Affiliation:
1. Aberystwyth University, Penglais Campus, Aberystwyth, Wales
Abstract
Abstract
The reward for the best storyteller among the pilgrims in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales is a meal: “soper at oure aller cost” (I 799). This narrative detail gives tangible form to the traditional association between literary creation and arable farming. Chaucer's diverse pilgrims and the tales they tell are woven together by the language, tropes, and contemporary concerns relating to anxieties about the production, supply, distribution, purity, and quality of food. Focusing on the figure of the Plowman, the apocryphal Plowman's Tale, and the Reeve's Tale, and reading them in the context of sociopolitical and religious dissent (the 1381 Peasants' Revolt and Lollardy respectively), this essay traces the ways in which the Canterbury Tales engages with the politics and poetics of food supply in the final decades of the fourteenth century.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory
Cited by
25 articles.
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1. Chaucer’s Pardoner: food, drink, and the discourse of desecration;Studia Neophilologica;2023-05-21
2. Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales as a Postpandemic Text;Pandemics and Epidemics in Cultural Representation;2022
3. Cambridge Companions to Literature;The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food;2020-03-19
4. Index;The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food;2020-03-19
5. Selected Guide to Further Reading;The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food;2020-03-19