Browse Items (16381 total)

Hanawalt, Barbara A.   Fiona Somerset and Nicholas Watson, eds. Truth and Tales: Cultural Mobility and Medieval Media (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2015), pp. 168–86.
Discusses Chaucer's use of humor in describing the "thieving millers" in GP and RvT. Looks at class and social issues among food providers, including cooks, bakers, and taverners, and civic governing entities responsible for overseeing production of…

Hanawalt, Barbara A., ed.   Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992.
Ten essays explore the intersection between history and literature in Chaucer's lifetime; issues of class, gender, and politics are recurrent concerns. One essay on literature and Richard II's court, two on Langland, one on medieval hunting, and one…

Hanawalt, Barbara A.,and David Wallace, eds.   Minneapolis and London : University of Minnesota Press, 1999.
Ten essays by various authors and an introduction by the editors. The essays focus on intersections between literary and historical texts, especially those concerned with representations of law and transgression of law. For three essays that pertain…

Handal, Saleem A.   Dissertation Abstracts International 53 (1992): 1724A.
Permeating Chaucer's writing, Augustinian psychology and philosophy can be foregrounded in interpreters' theater productions of TC.

Handley, Graham, ed.   Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1986.
Study guide that includes text and facing-page prose translation of the GP description of the Pardoner and of PardPT, with same-page notes, end-of-text glosses, a "structural summary," and shaping the Pardoner's materials.

Handyside, I. G., ed.   Houndsmill, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1978.
School edition of MilPT and the description of the Miller in GP. Facing-page (modern prose opposite Chaucer's poem), accompanied by explanatory notes, a glossary, appreciative criticism of the Miller's characterization, commentary on the setting and…

Handyside, I. H., ed..   London: Pan Books, 1978.
School edition of WBPT and the description of the Wife in GP. Facing-page (modern prose opposite Chaucer's poem), accompanied by explanatory notes, a glossary, appreciative criticism of the Wife's characterization, commentary on the structure of…

Hanks, D. Thomas (Jr.)   Christianity & Literature 33 (1984): 7-12.
The pun on "pryvetee," meaning in ME "private affairs" and "private parts," mocks the orderly piety of KnT and becomes part of a series of sacred-profane juxtapositions which heighten the bawdiness and comic effect of MilT.

Hanks, D. Thomas, Jr.   English Language Notes 31:3 (1994): 25-29.
The lord in SumT speaks of "the salt of the erthe and the savor," usually taken as a reference to Matthew 5.13. Yet no Bible known to Chaucer uses the word "savor" (Latin "vapor") in this passage. Instead, Chaucer may have drawn the phrase from…

Hanks, D. Thomas, Jr.   Chaucer Yearbook 4 (1997): 33-43.
SumP and various puns in SumT not only transform Friar John into a fart but also indicate that his prayers invert the Pentecostal wind and "suggest that his brethern share his odious nature."

Hanks, D. Thomas, Jr.   T. L. Burton and John F. Plummer, eds. "Seyd in Forme and Reverence": Essays on Chaucer and Chaucerians in Memory of Emerson Brown, Jr. (Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio Press, 2005), pp. 219-36.
Surveys Chaucer's concern with the coexistence of a beneficent God and the suffering of humans in KnT, MLT, ClT, and FranT. Chaucer often poses this issue by alluding to Job.

Hanks, D. Thomas,Jr.   Chaucer Review 18 (1983): 182-86.
Establishes parallels between MLT and "Emare" of manuscript Cotton Caligula A II to explain details not found in Trevet.

Hanks, D. Thomas,Jr., Arminda Kamphausen, and James Wheeler.   Chaucer Yearbook 3 (1996): 35-53.
Shows how modern punctuation obscures subtleties of Chaucer's poetry, drawing examples from CT. Unpunctuated, Chaucer's verse has a rich poetic syntax, especially in the ways it compels readers to posit one meaning, adjust that meaning to a second…

Hanks, D. Thomas.   Helen Phillips, ed. Chaucer and Religion (Cambridge: Brewer, 2010), pp. 183-88.
Discusses how US students' "grasp of Chaucer's work is hampered by their lack of biblical and doctrinal background" and offers suggestions for teaching CT, including journal exercises that foster interaction among students.

Hanks, Tom.   Medieval Perspectives 25 (2010): 50-67.
Tallies a number of "significant" allusions to the Vulgate Bible in CT and offers pedagogical advice on how to remedy the problem of modern students missing these allusions or misreading them.

Hanley, Katherine, C.S.J.   Northeast Modern Language Association Newsletter 2.2 (1970):112-114.
Describes the multiple puns on "prick" in Tho, denotative and connotative.

Hanly, Michael G.   Norman, Okla. : Pilgrim Books, 1990.
Investigates "topics relevant to the central question: Did Chaucer use the 'Roman de Troyle' of Beauvau, Seneschal of Anjou," in the composition of TC? Hanly reviews a number of candidates for authorship of the "Roman" and concludes that Chaucer…

Hanly, Michael Gerard.   Dissertation Abstracts International 49 (1989): 2213A.
Supporting Robert A. Pratt's theory in SP 53 (1956) that Chaucer drew on a French translation of Boccaccio, Hanly explores parallels, both verbal and thematic; the likelihood of Beauvau as translator; and the possibility of Chaucer's familiarity with…

Hanly, Michael.   Viator 28: 306-32, 1997.
Examines how the careers of several courtiers-diplomats-poets can help us reconstruct the "nature of literary transmission" from Italy to France to England. Discusses Philippe de Mézières, Honorat Bovet, Jean Muret and Giovanni Moccia, and…

Hanna, N[atalie].   Dissertation Abstracts International C75.01 (2016): n.p.
Examines "the semantics and pragmatics of nouns that denote gender and social status in Chaucer's literature, e.g., "knyght," "lady," "leche," "wyf '," focusing on MerT, FranT, ABC, and TC, but addressing most of Chaucer's works.

Hanna, Natalie.   Historical Reflections / Reflexions historiques 42.1 (2016): 61-74.
Tabulates and analyzes the "gender-based" nouns used of the marital couple in MerT, compared with uses elsewhere in CT, focusing on uses of "wyf" and "housbonde" (61 versus 4 uses in MerT), and on the locution of "taking" a wife. Such usages connect…

Hanna, Natalie.   Comparative Drama 55 (2021): 380-403.
Shows that in his pamphlet "A Strange Horse-Race," Thomas Dekker quotes FranT "to illustrate hospitality" and the force of "binding oaths"; in his play "The Shoemaker''s Holiday," he "drew on Chaucer's Franklin for material about credit and debt."…

Hanna, Natalie.   Roman Bleier, Brian Coleman, and Clare Fletcher, eds. Memory and Identity in the Medieval and Early Modern World (New York: Peter Lang, 2022), pp. 229-49.
Questions how and to what extent recurrent mention of Hector in TC helps to characterize Troilus as a knight. Instances and collocations of "knight," "worthy," related terms, and references to Hector, generally not found in Chaucer's source text,…

Hanna, Ralph III, and Traugott Lawler, eds., using materials collected by Karl Young and Robert A. Pratt.   Athens, Ga. and London: University of Georgia Press, 2014.
Critical edition of seven commentaries (one excerpted) on Walter Map's Latin antifeminist treatise, with analyses of contents and impact, manuscript information, variants and emendations, extensive notes, and facing-page translations. The…

Hanna, Ralph III.   Martin Stevens and Daniel Woodward, eds. The Ellesmere Chaucer: Essays in Interpretation (San Marino, Calif.: Huntington Library; Tokyo: Yushodo, 1995), pp. 225-43.
Ellesmere was not edited in a modern sense; i.e., it was not revised or corrected for such matters as metrical regularity. Having compared approximately 6,000 lines of Ellesmere with parallel lines in six other manuscripts nearly contemporary with…
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