Comparing Chaucer's Dating Back To The 14th Century

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Several factors may influence the way an author writes, such as an individual’s worldview, milieu, and the audience it is intended for. Oftentimes, other authors and literary works have a significant impact on one’s writing style and preferences because through reading other works, writers discover their own personal preferences. Dating back to the fourteenth century, critics can identify the influence authors have had on other writers by comparing and contrasting the works with other works in that time period. In fact, Geoffrey Chaucer, who is oftentimes considered the greatest English poet of the Middle Ages, has allowed other sources of literature from writers such as Giovanni Boccaccio, Dante Alighieri, and William Langland to influence …show more content…

In “The Canterbury Tales”, Chaucer introduces pilgrims that go on a pilgrimage to The Canterbury Cathedral to celebrate Thomas Becket’s life, which is the framework of the poem. The 120 stories the various pilgrims tell along the way are the framework-stories (Harmon, 209). Similarly, “The Decameron” tells of ten men and women who flee a plague, which is the framework, and the stories of the men and women being the framework-stories. Boccaccio composed “The Decameron” in French forty years before Chaucer began writing “The Canterbury Tales” allowing Chaucer the time to read Boccaccio’s work and implement its format in his planning when writing “The Canterbury Tales” (“Boccaccio, Giovanni”). Although, there is already supporting evidence that Chaucer was exposed to some of Boccaccio’s writing because he summarizes more than 1000 lines of Boccaccio’s “Teseida” in “The Knight’s Tale” (Heffernan, 317). Though Chaucer never directly says Boccaccio served as an inspiration to his writing, the similarities between their frameworks, and the fact that the works were both produced in the 14th century suggests Boccaccio served as one of Chaucer’s

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