On the Female Narrative in The Canterbury Tales from the Perspective of New Historicism

Authors

  • Qiuyi Liu
  • Chi Huang

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.62051/ijsspa.v2n2.38

Keywords:

New Historicism, Female Images, The Canterbury Tales, Chaucer

Abstract

New Historicism emphasizes the interplay between history and text, proposing an interpretation of literary works that focuses on the "textuality of history" and the "historicity of text." This paper, adopting a New Historicist approach, delves into the interpretation of female figures in The Canterbury Tales. Chaucer employs a framework-like structural form, depicting in fragmented textual fashion, whether on a large or small scale, the diverse life situations of women within the medieval context. In the New Historicist perspective , the design of female characters not only literarily reflects history but also facilitates the shaping of historical culture. It reveals the contradictions and harmonies between history and text, accomplishing the interaction between literature and history.

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References

Bakhtin, Mikhail.1984. Rabelais and His World.[M], Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN.(translated by Hélène Iswolsky).

Helen Cooper.1989.Oxford Guides to Chaucer The Canterbury Tales[M].New York:Oxford University Press,119-120, 326.

Joerg O.Fitchte (ed).1987.Chaucer's Frame Tales:the physical and meta-physical[M]. Gunter Narr Verlag Tubingen, 38-44.

Nasrullah Mambrol.2017.12.Stephen Greenblatt and New Historicism[OL].

Yang Jie, 2001. Examining Chaucer's Women's Liberation Thought from the Perspective of Bath Women. Journal of Hunan Agricultural University, (1).

Zhong Fang, 2004. The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, People's Literature Publishing House.

Zhang Jingyuan, 1993. New Historicism and Literary Criticism. Beijing University Press,172-177.

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Published

18-03-2024

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Liu, Q., & Huang, C. (2024). On the Female Narrative in The Canterbury Tales from the Perspective of New Historicism. International Journal of Social Sciences and Public Administration, 2(2), 269-273. https://doi.org/10.62051/ijsspa.v2n2.38