Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Chaucers the House Of Fame: The Cultural Nature Of Fame :: essays research papers
 Chaucer's "The House of Fame": The Cultural Nature of Fame    QUESTION 7.    DISCUSS THE CULTURAL NATURE OF FAME AND ITS TEXTUAL EXPRESSION WITH REFERENCE TO  ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING: ORAL HEROIC POETRY, CHAUCER'S DEPICTION IN THE  HOUSE OF FAME AND THE MODERN CONSTRUCTION OF THE CANON OF ENGLISH LITERATURE.    YOU SHOULD FOCUS YOUR ANALYSIS ON THE INTERPLAY OF ORAL AND LITERARY TRADITIONS  IN THESE CONTEXTS.      Many critics have noted the complexities within Chaucer's The House of Fame,  in particular, the complexities between the oral and the literary. The  differences between these methods are constantly appearing; Chaucer is well  aware of rapidly changing communicative practises and contrasts the preservation  of utterance with the longevity of literary texts. He achieves this by  discussing the nature of "Fame" and the difficulties that arise from it. "Fame"  can both destroy and create. It can result in the eternal preservation of great  works and their creators. However, Chaucer is quick to note the precarious  nature of "fame" noting the unreliable process of attaining it and its  potentially momentary existence. Every creator with their respective work/s  naturally crave and desire "fame"; they want their subjects to remain fresh in  the minds of their audience. Chaucer, while neither totally praising the written  nor the oral, reveals how essentially the written word is far more likely to  become eternal as opposed to the oral. The relative "fame" of any work is  dependent on many factors. Many traditional and classical ideas result in the  formation of the English canon, yet as Chaucer indicates, the "fame" of these  works can easily become annihilated. The arrival of new readers with different  ideals and thereby changing tradition, can reject classical or "canonical" work  and their "fame" will melt into nothingness.  Most stories, histories and legends that emerge from oral heroic poetry are  to herald the achievement of the powerful and wealthy so that their histories  will not fade from the memories of the population. The stories of Beowolf are a  clear example of this, as within these stories, (whether embellished or no),  Beowolf's fame and legend reaches the modern reader hundreds of years later.  Clearly, Beowolf is still very much dependant on the conventions of oral  traditions and written to leave a permanent reminder of Beowolf, to enforce  Beowolf's fame. The use of "Hwaet" to mark the start of an oration, emphasises  the continuation of oral tradition. Most oral cultures (usually illiterate),  pass on stories and legends learnt from the previous generation, basically using  the authority of recalled memory, not as an actual witness; rather 'I have heard  it said` than 'I know this to be true`.  					    
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