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From Chaucer’s Pardoner to Shakespeare’s Iago

Aspects of Intermediality in the History of the Vice

by Maik Goth (Author)
©2009 Thesis 150 Pages

Summary

In The Western Canon: The Books and School of the Ages the American critic Harold Bloom claims that Shakespeare drew on Chaucer’s Pardoner when creating the villain Iago for his Othello. This book turns Bloom’s observation of influences within the canon of Western literature into a more complex intermedial analysis of dramatic and literary traditions at the waning of the Middle Ages and the dawn of the Renaissance. The discussion of verbal and non-verbal codes in Chaucer’s presentation of the Pardoner and Shakespeare’s depiction of Iago sheds light on the various strands of the Vice’s development, and shows that Chaucer’s pilgrim, who descends obliquely from the stage Vices, stands at the very beginning of the Vice tradition, while Iago is a late development of him, who adapts his role to new dramatic challenges.

Details

Pages
150
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631564653
Language
English
Keywords
Drama Poetry Intermediality Tragedy
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. 143 pp.

Biographical notes

Maik Goth (Author)

The Author: Maik Goth holds an M.A. degree from the Universität Bochum, where he studied English and Latin literature. His main research interests are the poetry and drama of the early modern period and the late Middle Ages. He is currently writing a Ph.D. thesis on the monsters in Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene.

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Title: From Chaucer’s Pardoner to Shakespeare’s Iago