<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/267329">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Defense of Dorigen : Dorigen&#039;s Complaint in the Franklin&#039;s Tale]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Close feminist examination of Dorigen&#039;s complaint in FranT indicates that the Franklin may be ambivalent toward her.]]></dcterms:description>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Reprinted in Keiko Hamaguchi, Chaucer and Women (Tokyo: Eihosha, 2005).]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/264985">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Defense of the Bradshaw Shift]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[The arrangement of CT proposed by Henry Bradshaw a century ago solves the problems of geography and the Endlink to MLT which are present in the Ellesmere arrangement.  Recent arguments against the Bradshaw shift offer no real evidence to reject it.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/273846">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Defense of the Summoner.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Argues that the Summoner &quot;triumphs over&quot; the Friar in their tale-telling competition, revealing his greater intelligence and competence, but also indicating that his social success discloses a more fundamental &quot;malignancy and egotism.&quot; Compares the strategies of the two tale-tellers, exploring multiple ironies.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/266468">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Flaundres]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Summarizes the political, economic, and social aspects of late-medieval Flanders and evokes a sense of English attitudes toward them.  Chaucer&#039;s references and allusions to Flanders and Flemings in GP, Th, ShT, PardT, and CT anticipate the more aggressively anti-Flemish rhetoric of the fifteenth-century &quot;Libelle of Englysche Polycye.&quot;]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/272886">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Hevene and Helle: Anthem for SATB and Organ]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Printed musical score: TC 3.8-14, set to music, with text in Middle English.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/265318">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Love&#039;s Thrall: &#039;The Court of Love&#039; and Its Captives]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Thought to be the work of Chaucer until the 1870s, &quot;The Court of Love&quot; manipulates the conventions of love lyric and allegory, including several details from LGW, PF, and Pity. Such manipulation produces humor, depicting Philogenet as a kind of literary clown, one who mistakes erotic love for grace.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/267369">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In margine alla &#039;Griselda&#039; latina di Petrarca]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Discusses the work of J. B. Severs, the manuscript tradition of Petrarch&#039;s Griselda narrative, and the form in which it would have been accessible to Chaucer.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/267128">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Memory of My Honoured Teacher and Chaucer: From 1931 to 1948]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[In Japanese.]]></dcterms:description>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Looks back on the 1930s and &#039;40s, when the first generation studying medieval English literature in Japan faced various kinds of scholarly obstacles before and after World War II.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/276038">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In My Ear Continuously like a Stream.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Item not seen. WorldCat record indicates that this is a poem composed of lines drawn from a select group of literary works, including CT and works by Kerouac, Camus, Hemingway, Pound, and more.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/277496">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Praise of Animal Laborans, the Laboring Bodies of Chaucer&#039;s General Prologue.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Comments on food-producing labor as a motif in GP (and elsewhere in CT), in contrast with idleness, wealth-seeking, or nonproductive labor, especially among clerics. Associates these concerns with English history and ideological struggle.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/272800">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Praise of Chaucer]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Accepts that much fifteenth-century admiration of Chaucer praises his rhetoric and &quot;ornate eloquence,&quot; but explores comments that convey wider, more sophisticated appreciation of his stylistic range and philosophical depth, considering comments by Lydgate, Skelton, James I, Deschamps, Hoccleve, Usk, Hawes, Bokenham, Dunbar, Douglas, Walton, Ashby, and Henryson.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/276466">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Praise of European Peace: Gower&#039;s Verse Epistle in Thynne&#039;s 1532 Edition of Chaucer&#039;s &quot;Workes.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Considers why Gower&#039;s verse-epistle &quot;In Praise of Peace&quot; was included in William Thynne&#039;s 1532 edition of Chaucer&#039;s works and explores possible motives and collaborations in the process of editing the poem and the volume.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/273423">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Pursuit of &quot;Trewth&quot;: Ambiguity and Meaning in<br />
&quot;Amis and Amiloun.&quot;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[The Middle English romance &quot;Amis and Amiloun&quot; explores the complex concept of &quot;trewth&quot; in the fourteenth century. This essay contends that the binding oath made by childhood friends is reminiscent of the agreement of the GP pilgrims, as well as pledges made in FranT, ClT, and WBT, but differs from the pledge binding Palamon and Arcite in KnT]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/268266">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Quest of What&#039;s on a Woman&#039;s Mind: Gauvain as Dwarf in the Middle Dutch &#039;Wrake van Ragisel&#039;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[In the Middle Dutch &quot;Wrake van Ragisel&quot; (adapted from the Old French &quot;Vengeance Raguisel&quot;), &quot;Walewein, who is transformed into a dwarf, learns what women are exclusively led by their sexual desire,&quot; a different answer to the life question than is found in analogous versions of the tale, including WBT.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/266577">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of &#039;Happiness&#039;: &#039;Felicitas&#039; and &#039;Beatitudo&#039; in Early English Boethius Translations]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Compares Bo with the versions by &quot;Alfred,&quot; Walton (1410), Colville (1556), &quot;I. T.&quot; (1609), and Preston (1695), tracing the assimilation of sophisticated Latin terminology into English discourse.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/271632">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Chaucer: The Needed Narrative]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Appreciative comments on BD, HF, TC, and CT, addressing their concerns with death, isolation, knowledge of self, and above all, the hman need for self-disclosure in confronting these concerns. The human need for narrative is particularly evident in CT (KnT, Mel, WBPT, PardP, and CYT).]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275771">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Chaucer.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Engages several critical approaches to Chaucer works and incorporates them into appreciative commentaries, with particular attention to the poet&#039;s &quot;habit of working&quot; or process of composition, his narrative techniques (not inorganic, but accumulative), themes (the status of poetry and the value of reading), stylistic/rhetorical variety (especially allegory and naturalism), and poet-audience relations.  Organizes the discussions in three groups, i.e., Chaucer&#039;s &quot;spheres of interest&quot;: the dream world, mundane existence, and &quot;imagined life through reading,&quot; emphasizing how Chaucer may have created the works and how they mean. Discusses PF, LGWP, MkT, and PardPT in greatest detail, but treats all major works.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/264151">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Chaucer&#039;s Bawdy]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Among the hitherto unrevealed examples of subtle bawdy humor in Chaucer&#039;s poetry are many in KnT.  These provide suggestive commentary on the Knight&#039;s character.  The Miller&#039;s values probably come closer to Chaucer&#039;s own sentiments than do those reflected in the Knight&#039;s story.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/265306">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Malyne]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[The character Malyne, more complex than her fabliau antecedents, adds an ambiguous subplot to RvT.  Emphasizing disorder, the subplot undercuts the theme of &quot;retribution&quot; in the main storyline.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/274729">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Pity: Chaucerian Poetics and the Suffering of Others.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Considers how Chaucer (in ClT, LGW, and ParsT) develops the concept of pity from European sources, and privileges the concept in English literary discourse.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/268540">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Search of Stow&#039;s Chaucer]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Traces Stow&#039;s declining reputation among eighteenth- and nineteenth-century editors of Chaucer as well as a gradual revival of appreciation of Stow&#039;s edition, first among bibliophiles and later with modern Chaucerians. Dane examines the variants in imprints of Stow&#039;s edition and how these variants are cataloged in the STC. Includes facsimiles of two different title pages from the 1561 edition.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/264953">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In Service of the Flower: Chaucer and the &#039;Legend of Good Women&#039;]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[LGWP reveals the God of Love&#039;s misreading of TC and Rom.  The stories that follow must be read with Alceste&#039;s self-sacrifice and resurrection in mind.  With Alceste&#039;s powers of &quot;translatio,&quot; the sinful pagan lovers rise again to live in Christian poetry.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/270764">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In the Belly of the Tartar Beast: The Mongols and the Medieval English Culinary Imagination]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Explores Western medieval accounts of the Mongols in the context of historic antipathy between &quot;agricultural&quot; societies and their &quot;pastoral&quot;/nomadic rivals. Includes comparative assessments of hunting practices (as seen in BD, &quot;Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,&quot; and &quot;Parlement of the Thre Ages&quot;), warfare, and cuisine.]]></dcterms:description>
</rdf:Description><rdf:Description rdf:about="https://chaucer.lib.utsa.edu/items/show/275639">
    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[In the Event of Laughter: Psychoanalysis, Literature and Comedy.]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Includes brief comments on MilT as an example of &quot;a carnival-like rejection of hierarchies,&quot; aligning it with Alenca Zupančič&#039;s theory that &quot;comedy creates what we understand &#039;human&#039; to be.&quot;]]></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:RDF>
