speak to women
C
because the women all lie to him
Slide 21 - Quizvraag
What quest is the Knight sent on?
A
He needs to find a wife
B
He needs to slay a dragon
C
He needs to find out what women most desire
D
He needs to find a magic sword
Slide 22 - Quizvraag
In exchange for giving the knight the correct answer & saving his life, what does the hag want?
A
money
B
marriage
C
a child
D
nothing
Slide 23 - Quizvraag
So what do women really want according to this story?
Slide 24 - Tekstslide
What does the old woman tell the knight she will be if she remains old and ugly?
A
good and faithful
B
rich
C
very wise
Slide 25 - Quizvraag
How do you interpret the final resolution?
Is she giving in to male dominance? Is he giving her the upper hand?
Slide 26 - Tekstslide
According to you, is this tale feminist or anti-feminist?
A
Feminist
B
anti-feminist
Slide 27 - Quizvraag
The miller's Tale
Slide 28 - Tekstslide
Slide 29 - Tekstslide
Slide 30 - Tekstslide
Slide 31 - Tekstslide
Slide 32 - Tekstslide
Slide 33 - Tekstslide
Do you feel you have a sufficient grasp of the material discussed today?