Proseminar: Saving Criseyde: Chaucer and Henryson at Troy (Intro)

  • Teaching

    Details

    Faculty Faculty of Humanities
    Domain English
    Code UE-L06.01079
    Languages English
    Type of lesson Proseminar
    Level Bachelor
    Semester SP-2021

    Schedules and rooms

    Summary schedule Wednesday 10:15 - 12:00, Hebdomadaire (Spring semester)

    Teaching

    Teachers
    • Critten Rory
    Description

    In the minds of most modern readers, Chaucer's reputation stands on his vast, unfinished story collection, The Canterbury Tales (1388-1400). By contrast, the poet's late medieval contemporaries and early modern successors appear to have deemed his neatly crafted epic, Troilus and Criseyde (1382-86), to be of equal, if not superior, importance. This course invites students to undertake a close reading of the Troilus, Chaucer's masterwork of love, sex, war, and betrayal, and to think about some of its repercussions in later English literature.

    We will begin with a consideration of the sources of Chaucer's poem, in particular the Filostrato of Giovanni Boccaccio (late 1330s), before proceeding to study the Middle English text of Troilus and Criseyde in detail. Of particular interest will be the tensions caused by Chaucer's attempts to explore Criseyde's infamous betrayal of her lover from Criseyde's own perspective. With a view to fleshing out our enquiry, we will also examine one later response to Chaucer's text: the Testament of Cresseid (before 1492) by the Scottish poet, Robert Henryson.

    Students will write an exam (90 minutes) in the last week of class commenting on a passage from one of the set texts. Passages that might be set for commentary will be advertised as such as we progress through the readings.

    Training objectives
    • To introduce students to Chaucer's epic poem and to some of the sources that he adapted in its writing.
    • To introduce students to the medieval traditions of writing about Troy.
    • To enhance students' reading facility in Middle English. The goal is that students will more easily be able to access Middle English texts in student editions.
    Softskills No
    Off field No
    BeNeFri No
    Mobility No
    UniPop No

    Documents

    Bibliography

    Reading for the course will be posted online (Moodle). A timetable will be announced in week 1.

  • Dates and rooms
    Date Hour Type of lesson Place
    24.02.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    03.03.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    10.03.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    17.03.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    24.03.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    31.03.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    14.04.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    21.04.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    28.04.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    05.05.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    12.05.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    19.05.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    26.05.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
    02.06.2021 10:15 - 12:00 Cours MIS 02, Room 2122
  • Assessments methods

    Séminaire - Outside session

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure
  • Assignment
    Valid for the following curricula:
    English Language and Literature 120
    Version: SA15_BA_ang_V02
    Module One: Foundations

    English Language and Literature 60
    Version: SA15_BA_ang_V01
    Module One: Foundations

    Ens. compl. en Lettres
    Version: ens_compl_lettres

    Lettres [Cours]
    Version: Lettres_v01