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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
Lee, Dong-Choon (대구대학교)
저널정보
신영어영문학회 신영어영문학 신영어영문학 제49집
발행연도
2011.8
수록면
103 - 131 (29page)

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초록· 키워드

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Lee, Dong-Choon. The Knight’s Tale and The Miller’s Tale as One Tale. The New Studies of English Language & Literature 49 (2011): 103-131. The first two tales-the Knight’s Tale and the Miller’s Tale-of the Canterbury Tales are the representative examples that reflect not only the narrative technique of the “juxtaposition of opposites,” but also Chaucer’s narrative tendencies. The special poetic achievements (and limitations) of each are seen most clearly when the two tales are read together, one in the light of the other, as their juxtaposition invites. The Knight’s Tale and the Miller’s Tale, when read together, are the representative examples which tell what Chaucer attempts to show through his narrative technique of the juxtaposition of opposites and what attitude he expects from a reader. Chaucer does not mechanically indoctrinate an unique view of the world to the readers. He, avoiding his authorial stance on a certain limited view embodied in each tale, forces the specific views of the narrative onto the reader. It is through the juxtaposition between the completely different two tales in such things as tale-teller, plot, character, language, and the narrative voice that Chaucer creates the multiplicity of voice and the plurality of theme, and he trains a reader to grope for meaning from various sides. (Daegu University)

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Ⅰ. Structural Differences of Two Tales
Ⅱ. Contrast in the Character-portraits & the style of language
Ⅲ. Different Styles in Narrative Voices
Ⅳ. Chaucer’s Aim at the Effects of ‘Dialogic’
Works Cited

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