Book contents
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Chaucer as Context
- Part II Books, Discourse and Traditions
- Part III Humans, the World and Beyond
- Part IV Culture, Learning and Disciplines
- Part V Political and Social Contexts
- Chapter 34 Dissent and Orthodoxy
- Chapter 35 The Church, Religion and Culture
- Chapter 36 England at Home and Abroad
- Chapter 37 Chaucer’s Borders
- Chapter 38 Rank and Social Orders
- Chapter 39 Chivalry
- Chapter 40 Chaucer and the Polity
- Chapter 41 The Economy
- Chapter 42 Towns, Villages and the Land
- Chapter 43 London’s Chaucer
- Chapter 44 Everyday Life
- Chapter 45 Household and Home
- Chapter 46 Marriage
- Chapter 47 Dress
- Part VI Chaucer Traditions
- Further Reading
- Index
Chapter 40 - Chaucer and the Polity
from Part V - Political and Social Contexts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 June 2019
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Chaucer as Context
- Part II Books, Discourse and Traditions
- Part III Humans, the World and Beyond
- Part IV Culture, Learning and Disciplines
- Part V Political and Social Contexts
- Chapter 34 Dissent and Orthodoxy
- Chapter 35 The Church, Religion and Culture
- Chapter 36 England at Home and Abroad
- Chapter 37 Chaucer’s Borders
- Chapter 38 Rank and Social Orders
- Chapter 39 Chivalry
- Chapter 40 Chaucer and the Polity
- Chapter 41 The Economy
- Chapter 42 Towns, Villages and the Land
- Chapter 43 London’s Chaucer
- Chapter 44 Everyday Life
- Chapter 45 Household and Home
- Chapter 46 Marriage
- Chapter 47 Dress
- Part VI Chaucer Traditions
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
Geoffrey Chaucer lived and wrote his poetry during a period of unprecedented political instability in late medieval England. Parliamentary crises, baronial rebellion, popular revolt, disastrous foreign war, weak government, authoritarian rule and, finally, outright deposition made the years between c.1370 and c.1400 both momentous and dangerous times to witness. Chaucer was not immune to these events and his career as a servant of the crown can be seen to have suffered. Yet, political commentary – overt or indirect – is curiously absent from his work. Scholars have traditionally explained this in terms of his keen and calculated sense of self-preservation, but I suggest that Chaucer was displaying an ambiguous and detached political stance that was commonplace amongst his contemporaries. Scholarly attention on the polarised nature of the late fourteenth-century polity ignores the fact that most people looked on the political conflicts of these years with deep anxiety, mixed with a determination to remain steadfastly neutral. In this, Chaucer – the man and his work – was wholly representative of his age.
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- Geoffrey Chaucer in Context , pp. 337 - 345Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019