The Critics and the Prioress
Antisemitism, Criticism, and Chaucer's Prioress's Tale
Hannah Johnson author Heather Blurton author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:The University of Michigan Press
Published:19th Apr '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Of all the Canterbury Tales, Geoffrey Chaucer’s Prioress’s Tale, in which a young schoolboy is murdered by Jews for singing a song in praise of the Virgin Mary, poses a problem to contemporary readers because of the antisemitism of the story it tells. Both the Tale’s antisemitism and its “Chaucerianism”—its fitness or aptness as part of the Chaucerian canon—are significant topics of reflection for modern readers, who worry about the Tale’s ethical implications as well as Chaucer’s own implications. Over the past fifty years, scholars have asked: Is the antisemitism in the tale that of the Prioress? Or of Chaucer the pilgrim? Or of Chaucer the author? Or, indeed, whether one ought to discuss antisemitism in the Prioress’s Tale at all, considering the potential anachronism of expecting medieval texts to conform to contemporary ideologies.
The Critics and the Prioress responds to a critical stalemate between the demands of ethics and the entailments of methodology. The book addresses key moments in criticism of the Prioress’s Tale—particularly those that stage an encounter between historicism and ethics—in order to interrogate these critical impasses while suggesting new modes for future encounters. It is an effort to identify, engage, and reframe some significant—and perennially repeated—arguments staked out in this criticism, such as the roles of gender, aesthetics, source studies, and the appropriate relationship between ethics and historicism.
The Critics and the Prioress will be an essential resource for Chaucer scholars researching as well as teaching the Prioress’s Tale. Scholars and students of Middle English literature and medieval culture more generally will also be interested in this book’s rigorous analysis of contemporary scholarly approaches to expressions of antisemitism in Chaucer’s England.
“Blurton and Johnson have produced a work of scholarship so shrewd, humane, and conceptually alert that it will surely gain a large audience in the field. In their hands, the review of research becomes a canny and creative thing. They trace the history of the criticism, and isolate for scrutiny its premises and preoccupations; but they also, most hopefully, show that this history has on the large scale a rationality not always visible in its details.”
—Steven Justice, University of California, Berkeley
ISBN: 9780472130344
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
228 pages