This compilation of new essays and essays published over the past fifty years explores Chaucer's experiences with the cultural other especially Chaucer's relationship to Far Eastern Islamic and African sources. While studies of Chaucer's orientalism have heretofore focused on the Squire's Tale Chaucer's Cultural Geography considers many different Chaucerian works in the context of sexual geographies and colonizing and postcolonizing discourses. It comes at a time when critical methodology is being debated and a variety of approaches to Chacuer studies using modes of analyses normally reserved for later periods including Said's orientalism theories Dollimore's transgressive proximity and new French feminism. Moreover the book fits well into the new emphasis in the Chaucer curriculum on globalism and multiculturalism.
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