Browse Items (16470 total)

Cooney, Helen, ed.   Dublin and Portland, Ore. : Four Courts Press, 2001.
Ten essays by various authors on the role of language and literature in fifteenth-century England, Chaucer's influence at the time, and the relations of fifteenth-century literature to earlier and later tradition. Mention of Chaucer recurs…

Cawsey, Kathy, and Jason Harris, eds.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2007.
Ten essays by various authors, with an introduction by the editors and a comprehensive index. Topics range from Jerome's theory of translation to Julian of Norwich to Protestant reception of medieval literature. For three essays that pertain to…

Scattergood, John.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2006.
Reprints fifteen previously published essays by Scattergood, plus a sixteenth, original essay, "The Copying of Medieval and Early Renaissance Manuscripts" (pp. 21-82). The latter--which discusses the habits and status of medieval scribes, early…

McCormack, Frances.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2007.
Investigates Lollard vocabulary, translation strategies, and rhetorical tropes, arguing that the Parson and ParsT cannot categorically be identified as Lollard. Nonetheless, unmistakable elements of Lollardy undercut the hermeneutic stability of what…

Osborough, W. N.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2008.
Explores literary allusions used in the courts of law in Britain and Ireland, revealing how literature conceptually informs practical life. Osborough briefly mentions Chaucer when discussing etymology in a nineteenth-century case involving…

Hazell, Dinah.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2009.
Describes various kinds of poverty in England in the second half of the fourteenth century, summarizing economic and social factors and assessing their representation in various works of literature in English and Latin across a range of genres.…

Carney, Clíodhna, and Frances McCormack, eds.   Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2013.
Eleven essays about Chaucer and his works that form, in the words of its editors, a "general" rather than a "thematically unified" collection. Threads that run through multiple chapters include rhetoric, ethics, and poetic form. For individual…

Scattergood, John,and Julia Boffey,eds.   Dublin: Four Courts, 1997.
Ten essays initially presented at the first three conferences of the Early Book Society: Durham, 1989; Trinity College, Dublin, 1991; and Sheffield, 1993. The essays consider texts and books produced between the late fourteenth and early sixteenth…

Ni Cuilleanain, Eilean, and J. D. Pheifer, eds.   Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1993.
An introduction and eleven essays consider romances of the English tradition written between the late Middle Ages and Spenser, with recurrent concern for relations to the Continental tradition of romance. Topics include Chaucer, the "Gawain" poet,…

Coppola, Nancy, Norbert Elliot, David Geithman, Nancy Jackson, Eric Katz, and Burt Kimmelman.   Dubuque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt, 1997.
College textbook designed to introduce undergraduate students to the "ways that specialists in the social sciences and the humanities analyze environmental problems." Chapter 4, "Literature and the Environment," opens with a description of LGWP and…

Donohue, James John, trans.   Dubuque, Iowa: Loras College Press, 1966.
Item not seen. WorldCat records indicate that this collection includes modernizations of GP, KnT, PardT, MkT, NPT, and SNT, portions of which were previously published in 1954 and 1960.

Donohue, James J., trans.   Dubuque, Iowa: Loras College Press, 1974.
Verse translations of all of Chaucer's poetry, with the exceptions of CT, TC, and Rom, based on Skeat's edition and arranged in his chronology. Each translation follows Chaucer's verse form and is preceded by a one-page foreword that comments on…

Donohue, James J., trans.   Dubuque, Iowa: Loras College Press, 1975.
A Modern English translation in rhyme royal stanzas, based primarily on F. N. Robinson's text.

Donohue, James J., trans.   Dubuque, Iowa: Loras College Press, 1979.
Complete translation, with portions previously published: GP (1954 and 1966); KnT (1958 and 1966); MkT (1961 and 1966); and PardT, NPT, and SNT (1956 and 1966).

Fisher, Marlene, ed.   Dubuque, Iowa: Wm. C. Brown, 1969.
A textbook anthology of literary works (some excerpted) that pertain to love and marriage, from the classical period to modern America. Includes MerT in Nevill Coghill's modern translation (pp. 17-44), with a brief descriptive introduction and…

Hernández Pérez, María Beatriz.   Dulce María González Doreste and María de Pilar Mendoza Ramos, eds. Nouvelles de la rose: Actualité et perspectives du "Roman de la rose" (La Laguna: Servicio de Publicaciones, 2011), pp. 455-78.
Assesses Rom as a translation and also as a key moment in Chaucer's literary career that will make him the father of English poetry.

Burnley, J. D.   Durham Theses. Durham University. [http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7918/].
Examines the semantics of approximately fifty words that signify "benevolence and malevolence within courtly contexts in the works of Chaucer," exploring them diachronically and attending to "extralinguistic" factors in order to pursue a "literary…

Aers, David.   Durham University Journal 38 (1977): 201-05.
BD is about art as well as consolation--the art that engages real attention with its game and objectifies grief only to escape into its own fixity and so shatter finally on the existentiality of loss.

Schlesinger, George.   Durham University Journal, n.s., 52 (1991): 5-8.
Critical attempts to find a single meaning for ManT reveal the tale's own defiance of any didactic or schematized moral.

Dinshaw, Carolyn.   Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2012.
Addresses queer readings and the asynchrony of time within medieval tales in relation to "amateur medievalists" and scholars. Study includes discussion of temporality, queer historicism, and autobiographical anecdotes, providing a fresh way of…

Biddick, Kathleen.   Durham, N. C., and London : Duke University Press, 1998.
Explores the "contemporary consequences of the methods used to initiate medieval studies as an academic discipline in the nineteenth century," particularly how the discipline is "still intimately bound" to the "fathers" of medieval studies.

Edwards, Robert R.   Durham, N.C., and London: Duke University Press, 1989.
Argues that Chaucer's dream visions are concerned with both "mimetic representation" (the narrator's story of his dream) and aesthetic systems. Chapter 1, "The Practice of Theory," discusses Chaucer's study of Latin, Italian, and French writers to…

Williams, George.   Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1965.
Detects flaws in previous critical approaches to Chaucer and, as an alternative, reads his works as expressions of his "interest in actual persons," especially John of Gaunt and his circle. In this view, BD, Mars, TC, PF, HF, and most portions of CT…

Wood, Chauncey.   Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1984.
Asks for a "Gowerian" reading of TC--by which is meant "moral Gower," the poet of "honeste," married love. "What Chaucer Really Did to Il Filostrato" was to re-shape the story of the besotted Trojan prince as a warning to the inhabitants of "New…

Huerta, Monica.   Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2021.
Creative non-fiction contemplation of storytelling, Chicanx identity, and spatial politics, including, in Chapter 3, "Disciplines and Disciples," a brief consideration of "discipline" in CYT (8.1253), as it relates to alchemy, deception,…
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