チョーサーのimaginationについて : 特にnatureとの関わりにおいて

アクセス数 : 1266
ダウンロード数 : 155

今月のアクセス数 : 1
今月のダウンロード数 : 3
ファイル情報(添付)
KJ00004293745.pdf 755 KB 種類 : 全文
タイトル ( jpn )
チョーサーのimaginationについて : 特にnatureとの関わりにおいて
タイトル ( eng )
On Chaucer's Imagination : With Special Reference to Nature
作成者
収録物名
広島大学大学院文学研究科論集
The Hiroshima University studies, Graduate School of Letters
64
開始ページ 63
終了ページ 76
抄録
According to Douglas Gray's The Oxford Companion to Chaucer (2003), 'imagination' in the Middle English Period is not 'creative imagination,' though it is semantically connected with a creative ability in Romanticism. In Boece, Chaucer considers and classifies 'imagination,' making use of the following adjectives: 'sensible,' 'ymaginable,' and 'resonable.' Human beings perceive things by the faculty of their 'wits' or five senses. And they have 'imagination.' They are also given 'reson,' which the other animals do not possess. They can create a new image, combining old memories and reviving things which they saw in the past. Chaucer uses the notion of 'eyes of the mind,' by which even blind persons can see things. 'Imagination' is regarded as an ability higher than the five senses, because it preserves the forms of things, separating them from the materials of the real world. This paper discusses Chaucer's imagination, investigating the description of nature in Troilus and Criseyde. The description of nature plays an important part in Chaucer's works, and is always connected with the state of mind of the characters. In keeping with the development of the stories, it reflects the subtle psychological attitude of the characters. When they are in harmony with nature, they proceed favourably, according to how the situation develops. However, when they are out of harmony with nature, they are obliged to obey an uncontrollable power such as Fortune.
著者キーワード
チョーサー
imagination, nature
NDC分類
英米文学 [ 930 ]
言語
日本語
資源タイプ 紀要論文
出版者
広島大学大学院文学研究科
国立情報学研究所
発行日 2004-12-24
出版タイプ Version of Record(出版社版。早期公開を含む)
アクセス権 オープンアクセス
収録物識別子
[ISSN] 1347-7013
[NCID] AA11643449