The Old French fabliaux may be notorious for their bawdy content, but
few aspects of these medieval comic narratives are as astonishing as
their depiction of the parish priest, whose fiscal and sexual
transgressions are on occasion so enormous that lay protagonists are
driven to inflict graphic punishments ranging from public exposure and
communal beating to castration and murder. In this study, Burrows draws
on social psychological research into the cognitive and
socio-motivational components of stereotyping to explore the forces
underlying the creation and development of the fabliau priest. Through
an assessment of the constituent elements of the figure against a
background of a range of literary and historical sources, Burrows
demonstrates that the literary figure is the product of the specific
socio-historical context of contemporaneous changes in relationships
between Church and laity in which anticlerical stereotyping, in a manner
comparable to other instances of outgroup derogation, can be attributed
to a quest for positive social identity and ingroup solidarity on the
part of an inscribed lay audience.