<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/275860">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucer: &quot;The Canterbury Tales.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Offers a historicized, &quot;iconological,&quot; Great Texts approach to CT, reading the poem as a &quot;staged retelling of many tales, old and new&quot; that is thereby &quot;particularly pertinent for the larger rationale of a Great Texts curriculum.&quot; Traces two thematic patterns or &quot;movements&quot; in the work: rational wisdom and the Christian theological virtues, each expressed ironically at times, and both framed by recurrent concern with spiritual progress, confession, and conclusion.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275859">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Bookman&#039;s Tale.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Modern novel that includes a sailing trip to the Caribbean, during which the travelers (the Doctor&#039;s Colleague, the Wife, the Diver, etc.) exchange &quot;tales.&quot; Includes reference to Chaucer and an approximate quotation of HF 354-60.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275858">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Talking Dirty: Slang, Expletives, and Curses from Around the World.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A discursive lexicon of &quot;dirty&quot; language, sexual and scatological, including a brief section (pp. 8-14) on Chaucer&#039;s vocabulary, listing sample words and describing several scenes and examples from MilT, WBP, and elsewhere. Reprinted under the title &quot;Come Again?: Racy Slang, Expletives, and Curses from Around the World&quot; (New York: Skyhorse, 2012).]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275857">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The English Year: A Literary Journey Through the Seasons.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[An anthology of literary quotations from English writers, arranged by the days of the months, January through December. Includes GP 1-18 under April 15.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275856">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[A Death in Catte Street.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A murder mystery set in medieval London, told by Geoffrey Chaucer recounting events in the first person. Includes various historical persons and provides chapter notes at the end of the narrative.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275855">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Geoffrey Chaucer: Canterbury Bound. A Novel.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Historical novel; a prequel to CT and cast as Chaucer&#039;s notebook or journal as he plans and writes his poem, drawing inspiration from his fellow travelers on the current journey. Includes portions of CT in fictional drafts (GP extensively) and various details from Chaucer&#039;s life and other works.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275854">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Prologue to the Pokerbury Tales: A Satire.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Parodies GP, featuring twenty-nine character sketches of people who intend to travel together to Pokerbury, a site for gambling, planning to tell tales along the way. Modern professions include the Broker, the Dentist, the Scientist, etc.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275853">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Piccadilly Tales.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A frame-tale collection of stories that adapts aspects of CT, told while travelers are trapped on a stalled subway car. Written in rhymed couplets, with a General Prologue and nineteen tales without prologues.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275852">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Transcriptionist: A Novel.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A novel about a modern-day transcriptionist who works for a New York newspaper. Obsessed by a recent suicide, her distrust of truth and language grows. Includes recurrent references to Chaucer and his works, most extensively in Chapter 6, &quot;Chaucer&#039;s Scrivener Revealed,&quot; concerning a scholarly discovery made by the suicide victim&#039;s sister.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275851">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucer, Boccaccio, and Petrarch: Intralingual and Interlingual &quot;Translatio.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Expands upon Harold Bloom&#039;s concept of the &quot;anxiety of influence&quot; to explore agonistic revisionism through translation in medieval literature, focusing on transmission from Italy to England and illustrating in detail how &quot;verbal, phrasal, descriptive,  and formal correspondences between Petrarchan lyric and Boccacio&#039;s narrative&quot; in &quot;Filostrato&quot; enabled &quot;Chaucer to introduce the Petrarchan idiom to English audiences&quot; in TC. Includes comments on Dante&#039;s influence.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275850">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Spatializing Time: The Adventure of Multiple Temporalities in Chaucer&#039;s &quot;Man of Law&#039;s Tale.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Focuses on &quot;generic links&quot; between MLPT and &quot;the ancient novel/Greek romance,&quot; especially multiple adventures as a plot device and the motif of incestuous desire that is both &quot;rife&quot; in the plot of MLT and a &quot;conspicuous absence.&quot; Shows how incest links with &quot;the question of the tale&#039;s source&quot; and provokes awareness of &quot;cultural simultaneity,&quot; denying &quot;the progressive trajectory of history indispensable to a teleological notion of history&quot; and its periodization. In the tale &quot;incest bespeaks a resistance to dominant patterns of temporality.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275849">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The So-Called &quot;Chaucer Astrolabe&quot; from the Koelliker Collection, Milan: An Account of the Instrument and Its Place in the Tradition of Chaucer-Type Astrolabes.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Describes the ownership history and details the physical features of a fourteenth-century English astrolabe in the Koelliker Collection, Milan, assessing its status as the &quot;Chaucer Astrolabe&quot; (here called the &quot;Tomba-Koelliker astrolabe&quot;) by gauging its similarities with and differences from related instruments and the &quot;illustrations in the early copies&quot; of Astr. ]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275848">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Geoﬀrey Chaucer&#039;s Hybrid Woman: The Prioress in &quot;The Canterbury Tales.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Explores the social status of the Prioress as someone caught between &quot;her former and present estates, the nobility and the clergy respectively,&quot; exploring her &quot;hybrid identity&quot; at this interface Includes an abstract in Turkish and in English.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275847">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Slagveld van Gebroken Harten: Verhalen uit Chaucers &quot;The Canterbury Tales.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Item not seen. The WorldCat record indicates that this is a Dutch prose adaptation of CT for juvenile audience, with illustrations by Carll Cneut.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275846">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Modern prose adaptation of PardPT, adapted into a fictional frame that refers to Passolini&#039;s cinematic version of CT.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275845">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Eternal Things.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Short story about an Oxford graduate student, ambivalent about love and about her Chaucer studies, visited by the poet at nighttime. Includes recurrent allusion to the ambiguous gate in PF 123ff.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275844">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Sejm Ptasi.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Item not seen. The WorldCat record indicates that this is a translation of PF into Polish. ]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275843">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Middle English: Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1960.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275842">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Middle: English: Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1961.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275841">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Middle English: Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1962.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275840">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[A Treatise on the Astrolabe by Geoffrey Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Translates a portion of Astr (through Part 2.7) into Modern English with accompanying illustrations &quot;re-drawn&quot; from the manuscripts. The Introduction summarizes the nature, variety, and uses of astrolabes, describes Chaucer&#039;s text, and commends it as &quot;[o]one of the oldest examples of technical writing in English.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275839">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Sex im Mittelalter: Die Andere Seite einer Idealisierten Vergangenheit. Literatur und Sexualität.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Surveys depictions of sexual activities and attitudes toward them in the literature of medieval Europe. Includes a brief life of Chaucer and recurrent comments on his works (see the Index), with a summary description of sexuality and scatology in MilT as a fabliau.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275838">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[The Princess Emily: A Retelling of &quot;The Knight&#039;s Tale&quot; by Geoffrey Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Prose adaptation of KnT, abbreviated and simplified for a juvenile audience, with color illustrations by Marcin Piwowarski.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275837">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Shakespeare, Chaucer, and Shakespeare&#039;s Editors.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Surveys attention to Chaucer&#039;s influence upon Shakespeare, enumerating the references to Chaucer in all recent Arden Shakespeare editions and in various editions of &quot;Troilus and Cressida&quot; and of &quot;The Two Noble Kinsmen.&quot; Shows that the attention is limited and cites critical trends that help to explain why.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275836">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Romance and Love in Chaucer&#039;s &quot;Troilus and Criseyde,&quot; &quot;The Squire&#039;s Tale,&quot; and &quot;The Parliament of Fowls.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Comments on the importance of love as a topic in Chaucer&#039;s works, with particular attention to TC, SqT, and PF.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description></rdf:RDF>
