The Merchant's Tale Critics Quotes Flashcards

1
Q

Quote about authority?

A

‘The whole notion of authority seems to be parodied in this poem concerned with unsteady fortune and false reputation’ - Peter Ackroyd

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2
Q

Quote about London?

A

‘London had become the vortex for mercantile activity’ - Peter Ackroyd

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3
Q

Quote about marriage?

A

‘Mock - encomium of marriage’ - Pearsall

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4
Q

Quote about voice?

A

‘The voice of the mal - marie’ - Pearsall

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5
Q

Marriage as a purchase?

A

‘January shops for his bride’ - Stephanie Tolliver

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6
Q

The diverse nature of the text?

A

‘heterogeneity’ - Ackroyd

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7
Q

Qualities of Chaucer?

A

‘a contemporary ironist and satirist’ - Ackroyd

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8
Q

How nationality is presented?

A

‘smiling emblem of Englishness’ - Ackroyd

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9
Q

What Chaucer leaves behind?

A

‘invisible man who leaves only the breath of good humour behind’ - Ackroyd

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10
Q

The two worlds that Chaucer was on the cusp of?

A

‘He was poised between the courtly poet […] and the self conscious literary artist’ - Ackroyd

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11
Q

How is Chaucer’s perspective weaved into the tale?

A

‘he chooses to hide behind his words and allows his personality to be dissolved within them, he shifts the blame’ - Ackroyd

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12
Q

How the tale acts as a burlesque?

A

‘a ludicrous parody of courtly love’ - Sheila Innes

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13
Q

What could Chaucer not maintain?

A

‘he could not maintain a high style when his instinctive comedy kept breaking through’ - Ackroyd

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14
Q

Where was Chaucer?

A

‘Chaucer was at the centre of events at a time of huge instability eg - the election of the two rival popes in the election of 1378’ - Ackroyd

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15
Q

How does Chaucer make the tale more real?

A

‘By placing himself within the narrative, however, Chaucer renders the poem more real and more credible’ - Ackroyd

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16
Q

May is in a subservient position to Januarie?

A

‘his willing sex slave’ - John Hathaway

17
Q

What is Januarie a victim of?

A

‘Januarie has become a victim of his own desires’ - John Hathaway

18
Q

What type of story?

A

‘Modern black comedy’ - Pearsall

19
Q

What the affair is based on?

A

‘Their sordid little liaison is based on lust’ - Sheila Innes

20
Q

What it mocks?

A

‘Mocks users of authority’ - Marion Turner

21
Q

What Januarie deserves?

A

‘Januarie is a joke and deserves our derision’ - Tina Davidson

22
Q

The inevitable victory?

A

‘Chaucer shows the inevitability of youth’s victory over age’ - Tina Davidson

23
Q

What is May like?

A

‘feisty and opportunist May’ - Tina Davidson

24
Q

How the merchant speaks?

A

‘Misogynistic voice of the merchant’ - Bunting

25
Q

Disgust for Januarie?

A

‘Chaucer creates a comic repulsion of Januarie’ - Bunting

26
Q

Januarie + sex?

A

‘An old bachelor luxuriating in lechery’ - Meally