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“Chaucer (of all admired) the story gives”: Shakespeare, Medieval Narrative, and Generic Innovation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 March 2023

Christopher Cobb
Affiliation:
St Mary's College, Indiana
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Summary

Utterances are not indifferent to one another, and are not selfsufficient; they are aware of and mutually reflect one another … each utterance is filled with various kinds of responsive reactions to other utterances of the given sphere of speech communication.

—M. M. Bakhtin, “The Problem of Speech Genres”

I am interested in the relation of Chaucerian narrative to what appear to be innovations in Shakespeare’s dramaturgy after the turn of the century. My interest is thus less in verbal influences or direct debts of theme or matter than in structural and narratological elements that Shakespeare may have adapted in producing plays like Troilus and Cressida, Pericles, and Two Noble Kinsmen. Following Bakhtin’s suggestion that utterances (as works) are responsive to each other, I intend to investigate the ways Shakespeare’s post-1600 plays react to medieval antecedents as they experiment with alternative principles of construction. My intention is not to focus so much on specific connections as on structural ones. Bakhtin argues that works interact in ways that go beyond more or less readily recognizable matters of verbal influence. He writes:

The work, like the rejoinder in dialogue, is oriented towards the response of the other (others), towards his active responsive understanding, which can assume various forms: educational influence on the readers, persuasion of them, critical responses, influences on followers and successors and so on. It can determine others’ responsive positions under the complex conditions of speech communication in a particular cultural sphere. The work is a link in the chain of speech communion. Like the rejoinder in dialogue, it is related to other work-utterances: both those to which it responds and those that respond to it. At the same time, like the rejoinder in a dialogue, it is separated from them by the absolute boundaries created by a change of speaking subjects.

Works, in this account, engage in a conversation spanning histories of reception and production, and each work actively works to condition the kinds of responses it will receive as much as it influences the works to which it responds. Bakhtin imagines a dynamic and flexible version of literary history that attempts to account for the ways work-utterances, to use his term, intervene prospectively and retrospectively in the “chain of speech communion” that is the literary field.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2010

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