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“How Strange Life is!”: The Performative Narrator and Chaucerian Similarities in Steven Leacock’s Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town

Authors
Kenneth Eckert
Issue Date
Feb-2019
Publisher
대한영어영문학회
Keywords
Stephen Leacock; Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town; Geoffrey Chaucer; Sir Thopas; Canadian fiction
Citation
영어영문학연구, v.45, no.1, pp.199 - 216
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
영어영문학연구
Volume
45
Number
1
Start Page
199
End Page
216
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/4524
DOI
10.21559/aellk.2019.45.1.010
ISSN
1226-8682
Abstract
Stephen Leacock’s humorous Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town (1912) is now less known outside Canada, but was in its time possibly more recognized abroad than the country was, and remains a foundational touchstone of Canadian fiction. Yet its genial humor has brought it affection but slighter academic regard, and its amorphous narrator has received criticism for his claimed inconsistency in knowledge level and identity. This article asserts that this alleged inconsistency can be explained by the example of Chaucer’s Tale of Sir Thopas. While it is an odd connection, Chaucer also deploys a narrator who knowingly employs a lowered or counterfactual viewpoint, and so both the poem and the Sketches are contextualized as explicit performances. Recognizing the narrator’s guise as an admitted reciter separate from his fictive story may help elucidate this critical issue and raise regard for Leacock’s masterpiece.
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