5/9/2023 0 Comments The canterbury tales booksJokes, Jests, Pranks, and Play in the Cook’s Tale Wages, Work, Wealth, and Economic Inequality in the Reeve’s Tale Protest, Complaint, and Uprising in the Miller’s Tale Sisterhood and Brotherhood in the Knight’s Tale The General Prologue: Cultural Crossings, Collaborations, and Conflicts New readers may wish to start with our User’s Guide for ideas about how to read, use, and get the most out of this resource.Įditors’ Acknowledgments List of Chapters and Topics Essay Chapters To return to this page you can click on the title at the top of each page. In the future, more material will be added to this project: teaching resources, reader contributions, and new essay chapters that consider tales from additional viewpoints and in relation to different topics.Ī site menu is located at the bottom of every page for easy navigation. Essay chapters explore each of the tales in relation to an engaging topic of broad general interest, while reference chapters provide key context and tools for understanding the Canterbury Tales and its time period. There are two kinds of material available here. The chapters have been created and edited by professional scholars of Chaucer, and all material is released open access and free of charge for classroom, scholarly, and personal use. The Open Access Companion to the Canterbury Tales (OACCT) is a volume of introductory chapters for first-time, university-level readers of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales. Welcome to the Open Access Companion to the Canterbury Tales
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