Title: Chaucerovy Čechy
Variant title:
- Chaucer's Bohemia
Source document: Bohemica litteraria. 2016, vol. 19, iss. 1, pp. 7-28
Extent
7-28
-
ISSN1213-2144 (print)2336-4394 (online)
Stable URL (handle): https://hdl.handle.net/11222.digilib/136157
Type: Article
Language
License: Not specified license
Notice: These citations are automatically created and might not follow citation rules properly.
Abstract(s)
Geoffrey Chaucer has traditionally been seen as indebted to the great male writers of medieval Europe: Dante, Boccaccio, Petrarch and Guillaume de Machaut. However, less has been written about the European woman who was Queen of England and his possible patron: Anne of Bohemia, daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV and wife of Richard II. Although Chaucer explicitly compliments the Queen in his work, most scholars have not engaged seriously with the question of her role in Chaucer's oeuvre. Alfred Thomas's article shows that Anne came from a long line of highly educated and multilingual royal women and he rereads some of the famous stories from the Canterbury Tales alongside contemporaneous works in Czech, German, and Latin – languages with which the Queen was familiar. Thomas argues that even if she did not literally commission any of his works, Chaucer seems to have been writing for Anne as an imagined reader and this awareness shaped the way he wrote and what he chose to write.
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[3] GOWER, John, 1980. Confessio Amantis. Ed. Russell A. PECK. University of Toronto Press, Toronto
[4] CHAUCER, Geoffrey, 1956. Canterburské povídky. Přel. František VRBA. 2. vyd. Naše vojsko, Praha
[5] CHAUCER, Geoffrey, 1987. The Riverside Chaucer. Ed. Larry D. BENSON. 3. vyd. Houghton Mifflin, Boston
[6] CHAUCER, Geoffrey, 2001. Troilus a Kriseida. Přel. Zdeněk HRON. BB art, Praha
[7] CHAUCER, Geoffrey, 2017. Ptačí sněm. Přel. Filip KRAJNÍK. Argo, Praha
[8] WESTMINSTER CHRONICLE, 1982. The Westminster Chronicle 1381–1394. Ed. a přel. L. C. HECTOR a Barbara F. HARVEY. Clarendon Press, Oxford
[9] BENNETT, Michael J., 1999. Richard II and the Revolution of 1399. Sutton, Stroud
[10] BENSON, Larry D., 1982. "The Occasion of the Parliament of Fowls", in The Wisdom of Poetry. Essays in Early English Literature in Honor of Morton W. Bloomfield. Ed. Larry D. BENSON a Siegfried WENZEL. Medieval Institute Publications, Kalamazoo, s. 123–144
[11] BINSKI, Paul, 1995. Westminster Abbey and the Plantagenets. Kingship and the Representation of Power 1200–1440. Yale University Press, New Haven
[12] BINSKI, Paul, 1996. Medieval Death. Ritual and Representation. Cornell University Press, London
[13] BINSKI, Paul, 1997. "The Liber Regalis: Its Date and European Context", in The Regal Image of Richard II and the Wilton Diptych. Ed. Dillian GORDON, Lisa MONNIS a Caroline ELAM. Harvey Miller, London, s. 233–246
[14] BOWERS, John, 2001. The Politics of Pearl. Courtly Poetry in the Age of Richard II. D. S. Brewer, Cambridge
[15] BROWN, Peter, 2013. "Towards a Bohemian Reading of Troilus and Criseyde", in Reading Chaucer: Selected Essays. Peter Lang, Oxford, s. 57–84
[16] DELANY, Sheila, 1994. The Naked Text. Chaucer's Legend of Good Women. University of California Press, Berkeley van DUSSEN, Michael
[17] DELANY, Sheila, 2012. From England to Bohemia. Heresy and Communication in the Later Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
[18] ELLIOTT, Dyan, 1993. Spiritual Marriage. Sexual Abstinence in Medieval Wedlock. Princeton University Press, Princeton
[19] FRIED, Johannes, 2015. The Middle Ages. Přel. Peter LEWIS. Harvard University Press, Cambridge (Massachusetts)
[20] GANIM, John M., 2008. "Chaucer and the War of the Maidens", in Cultural Diversity in the British Middle Ages. Archipelago, Island, England. Ed. Jeffrey Jerome COHEN. Palgrave, London
[21] HARVEY, John H., 1971. "Richard II and York", in The Reign of Richard II. Essays in Honour of May McKisack. Ed. F. R. H. du BOULAY a Caroline M. BARRON. Athlone Press, London
[22] HELMBOLD, Anita, 2008. "Chaucer Appropriated: The Troilus Frontispiece as Lancastrian Propaganda", in Studies in the Age of Chaucer 30, s. 205–234
[23] HUDSON, Anne, 1985. Lollards and their Books. Hambledon, London
[24] KISER, Lisa J., 1983. Telling Classical Tales. Chaucer and the Legend of Good Women. Cornell University Press, Ithaca
[25] MATTHEW, Gervase, 1968. The Court of Richard II. W. W. Norton and Company, New York
[26] MUELLER, Joan, 2006. The Privilege of Poverty: Clare of Assisi, Agnes of Prague, and the Struggle for a Franciscan Rule for Women. The Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park
[27] NEWMAN, Barbara, 2013. Medieval Crossover. Reading the Secular against the Sacred. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame
[28] ROSARIO, Iva, 2000. Art and Propaganda. Charles IV of Bohemia, 1346–1378. D. S. Brewer, Cambridge
[29] SAUL, Nigel, 1999. Richard II. Yale University Press, New Haven
[30] STROHM, Paul, 1989. Social Chaucer. Harvard University Press, Cambridge (Massachusetts)
[31] STROHM, Paul, 1992. Hochon's Arrow. The Social Imagination of Fourteenth-Century Texts. Princeton University Press, Princeton
[32] TAYLOR, Andrew, 1997. "Anne of Bohemia and the Making of Chaucer", in: Studies in the Age of Chaucer 19, s. 95–120
[33] THOMAS, Alfred, 2007. A Blessed Shore. England and Bohemia from Chaucer to Shakespeare. Cornell University Press, Ithaca
[34] THOMAS, Alfred, 2013. "Between Court and Cloister: Royal Patronage and Nuns' Literacy in Medieval East-Central Europe", in Nuns' Literacies in Medieval Europe. The Hull Dialogue. Ed. Virginia BLANTON, Veronica O'MARA a Patricia STOOP. Brepols, Turnhout, s. 207–221
[35] WALLACE, David J., 1995. "Anne of Bohemia, Queen of England and Chaucer's Emperice", in Litteraria Pragensia 5, s. 1–16
[36] WALLACE, David J., 1997. Chaucerian Polity. Absolutist Lineages and Associational Forms in England and Italy. Stanford University Press, Stanford
[37] WYCLIF, John, 1883. John Wyclif's Polemical Works in Latin. I–II. Ed. R. BUDDENSIEG. Trübner, London.
[38] WIMSATT, James I., 1991. Chaucer and His French Contemporaries. Natural Music in the Fourteenth Century. University of Toronto Press, Toronto