Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale

This essay is a reading of Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale as an anti-clerical satire, following others in the Canterbury Tales like the Friar’s, Summoner’s, and Pardoner’s Tales. Through the Nun’s Priest and Chauntecleer, Chaucer completes his anti-clerical satire by obliquely portraying priestly and...

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Main Author: Lai, Daniel
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50617
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-506172019-12-10T14:36:36Z Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale Lai, Daniel School of Humanities and Social Sciences Walter Philip Wadiak DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English This essay is a reading of Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale as an anti-clerical satire, following others in the Canterbury Tales like the Friar’s, Summoner’s, and Pardoner’s Tales. Through the Nun’s Priest and Chauntecleer, Chaucer completes his anti-clerical satire by obliquely portraying priestly and sexual abuses. Within the larger frame of the “interacting polarities” of experience and auctoritee, Chaucer subversively portrays the representational incongruities of anticlerical satire in an ironic, ostensibly sententious moral allegory, highlighting the “severe contradictions” between the Church’s proclaimed Christian “self-representations” and the practices of its human representatives. Through the undermining of authoritative literary forms, the use of fable, anti-feminism and individualist verisimilitude, Chaucer parodies the authoritative exegetical structures he attacks, to show the hypocritical, self-seeking excesses that result from the unchecked discursive power of contemporary structures of clerical and exegetical authority. In so doing, he constitutes a new, more egalitarian politics of reading. Bachelor of Arts 2012-08-07T07:46:12Z 2012-08-07T07:46:12Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50617 en Nanyang Technological University 31 p. application/msword
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
Lai, Daniel
Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
description This essay is a reading of Chaucer’s Nun’s Priest’s Tale as an anti-clerical satire, following others in the Canterbury Tales like the Friar’s, Summoner’s, and Pardoner’s Tales. Through the Nun’s Priest and Chauntecleer, Chaucer completes his anti-clerical satire by obliquely portraying priestly and sexual abuses. Within the larger frame of the “interacting polarities” of experience and auctoritee, Chaucer subversively portrays the representational incongruities of anticlerical satire in an ironic, ostensibly sententious moral allegory, highlighting the “severe contradictions” between the Church’s proclaimed Christian “self-representations” and the practices of its human representatives. Through the undermining of authoritative literary forms, the use of fable, anti-feminism and individualist verisimilitude, Chaucer parodies the authoritative exegetical structures he attacks, to show the hypocritical, self-seeking excesses that result from the unchecked discursive power of contemporary structures of clerical and exegetical authority. In so doing, he constitutes a new, more egalitarian politics of reading.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Lai, Daniel
format Final Year Project
author Lai, Daniel
author_sort Lai, Daniel
title Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
title_short Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
title_full Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
title_fullStr Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
title_full_unstemmed Silencing the silencers : Chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the Nun’s Priest’s Tale
title_sort silencing the silencers : chaucer’s satire of clerical authority in the nun’s priest’s tale
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50617
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