Chaucer's Sources and Analogues Revisited
Jill Mann, University of
Notre Dame
Sources and Analogues of the Canterbury Tales, Volume I. Edited
by Robert M. Correale and Mary Hamel. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2002. Pp.
xii, 623. $99; £55.
Bryan and Dempster's Sources
and Analogues of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (hereafter SA) has been one
of the indispensable tools of Chaucer scholarship for more than half a
century. Gathering together earlier research in this area, particularly
that produced under the aegis of the Chaucer Society, SA presented it
in an orderly and easily accessible form. The new volume of sources and
analogues edited by Robert M. Correale and Mary Hamel, which covers roughly
half of the Canterbury Tales, will not so much lay SA to rest as give
it a new lease of life, by updating its scholarship, by correcting the
few errors that it contains, and above all by providing modern English
translations for the benefit of students and scholars less linguistically
proficient than they were formerly expected to be. The intentions motivating
the production of this volume are admirable; unfortunately their execution
is not uniformly successful, and there are a couple of outright disaster
areas, as will appear below.
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