Session 1: Chaucer: Five Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer is sometimes called the 'father of English literature' not only because he wrote so well but because he has been, and remains, a poet who had a unique power to capture in language the foibles and strengths, the folly and wisdom, and the rich variety of perspectives that make us human. Though his the language in which he wrote (Middle English) requires an initial stretch for modern readers, it is quickly mastered and well worth the effort, since Chaucer was also the first poet in English to use the language with such finesse and precision. Join Christopher Cannon, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of English and Classics, to read five of the most accomplished of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and discover Chaucer's unusual and innovative techniques for bringing the fourteenth-century England to life in language. To learn more visit https://www.jhu.edu/hopkinsathome/

Session 2: Chaucer: Five Canterbury Tales

Old, Middle, Modern: Chaucer as the turning-point in the story of English pronunciation

Why are the Canterbury Tales worth reading?

Harold Bloom - "Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human"

The Epic of Gilgamesh, Lecture by Andrew George

Sr A Intro to Chaucer

How to Analyze a Poem: a close reading of W.B. Yeats' poem "Lake Isle of Innisfree"

The Canterbury Tales: The English Language's First Masterpiece | Literary Classic | Absolute History

CHAUCER'S PROLOGUE TO CANTERBURY TALES

The Canterbury Tales, or, How Technology Changes The Way We Speak: The London History Show

Harold Bloom interview on "Hamlet" (2003)

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

Teaching poetry: Helen Vendler at Harvard University

Russell's Paradox - a simple explanation of a profound problem

Grammar rules you can stop sticking to

The Book Club: The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer with Catherine Illingworth | The Book Club

English Literature | Geoffrey Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales | English Literature Lessons

Why English Departments Hate Literature

Alumni College 2014: Marc Conner's "Charles Dickens and the 19th-century British Novel"

