Browse Items (16470 total)

Owen, Charles A.,Jr.   PMLA 98 (1983):902.
Response to Gitte's article: the "open-endedness" of CT may result more from the unfinished state of CT than from Arabic tradition.

Gittes, Katharine Slater.   PMLA 98 (1983): 903-04.
The "fragmentary state" of CT and its lack of definitive ending may reflect external circumstances, yet its "open-endedness" may be part of its structural plan.

Carruthers, Mary (J.)   Journal of Narrative Technique 2 (1972): 208-14.
Argues that FrT and SumT "explore the question of true meaning in far-reaching ways." Concerned with "externals" only, the Friar's summoner ignores intention, while the Friar himself (a "false glossator" though described as worthy) "cannot properly…

Besserman, Lawrence [L.]   PMLA 98 (1983): 405-06.
Melvin Storm's article indicates that pardoners were rarely accused of carrying false relics.

Eckhardt, Caroline D.   PMLA 98 (1983): 902-03
Gitte's article in PMLA may indicate an "open-ended" quality of Chaucer's mind.

Meisami, Julie Scott.   PMLA 99 (1984): 109-11.
In her essay Gittes overemphasizes generalizations about Arabic mathematics, architecture, and literature, especially its "atomization" into component units.

Gittes, Katharine Slater.   PMLA 99 (1984): 111-12.
The open-ended frame tale appears to have originated in Arabic literature. Arabic aesthetic can depend on the component unit.

Storm, Melvin.   PMLA 98 (1983): 406.
Outside of Lollard tracts, false relics were rarely associated with pardoners.

Kordecki, Lesley.   Exemplaria 4 (1992): 365-85.
"Glossa Ordinaria" and NPT demonstrate the medieval tendency to accompany a base text with another, more interpretive one, generating further discourse, discouraging closure, and resulting in compound, sometimes conflicting, interpretations or…

Menmuir, Rebecca.   Chaucer Review 56.2 (2021): 171-92.
Focuses on Ovid's post-exilic poem "Ibis," now nearly forgotten in scholarship but once central to medieval readers. Catalogues the extant manuscripts of Ibis and compares this to the higher number of mentions in manuscript inventories, before…

Wuertz, Carol.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 146-57.
Argues that the "message" of WBPT is that all individuals are to be valued.

Dixon, Chris Jennings, ed.   Urbana, Ill.: National Council of Teachers of English, 2007.
Seventy-five lesson plans for teaching writing to high school students, arranged in seven categories: Writing Process, Portfolios, Literature, Research, Grammar, Writing on Demand, and Media. Two of the plans for writing about literature focus on…

Case, Linda.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 186-202.
Description of proposed classroom activities for high school study of GP.

Hefling, Carol.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 247-52.
Presents in outline form materials for a unit on medieval history for the high school classroom, incorporating suggestions or using selections from CT.

Alamichel, Marie-Françoise.   Bulletin des Anglicistes Médiévistes 58: 5-37, 2000.
Examines medieval English widows. While Old English literature shows a general lack of interest in marriage and widowhood, Middle English literature is rich in various forms of testimonies. None of the widows surveyed shows true sorrow after the…

Dauby, Helene.   Leo Carruthers, ed. La ronde des saisons: Les saisons dans la litterature et la societe anglaises au Moyen Age (Paris: Presses Universitaires de Paris-Sorbonne, 1998), pp. 101-10.
Examines the diet of the poor widows in CT and the extravagant menus of the Franklin, the numerous recipes in "Le menagier de Paris," and "The Boke of Nurture" by John Russell.

Blandeau, Agnès.   Martine Yvernault and Sophie Cassagnes-Brouquet, eds. Frères et sœurs: Les liens adelphiques dans l'Occident antique et médiéval. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2007, pp. 229-36.
Blandeau examines meanings and connotations of the terms "brother," "brotherly," and "brotherhood" in CT and other medieval texts, from "Beowulf" to Malory's "Le Morte Darthur." Brotherhood ranges widely and can extend to a universal fraternity in a…

Mertens-Fonck, Paule.   Marie-Françoise Alamichel, ed. La complmentarité: Mélanges offerts à Josseline Bidard et Arlette Sancery à l'occasion de leur départ en retraite (SAC 29 [2007], no. 85), pp.177-85.
Two intertwined debates underlie CT: 1) a tension between traditional literature and individualizing contemporary details, and 2) the realist/nominalist debate over universals.

Engel, Claire-Eliane.   Revue des Sciences Humaines 120 (1965): 577-85.
Comments on the historicity and relative chronology of the military campaigns mentioned in the GP description of the Knight, observing how the events are out of sequence and how Chaucer's may have known of them.

Dor, Juliette de Caluwe-, trans.   Ghent: Editions Scientifiques E. Story-Scientia, 1977.
French translation of GP, KnT, MilT, and NPT, the first part of a projected complete translation of CT.

Mertens-Fonck, Paule.   Colette Stévanovitch, ed. L'Articulation langue-littérature dans les textes médiévaux anglais. Collection GRENDEL, no. 5 (Nancy: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur, 2005), pp. 99-116.
CT reflects the medieval philosophical debate over universals, posing traditional literature in tension with more fully actualised characterization.

Clouet, Richard.   Bulletin des Anglicistes Medievistes 59: 15-25, 2001.
Surveys overt and covert links and references to Spain in CT.

Morrison, Stephen.   Colette Stévanovitch, ed. L'Articulation langue-littérature dans les textes médiévaux anglais (Nancy: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur, 2005), pp. 117-32.
Explores the combination of "manly" and "man," as well as the meaning of "manly," in reference to the GP description of the Monk.

Dor, Juliette.   Marie-Francoise Alamichel, ed. La complémentarité: Mélanges offerts á Josseline Bidard et Arlette Sancery á l'occasion de leur départ en retraite (Paris: AMAES, 2005), pp. 165-76.
Analyses Chaucer's polysemous uses of quite(n) in CT in light of late fourteenth-century concerns with contracts and debts, disclosing various tensions among the tellers' origins, professions, and ranks.

Keller, Wolfram R., and Margitta Rouse.   Troianalexandrina: Anuario sobre literatura medieval de materia clásica 19 (2019): 313-32.
Considers the "temporal hybridity" of late medieval engagements with the matter of Troy, including discussion of the "epistemological legitimization of a poetics of innovation" in HF that extends into early modern treatments of the material, evident…
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