Love and Marriage in the Age of Chaucer


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About The Book

Spicing erudition with wit Professor Kelly takes a new look at medieval attitudes toward love sexuality and marriage and he corrects a number of long-standing misconceptions embodied in the concept of courtly love. Through a close examination of canon law the common practice of clandestine marriage writings on mysticism and medieval poetry - particularly Gowers Confessio amantis and Chaucers romances and their sources - he concludes that medieval lovers favored matrimony and did not consider sexual passion incompatible with virtue. His evidence contradicts the theory closely associated with C.S. Lewis that extramarital love was preferred in the Middle Ages and that the sexual pleasures celebrated by poets were necessarily regarded as immoral by society at large. By placing religious and cultural conventions in their proper context Professor Kelly shows that the hopes and fears of medieval lovers were much the same as those of lovers of all other ages.
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