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Father Chaucer and the Vivification of Print
by Laura
M. Bishop, Robert D. Clark Honors College, University of Oregon
Even in the fifteenth century, Chaucer was seen by his countrymen as the
preeminent English poet, the father, as Dryden was to call him in 1700,
of English poetry. Despite general agreement in the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries about Chaucer's poetic preeminence, however, Thomas Speght's
edition of Chaucer's Works (1598, STC 5077, 5078, 5079; 1602, STC 5080,
5081) adds elaborate textual apparatus—illustrated frontispieces, life
histories and genealogies, epistles and dedicatory poems—that insist on
Chaucer's literary value in a particular way: They use the tropes of Chaucer
as father and as living presence to affirm Chaucer's literary worth. These
apparatus—or peritexts, to borrow Gerard Genette's term—invoke Chaucer's
living voice through dialogues and letters; their images picture him as
if alive and situate his fatherhood, as well as his poetry, in the midst
of tudor politics. Many peritexts are new to Speght's editions; others
carry over from his editorial predecessors William thynne (1532, StC 5068)
and John Stow (1561, STC 5075, 5076). What prompts this expression of
Chaucer as father and as living presence?
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