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Chaucerian polityChaucerian polity

Chaucerian polity1997

David Wallace

About this book

Chaucer's encounters with the great Trecento authors - Dante, Boccaccio, and Petrarch - facilitate the testing and dismantling of time-honored terms such as medieval, Renaissance, and humanism. The author argues that no magic curtain separated "medieval" London and Westminster from "Renaissance" Florence and Milan; as a result of his Italian journeys, all sites were interlinked for Chaucer as parts of a transnational nexus of capital, cultural, mercantile, and military exchange. In his travels, Chaucer was exposed to the Trecento's most crucial material and ideological conflict, that between a fully developed and highly inclusive associational polity (Florence) and the first, prototypically imperfect, absolutist state of modern times (Lombardy). The author's articulation of "Chaucerian polity" - through analyses of art, architecture, city and country, household space, guild and mercantile cultures, as well as literary texts - thus opens sightlines through the Henrician revolution to the writings of Shakespeare. In the process, this innovative study of Chaucer's poetry and prose is invigorated by an engagement with approaches gleaned from modern Marxist historiography, gender theory, and cultural studies.

Details

First published
1997
OL Work ID
OL3274287W

Subjects

Constitutional history, MedievalDespotism in literatureEnglish Political poetryEnglish poetryHistoryHistory and criticismIn literatureItalian influencesItalyKnowledgeMedieval Constitutional historyMedieval TalesPolitical and social viewsPolitical poetry, EnglishPolitics and literatureTales, MedievalChaucer, geoffrey, -1400English poetry, history and criticism, middle english, 1100-1500

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