Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to The Canterbury Tales
- The Cambridge Companion to The Canterbury Tales
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- 1 The Form of the Canterbury Tales
- 2 Manuscripts, Scribes, Circulation
- 3 The General Prologue
- 4 The Knight’s Tale and the Estrangements of Form
- 5 The Miller’s Tale and the Art of Solaas
- 6 The Man of Law’s Tale
- 7 The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale
- 8 The Friar’s Tale and TheSummoner’s Tale in Word and Deed
- 9 Griselda and the Problem of the Human in The Clerk’s Tale
- 10 The Franklin’s Symptomatic Sursanure
- 11 The Pardoner and His Tale
- 12 The Prioress’s Tale
- 13 The Nun’s Priest’s Tale
- 14 Moral Chaucer
- 15 Chaucer’s Sense of an Ending
- 16 Postscript: How to Talk about Chaucer with Your Friends and Colleagues
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
8 - The Friar’s Tale and The Summoner’s Tale in Word and Deed
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 August 2020
- The Cambridge Companion to The Canterbury Tales
- The Cambridge Companion to The Canterbury Tales
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Preface
- Note on the Text
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- 1 The Form of the Canterbury Tales
- 2 Manuscripts, Scribes, Circulation
- 3 The General Prologue
- 4 The Knight’s Tale and the Estrangements of Form
- 5 The Miller’s Tale and the Art of Solaas
- 6 The Man of Law’s Tale
- 7 The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale
- 8 The Friar’s Tale and TheSummoner’s Tale in Word and Deed
- 9 Griselda and the Problem of the Human in The Clerk’s Tale
- 10 The Franklin’s Symptomatic Sursanure
- 11 The Pardoner and His Tale
- 12 The Prioress’s Tale
- 13 The Nun’s Priest’s Tale
- 14 Moral Chaucer
- 15 Chaucer’s Sense of an Ending
- 16 Postscript: How to Talk about Chaucer with Your Friends and Colleagues
- Further Reading
- Index
- Cambridge Companions to …
Summary
Often overshadowed by the other works of the “Marriage Group,” the tales told by the Friar and the Summoner powerfully engage with several of the social issues that Chaucer interrogates within the Canterbury Tales, including medieval anti-clericalism and anti-fraternalism, institutional corruption, the fourteenth-century gift economy, and even demonology. Most important, however, The Friar’s Tale and The Summoner’s Tale indulge in a ribald exploration of the tangled relationships among entente, utterance, and performance - a web of social and linguistic concerns that Chaucer invokes as early as the General Prologue and regularly reasserts throughout the Tales. While it pays heed to the vocational rivalry that motivates the Friar and Summoner, this chapter also considers their tales in relation to the broader linguistic problematic of Chaucer’s project. The Friar’s caustic exploration of the performative efficacy of the spoken word and the Summoner’s cynical implication that speech is, quite literally, a lot of hot air offer a gloss of one of the Canterbury Tales’ most enduring puzzles, the ongoing struggle to reconcile the word with the deed and the ethical stakes of doing so.
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- The Cambridge Companion to The Canterbury Tales , pp. 121 - 135Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020