<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/">
<rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271833">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Disconsolate Art]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Rejects conventional readings of BD as a demonstration that art can transcend suffering; instead shows how BD &quot;enacts . . . a disconsolate poetics, in which pain and suffering perdure.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271832">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[A Dark Stain and a Non-Encounter]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Concentrates on Ceyx and Alcyone&#039;s encounter in BD as a communication failure that aligns with a series of other failed attempts at communication throughout the poem.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271831">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Half Dead: Parsing Cecilia]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Considers the anonymous executioner and the three strokes required to execute Cecilia in SNT.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271830">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Dark Is Light Enough: The Layout of the Tale of Sir Thopas]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Suggests that the textual layout of Th is authorial in the Ellesmere, Hengwrt, Cambridge MS Gg.II.27, and Dd.IV.24 copies of Th. Because other manuscripts do not adhere to this layout, they exemplify how scribes interpret texts rather than transmit them faithfully. Includes a diplomatic edition of the layout of Th as found in Oxford, Christ Church, MS 152.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271829">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Suffer the Little Children; or, A Rumination on the Faith of Zombies]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Imagines the singing clergeon of PrT as a sort of zombie whose zombie faith is echoed by the Prioress.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271828">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Physician&#039;s Tale as Hagioclasm]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Reads PhyT as a deliberate inversion of hagiography, seen particularly in its failure to end with any positive consequences of the martyrdom.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271827">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In the Event of the Franklin&#039;s Tale]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Demonstrates how the resolution of FranT turns on so much semantic play with &quot;fre&quot; that the ending itself remains unresolved or &quot;fre.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271826">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Kill Me, Save Me, Let Me Go: Custance, Virginia, Emelye]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Explores Custance, Virginia, and Emelye as women who recognize they are characters in someone else&#039;s narratives. Also suggests that Chaucer was similarly constrained by his sources, leaving him too without freedom to be his own self.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271825">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Unravelling Constance]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Meditates fictively on Custance and her loss of identity.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271824">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Saturn&#039;s Darkness]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Explores the contrast between Theseus and Saturn in KnT as a metaphor for the lives of modern academic Chaucerians.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271823">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Black as the Crow]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Reviews Chaucer&#039;s three uses of a crow (in ManT, PF, and as a &quot;metaphor for the very blackness of blood&quot; at the end of KnT) as a &quot;marker for silence, sterility, and death.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271822">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucerian Afterlives: Reception and Eschatology]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Claims that &quot;Chaucer is eschatological&quot; with a recurrent focus on &quot;death, judgment, hell, and heaven,&quot; but that he also anticipates in Ret how readers might associate Chaucer the author with Chaucer&#039;s texts, thus encouraging &quot;a dynamic of textual dispossession.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271821">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[L&#039;O de V: A Palimpsest]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Experimental juxtapositioning of Virginia&#039;s rape in PhyT, Chaucer&#039;s interaction with Cecily Chaumpaigne, and &quot;The Story of O&quot; (1954), presented as a text caught in the act of being edited, complete with palimpsests of strikeouts, text additions, and so forth.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271820">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Dark Whiteness: Benjamin Brawly and Chaucer]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Studies the poem &quot;Chaucer&quot; by Benjamin Brawly, an early twentieth-century African-American poet.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271819">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Dark Chaucer: An Assortment]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A collection of essays highlighting &quot;dark,&quot; unsettling, and culturally unsavory elements across the Chaucer canon. For individual pieces, search for Dark Chaucer under Alternative Title.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271818">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Canterbury Trail]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Fiction loosely based on framework of CT, with unlikely group of ski enthusiasts brought together during a pilgrimage through backcountry British Columbia.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271817">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Criseyde&#039;s Last Word]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Discusses Criseyde&#039;s &quot;slipperiness and unreliability&quot; in TC, focusing on her last letter to Troilus, which is &quot;Chaucer&#039;s own addition,&quot; as a way of understanding her character.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271816">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Sir Thopas and His Lancegay]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Discusses the significance of Sir Thopas&#039;s lancegay as a weapon of choice, and why Chaucer chose this weapon.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271815">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucer&#039;s Knight&#039;s Tale: The Book of the Duke]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Examines the characterization of Theseus in KnT, comparing it with that of Boccaccio&#039;s Teseo and arguing that Chaucer depicts an ideal of moral worth, aristocratic justice, knightly virtue, and nobility of conquest.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271814">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Fourteenth-Century Weaponry, Armour and Warfare in Chaucer and &#039;Sir Gawain and the Green Knight&#039;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Looks at CT and &quot;Sir Gawain and the Green Knight&quot; from a &quot;military historical and archeological perspective.&quot; Focuses on the Knight in GP and KnT, and on warfare scenes in Th and Sir Gawain.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271813">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Hooly Blisful Martir for to Seke]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Discusses the shrines and holy places the pilgrims would have visited along their pilgrimage in CT.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271812">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Plea and Petition in Chaucer]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Argues that petition is an integral part of the &quot;narrative process and imaginative texture of Chaucer&#039;s poems,&quot; and that it greatly affects poetic meaning. Discusses Purse and the F and G versions of LGWP, among other poems.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271811">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Poetics of Fraud: Jean de Meun, Dante, and Chaucer]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Traces Chaucer&#039;s and Dante&#039;s different responses to poetic &quot;representation and authority&quot; to Jean de Meun&#039;s &quot;Le roman de la rose,&quot; examining the &quot;poetics of fraud&quot; in PardT and HF.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271810">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucer in Context: A Golden Age of English Poetry]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Collection of essays addressing various Chaucerian topics, including &quot;textual authority, poetic design, political affiliations and sympathies, and religious convictions.&quot; For individual essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Chaucer in Context: A Golden Age of English Poetry under Alternative Title.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271809">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Poetry of Translation: From Chaucer and Petrarch to Homer and Logue]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Explores the complexity of using literary translations, discussing Chaucer in relation to Dante, Petrarch, and Dryden in Chapter 15.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description></rdf:RDF>
