
The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer
Explores how generations of biographers shaped, reinvented, and fabricated the life of Geoffrey Chaucer
Very little is known with certainty about Geoffrey Chaucerās life, yet he has long been enshrined as the āFather of English Poetry.ā Over six centuries, biographers have sought to craft a version of Chaucer that meets the needs of their own time, culture, and readers. In doing so, they have often blurred the boundaries between evidence and invention. In The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer, Simone Celine Marshall takes a distinctive approach that examines not just Chaucer himself, but the ways in which his life story has been repeatedly fabricated and reshaped to reflect broader social, cultural, and literary currents. By analysing over two dozen biographies, Marshall demonstrates that each one is less a faithful record of Chaucerās life than a mirror of its own eraās priorities and prejudices.
Marshall situates Chaucer within a 625-year tradition of biography-making, showing how the image of the poet has been reframed over timeāfrom Renaissance humanist, to national literary figure, to contested cultural symbol. Structured both chronologically and thematically, the book traces episodes that have particularly exercised biographers, including Chaucerās travels, his alleged authorship of The Testament of Love, his English identity, his entanglement with accusations of rape, and even his role in colonial contexts such as New Zealand. Throughout the text, Marshall highlights how each retelling of Chaucerās life is also a response to shifting societal concernsāabout authorship, nationhood, morality, and cultural authority.
A fascinating study of how lives are written, rewritten, and continually reimagined to serve evolving generations of readers, The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer:
- Draws from more than two dozen biographies of Geoffrey Chaucer, spanning from 1532 to 2019
- Examines how biography functions not just as historical record, but as cultural and societal reflection
- Offers fresh insights into Chaucerās international reception, with particular attention to colonial and postcolonial contexts
- Investigates how issues of authorship, nationalism, morality, and gender shape portrayals of Chaucer over centuries
- Provides a timeline of Chaucerās known life events alongside contemporary historical and literary milestones
The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer is ideal for undergraduates and postgraduates in English literature, medieval studies, and cultural history, particularly courses such as Medieval Literature, Author and Authorship Studies, and Histories of Biography within BA and MA degree programmes. It is also suitable for general readers interested in Chaucer, medieval poetry, or the broader study of how literary figures are remembered and reimagined.
Explores how generations of biographers shaped, reinvented, and fabricated the life of Geoffrey Chaucer
Very little is known with certainty about Geoffrey Chaucerās life, yet he has long been enshrined as the āFather of English Poetry.ā Over six centuries, biographers have sought to craft a version of Chaucer that meets the needs of their own time, culture, and readers. In doing so, they have often blurred the boundaries between evidence and invention. In The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer, Simone Celine Marshall takes a distinctive approach that examines not just Chaucer himself, but the ways in which his life story has been repeatedly fabricated and reshaped to reflect broader social, cultural, and literary currents. By analysing over two dozen biographies, Marshall demonstrates that each one is less a faithful record of Chaucerās life than a mirror of its own eraās priorities and prejudices.
Marshall situates Chaucer within a 625-year tradition of biography-making, showing how the image of the poet has been reframed over timeāfrom Renaissance humanist, to national literary figure, to contested cultural symbol. Structured both chronologically and thematically, the book traces episodes that have particularly exercised biographers, including Chaucerās travels, his alleged authorship of The Testament of Love, his English identity, his entanglement with accusations of rape, and even his role in colonial contexts such as New Zealand. Throughout the text, Marshall highlights how each retelling of Chaucerās life is also a response to shifting societal concernsāabout authorship, nationhood, morality, and cultural authority.
A fascinating study of how lives are written, rewritten, and continually reimagined to serve evolving generations of readers, The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer:
- Draws from more than two dozen biographies of Geoffrey Chaucer, spanning from 1532 to 2019
- Examines how biography functions not just as historical record, but as cultural and societal reflection
- Offers fresh insights into Chaucerās international reception, with particular attention to colonial and postcolonial contexts
- Investigates how issues of authorship, nationalism, morality, and gender shape portrayals of Chaucer over centuries
- Provides a timeline of Chaucerās known life events alongside contemporary historical and literary milestones
The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer is ideal for undergraduates and postgraduates in English literature, medieval studies, and cultural history, particularly courses such as Medieval Literature, Author and Authorship Studies, and Histories of Biography within BA and MA degree programmes. It is also suitable for general readers interested in Chaucer, medieval poetry, or the broader study of how literary figures are remembered and reimagined.
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Explores how generations of biographers shaped, reinvented, and fabricated the life of Geoffrey Chaucer
Very little is known with certainty about Geoffrey Chaucerās life, yet he has long been enshrined as the āFather of English Poetry.ā Over six centuries, biographers have sought to craft a version of Chaucer that meets the needs of their own time, culture, and readers. In doing so, they have often blurred the boundaries between evidence and invention. In The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer, Simone Celine Marshall takes a distinctive approach that examines not just Chaucer himself, but the ways in which his life story has been repeatedly fabricated and reshaped to reflect broader social, cultural, and literary currents. By analysing over two dozen biographies, Marshall demonstrates that each one is less a faithful record of Chaucerās life than a mirror of its own eraās priorities and prejudices.
Marshall situates Chaucer within a 625-year tradition of biography-making, showing how the image of the poet has been reframed over timeāfrom Renaissance humanist, to national literary figure, to contested cultural symbol. Structured both chronologically and thematically, the book traces episodes that have particularly exercised biographers, including Chaucerās travels, his alleged authorship of The Testament of Love, his English identity, his entanglement with accusations of rape, and even his role in colonial contexts such as New Zealand. Throughout the text, Marshall highlights how each retelling of Chaucerās life is also a response to shifting societal concernsāabout authorship, nationhood, morality, and cultural authority.
A fascinating study of how lives are written, rewritten, and continually reimagined to serve evolving generations of readers, The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer:
- Draws from more than two dozen biographies of Geoffrey Chaucer, spanning from 1532 to 2019
- Examines how biography functions not just as historical record, but as cultural and societal reflection
- Offers fresh insights into Chaucerās international reception, with particular attention to colonial and postcolonial contexts
- Investigates how issues of authorship, nationalism, morality, and gender shape portrayals of Chaucer over centuries
- Provides a timeline of Chaucerās known life events alongside contemporary historical and literary milestones
The Life of the Author: Geoffrey Chaucer is ideal for undergraduates and postgraduates in English literature, medieval studies, and cultural history, particularly courses such as Medieval Literature, Author and Authorship Studies, and Histories of Biography within BA and MA degree programmes. It is also suitable for general readers interested in Chaucer, medieval poetry, or the broader study of how literary figures are remembered and reimagined.












