Unit 13 |
|
English
201:
Masterpieces of Western Literature |
.Unit 13 Reading | Course Reading | Entry Page |
Introduction | Background | .Explication | Questions | Review |
Background:
Bawdiness:
In the general introduction to the medieval period, our text says:
1170 The importance
of the oral folk tradition lies less in directly surviving texts than in
the pervasive influence it exerted upon written literature--as sources,
for example,
of the stories in the Decameron & the Canterbury Tales.
What does this mean? & who can blame you for sometimes thinking professors can't or won't simply say what they mean. Our editor is trying to explain why Boccaccio & Chaucer's work is so bawdy. His explanation is that their work sought to realistically illustrate the lives of common people. Common people are not saints. They gossip about sex & tell dirty jokes. Our editor explains that this level of oral "literature" was not historically recorded, but that Boccaccio & Chaucer, in effect, told such jokes & used such gossip to create their characters.
Realism:
In the introduction to Boccaccio,
our text says:
1775 with its almost
exclusive emphasis on human ingenuity & resourcefulness, [Boccaccio
offers] something genuinely new. Heaven & divine grace play almost
no role in The Decameron.
Women:
The
horns of a dilemma are these. If women are plaster cast copies of
the Virgin Mary, they are worthy of much more than respect. They
are worthy of adoration. But, as Courtly Love argued, what one adores,
one cannot touch. Women were revered as an ideal but ignored or marginalized
in the day-to-day men's world. On the other hand, if women are rendered
as human beings, no better & no worse than men, what magic & charm
& beauty is left in a world rushing toward "the bottom line" of explicit
cash deals? Our introduction simply says, Boccaccio portrayed:
1775 women not
as etherealized ideals but as realistic creatures of flesh & blood
who are driven as
much by desire as men are.
Although the young people who tell
the stories may be elegant & refined; like Chaucer's characters, the
men & women in Boccaccio's stories are mostly competitive, shrewd,
& on the lookout to victimize each other. We laugh at these characters,
but would you like to live among them? Or if we do, aren't we nostalgic
for a better world, for better people?
Click on the next section: Explication
above.