30 Great Myths about Chaucer. Stephanie Trigg

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also childishly enthusiastic about all forms of human endeavor. His poetry is outrageously bawdy and full of fart jokes and he is a profoundly pious religious thinker, while also being guilty of anti‐Semitism. His poetry is utterly imbued with medieval culture, but he is also way ahead of his time in his anticipation of our own concerns. His poetry is some of the greatest in the English language, but is also too difficult to read. Chaucer himself is wise and cynical, but his achievement was limited by medieval ignorance and superstition, just as his sympathetic respect for women was restricted by patriarchal ideologies. He is praised as a genius in his own time and has variously been celebrated as a satirist, a reformer, a lyricist, a pre‐Shakespearean lover of bawdy, a sentimentalist, a religious apologist, a humanist, a feminist, a post‐modernist and a queer theorist.

      And so it goes. Chaucer’s long reception history is a contradictory mess of changing opinions and ideas about the character of the medieval poet, the nature of his poetic achievement and the interpretation of his poetry. These aspects of his history are so interwoven it can be quite difficult to untangle critical readings of his works from ideas about the medieval poet himself. And nor are these debates confined to the past alone.

      We will find with many of these “myths” that they arise from tiny suggestions in the poems or in the life‐records, hints that have generated beliefs and assumptions that have then shaped the traditions of critical interpretation. It is a pattern that is very familiar from the archives of medievalism.

      This poses a distinctive problem for any biographer of Chaucer. They must all negotiate this gap between the lively personalities and narrative voices that populate Chaucer’s fictions and the “real” or “concrete” evidence found in the surviving documents. Many of our “myths” find their origins in these gaps, and the desire to make satisfying imaginative links between Chaucer’s fictions and what we can piece together of his life. For example, in a number of Chaucer’s early poems, the narrator constructs the persona of a young man who is unlucky or unsuccessful in the art of love, or who is suffering an unrequited love. Fueled by the desire to fill in the historical gaps and to tie this narrative voice to the biographical record, early historical critics went to work to discover the identity of Chaucer’s early love, though without ever resolving the issue (see Myth 3).

      Contemporary Chaucerian studies continues to scrutinize the past reception of the medieval poet, and is particularly interested in the way the scribes of his manuscripts and the editors of the early printed texts mediate his works for us in influential ways. Equally, modern criticism is keen to re‐examine the political, social, linguistic and literary contexts in which Chaucer lived and worked; as well as bringing insights and critiques from other fields such as gender studies, queer studies, environmental studies, animal studies and cognitive literary studies. In this book we also engage with some of the striking or influential representations of Chaucer and his characters in the fictions of medievalism, as this has become one of the most popular sites in which people encounter Chaucer today.

      Many lovers

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