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Chapter 2 - Merchant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2019

Robert J. Meyer-Lee
Affiliation:
Agnes Scott College, Decatur
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Summary

Chapter 2 argues that the positioning of the Merchant’s performance as an answer to the Clerk’s stages a stern critique of the naïve escapism of the poet-student occupation as the Clerk’s performance imagines it. In this view, the Clerk’s meta-value is an attempt to avoid confronting the true nature of value in the sublunary realm: the material desires of flesh-and-blood individuals. According to the Merchant’s performance, all discourse is a self-interested instrument of these desires. Yet the chapter also argues that this grim position is not one voiced by a bitter man far removed from Chaucer, but rather that the tale is told with the very narratorial wit and playfulness most characteristic of Chaucer’s fiction, whether in his first-person voice or otherwise. For this reason, the Merchant’s dialectical negation of the Clerk’s notion of literary value represents at once Chaucer’s skepticism about the value of his own craft and his reveling in his mastery over it. To pursue this argument, the chapter performs a close reading of the Merchant’s Prologue, examines key moments in the Merchant’s Tale, and considers the Merchant’s portrait in its historical context.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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  • Merchant
  • Robert J. Meyer-Lee, Agnes Scott College, Decatur
  • Book: Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales
  • Online publication: 15 October 2019
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  • Merchant
  • Robert J. Meyer-Lee, Agnes Scott College, Decatur
  • Book: Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales
  • Online publication: 15 October 2019
Available formats
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To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Merchant
  • Robert J. Meyer-Lee, Agnes Scott College, Decatur
  • Book: Literary Value and Social Identity in the Canterbury Tales
  • Online publication: 15 October 2019
Available formats
×