Browse Items (16381 total)

Bradbury, Jill Marie, Geoffrey Clegg, Stephanie L. Kerschbaum,
Pamela Kincheloe, and Tonya Stremlau.  
Literature Compass 16.1 (2019): n.p.
A group of "deaf/Deaf/hard of hearing scholars with wide-ranging expertise in literary studies, rhetoric, disability studies, and Deaf Studies" express "deep reservations" about Robinson's essay.

Solberg, Emma Margaret.   New Chaucer Studies: Pedagogy & Profession 2.2 (2021): 134-53.
Responds to earlier essays in NCSPP, adding comments on the sexual biases of the opening of GP, comparison of the Man in Black of BD and Marie de France's Guigemar, Chauce''s (and others') self-deprecation as a form of (sexualized) power, and…

Jagot, Shazia.   Postmedieval: A Journal of Medieval Cultural Studies 13 (2022): 621-24.
Responds to essays included in a special issue of "postmedieval," and comments on SqT, identifying ways that the work and its brass steed--"belong to a world of the "sıra" in ways that reflect the entangled and often diffuse ways that fictional…

Steiner, Emily.   Mary C. Flannery and Katie C. Walter, eds. The Culture of Inquisition in Medieval England (Cambridge: Brewer, 2013), pp. 164-72.
Responds to the nine essays in this volume, exploring relations among inquisition, innovation, creativity, and imagination. Discusses LGWP as a poem that "seeks its inventiveness in law at the same time that it invites its readers to enjoy the…

Hansen, Elaine Tuttle.   Studies in the Age of Chaucer 27 (2005): 277-87.
Expresses concerns about contemporary higher education--from "prevailing careerism to the overall decline in literary reading"--and encourages "Chaucerian values" among university administrators.

Cooper, Helen.   Studies in the Age of Chaucer 22: 425-33, 2000.
Critical response to essays on MkT by Ann W. Astell, Terry Jones, Henry Ansgar Kelly, Stephen Knight, and Richard Neuse.

Swenson, Haylie.   Will Rogers and Christopher Michael Roman, eds. Medieval Futurity: Essays for the Future of a Queer Medieval Studies (Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute Publications, 2020), pp. 189-96.
Reassesses the role and value of the falcon and the mechanical horse in SqT. Demonstrates through these depictions that SqT creates "interspecies and intrasexual relationships of care outside of the gendered human norms of chivalric romance."

Ross, Valerie A.   AEstel 4 (1996): 29-56.
Examines feminist and antifeminist readings Criseyde, arguing that--like Chaucer, who appropriates his sources, and like his narrator, who constantly negotiates and repositions himself in relation to Lollius--Criseyde performs, mimes, and parodies…

Piercy, Hannah.   Woodbridge: D. S. Brewer, 2023.
Anatomizes the motif of resistance to love "across the chronology and variety of medieval English romance, from twelfth-century Anglo-Norman lais to fifteenth-century prose works," exploring "ways in which it reinforces or subverts contemporary…

Ishizaka, Ko.   Kansai University Studies in English Language and Literature: 137-44, 2000.
Discusses the "images" of several scenes in HF, following V. A. Kolve's article "Chaucer and the Visual Arts" (1975).

Shikii, Kumiko.   Sella (Tokyo) 13 (1983): 85-97.
TC scholarship is reviewed. It is important to read TC in terms of the Christian view of life.

Palmer, R. Barton.   David Galef, ed. Second Thoughts: A Focus on Rereading (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1998), pp. 169-95.
Argues that in reading BD medieval audiences would also have reread Machaut's "Fonteinne Amoureuse" and recalled other works by Chaucer's predecessor. Chaucer's derivative version of the account of Ceyx and Alcyone "thematizes the story as a…

Stenner, Rachel, Tamsin Badcoe, and Gareth Griffith, eds.   Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019.
Twelve essays on Spenser's knowledge of and uses of Chaucer as source or inspiration. The introduction by the editors summarizes earlier critical studies, describes the essays, and asserts that the essays together "characterise the relationships…

Madsen, Deborah L.   New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994.
Defines allegory by structural features of plot rather than by content, surveying theory and history of the genre from the classics to contemporary criticism. Briefly considers BD and PF as allegories.

Arner, Timothy.   Comparative Literature 69.2 (2017): 160-80.
Shows that Lucan's "Bellum civile," the medieval "accessus" tradition, and "vitae Lucani" together depict the Roman poet as a "violated female," victimized by his "tyrannical emperor," and abruptly silenced, arguing that this legacy influenced LGW…

Barefield, Laura D.   Dissertation Abstracts International 59 (1999): 2489A.
At the crux of chronicle and romance, Geoffrey of Monmouth's "Historia" provides much of the basis for later literature. The work emphasizes women not only as child bearers but also as speakers who could uphold or deny legitimacy. Barefield discusses…

Krummel, Miriamne Ara.   The Medieval Postcolonial Jew, in and out of Time (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2022), pp. 185-229; illus.
Interprets four manuscript versions of ClT (here retitled "The Legend of the Litel Clergeon and the Jews") that occur outside the context of CT, "excise" Chaucer's authorship, and adjust their temporalities, addressing "their own distinct identities,…

Lawton, Lesley.   Jean-Paul Debax, ed. Actes de l'atelier "Moyen Age" du XLVe congrès de la SAES (Société des Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur). Paris: Publications de l'Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur, 2006, pp. 31-46.
Discusses John Gower's "Vox Clamantis," with passing mention of Chaucer.

Edwards, A. S. G.   Derek Pearsall, ed. New Directions in Later Medieval Manuscript Studies: Essays from the 1998 Harvard Conference (York; and Rochester, N.Y.: York Medieval Press, in association with Boydell and Brewer, 2000), pp. 65-79.
Edwards surveys attempts to "historicize" the representation of Middle English texts, from black letter type to computer transcription, focusing on the nineteenth-century efforts of Frederic Madden. Includes recurrent references representing the…

Morris, Andrew Jeffrey.   Dissertation Abstracts International 65 (2005): 4555A
As part of a larger discussion of medieval estate management and its literary representations, Morris examines the character of Piers Plowman and Chaucer's Oswald the Reeve.

Moore, Colette.   Dissertation Abstracts International 65 (2005): 3815A
Moore shows that medieval poems (including Chaucer's) "exploit the less-determined systems of medieval speech marking for aesthetic and rhetorical purposes."

Grady, Frank.   New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005.
The virtuous pagan motif plays a minor thematic role but an important structural function in the scene of Troilus's ascent at the end of TC.

Chance, Jane.   Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 38 : 75-92, 2002.
The Knight, in representing the gods, omits any reference to the castration of Saturn in order to justify the ascendancy of Jupiter, the authority of Theseus, and the political situation of the later fourteenth century, "a dark time in which…

Robertson, Elizabeth, and Christine M. Rose, eds.   New York and Basingstoke : Palgrave, 2001.
Eleven essays about literary depictions of rape in Chaucer, Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Latin comedies, Ovidian narratives, and the Philomel story. Includes an introduction by the editors, an afterword by Christopher Cannon, and a revised reprint…

Pigg, Daniel F.   In Albrecht Classen, ed. Magic and Magicians in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Time: The Occult in Pre-Modern Sciences, Medicine, Literature, Religion, and Astrology (Boston, Mass.: De Gruyter, 2017), pp. 489-506.
Comments on the "shadowy slippage" between science and magic in FranT and the deceptive practices evident in CYPT suggesting that "Chaucer explored magic and science" in order to distinguish between "phenomena that can be controlled" and those that…
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