Father Chaucer and the Apologists
eBook - ePub

Father Chaucer and the Apologists

Cecily Chaumpaigne and 700 Years of Rape Culture

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Father Chaucer and the Apologists

Cecily Chaumpaigne and 700 Years of Rape Culture

About this book

On May 4, 1380, Cecily Chaumpaigne filed a quitclaim with the Chancery in Westminster, releasing the poet Geoffrey Chaucer from any prosecution de raptu meo (on account of my rape). This legal document, lost for centuries, has haunted Chaucer studies since its rediscovery in 1873.

Over the past 150 years since it reemerged, many Chaucer scholars have sought to discount, sanitize, or excuse the release. Through a careful examination of the long Chaucer historiography, Sarah Baechle shows how critics have read the question of Chaucer's potential culpability for rape through prevailing attitudes toward sexual violence. They did so, moreover, in ways that will be very familiar to contemporary readers versed in rape culture—practices that dismiss sexual violence by centering and promoting accused perpetrators, erasing or attacking the victim-survivor, and minimizing the violence of the crime. Baechle pairs the necessary excavation of this critical history with reparative readings of the poet's narratives of sexual violence, including the Miller's Tale, the Reeve's Tale, the Wife of Bath's Tale, and Troilus and Criseyde, and she theorizes "assailant speech" as a counterpart to survivor speech, proposing it as a new means of understanding Chaucer's place in feminist studies of the Middle Ages.

Father Chaucer and the Apologists is an urgently needed examination of the discourse surrounding Chaumpaigne's quitclaim that reveals the ties between Chaucer studies and the persistence of rape culture. This book will appeal to students and scholars of Chaucer and of gender and sexual violence more broadly.

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Yes, you can access Father Chaucer and the Apologists by Sarah Baechle in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & English Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Preface
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Introduction
  10. Chapter 1. Class Coercions: Victorian Sexuality, Epistemologies of Consent, and the Miller’s Tale
  11. Chapter 2. Letters of the Law: Cautionary Directives, Discourses of Trauma, and the Reeve’s Tale
  12. Chapter 3. Reasonable Rapists: Myths of Consent, the Mistake of Fact Defense, and Troilus and Criseyde
  13. Chapter 4. Rapists with Potential: Philogynist Chaucer, the Wife of Bath, and the Work of Reparation
  14. Notes
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index