Browse Items (16470 total)

Duncan, Thomas G., ed.   Cambridge: Brewer, 2013.
Offers a "comprehensive selection" of short poems and lyrical interpolations from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries (Part I) and from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries (Part II), topically arranged, in normalized spelling, with sidebar…

Duncan, Thomas G., ed.   London: Penguin, 1995.
Having normalized the language "in accordance with the grammar and spelling of late fourteenth-century London English," Duncan divides this "comprehensive selection" of lyrics into four thematic groups, three of which include lyrics attributed to…

Davies, R. T., ed.   London: Faber and Faber, 1963.
[Evanston, Illinois]: Northwestern University Press, 1964.
Anthologizes 187 English lyric poems and lyrical excerpts from the twelfth through the sixteenth centuries, arranged in chronological order, with an Introduction (pp. 13-49), on-page glosses, end-of-text notes, an appendix of Types and Titles of the…

Brantley, Jessica.   Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2022.
Offers "a general introduction to manuscript studies for readers whose particular interests lie in medieval literature," commenting on material concerns, paleography, decoration and illustration, codicology, and principles of manuscript description,…

Bahr, Arthur, and Alexandra Gillespie.   Chaucer Review 47.4 (2013): 346-60.
Introduces a special issue on manuscript studies and history of the book in relation to critical theory; also, summarizes the issue's articles. Discusses CT, TC, and Th.

Lundeen, Stephanie Thompson.   DAI A69.05 (2008): n.p.
Considers Chaucer's works in the context of medieval poetry, approached here as "instantiations of performance," i.e., understood as interplay among author, performer, audience, and the material form of the texts.

Kratzmann, Gregory,and James Simpson,eds.   Cambridg : D. S. Brewer, 1986.
Nineteen essays by various hands emphasizing religious and ethical change and focusing on Chaucer's religious poetry and "Piers Plowman" but including religious writings in the Old English period and the sixteenth century.

Ashton, Gail.   New York: Continuum, 2010.
Outlines the literary and social contexts in which late medieval English romances were produced. Assesses a number of these romances and their "afterlives," exploring their gender affiliations, uses of symbols, concerns with familial and cultural…

Galván [Reula], Fernando.   Atlantis 11.1-2 (1989): 191-207.
A bibliography of Old and Middle English scholarship in Spanish up to 1988, with particular attention to Chaucer. Includes listings of M.A. and Ph.D. theses, and offers separate sections on critical studies of Chaucer (items 147-78) and editions and…

Bale, Anthony, and Sebastian Sobecki, eds.   Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.
Gathers secular and religious travel narratives of England
and France. The volume is divided into three sections: critical essays; twenty-six texts, or excerpts, from narratives, including SqT; and supporting bibliographies.

Kemmler, Fritz, and Courtnay Konshuh, eds.   Tübingen: Gunter Narr, 2008.
Surveys Old English and Middle English works to determine interconnectedness of the language and texts. Brief discussion of Chaucer's GP. Includes glossary and bibliography.

Webb, Diana.   Houndmills, Basingstoke; and New York : Palgrave, 2002.
An introduction to pilgrimage in medieval western Europe that describes motives for pilgrimage, kinds of pilgrims, geography, relics and souvenirs, responses to pilgrimage, etc. Webb pays recurrent attention to CT, especially as a depiction of social…

Hostetter, Aaron K.   J. Michelle Coghlin, ed. The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020), pp. 15-28
Describes the social implications of food and dining practices in late medieval cookbooks, social records, and aesthetic literature, commenting on the culinary concerns associated with the Franklin, Prioress, Squire, and Cook in GP and similar…

Robertson, Elizabeth.   Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature 26 (2007): 67-79.
Includes recurrent attention to Chaucer studies, while exploring the history of feminism in medieval studies and the need for a "dialectical questioning" between concerns of particular historical women and their more general contexts.

Lindahl, Carl, John McNamara, and John Lindow, eds.   Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-CLIO, 2000.
Individual entries on topics from "Accused Queen" to "Zither" include brief descriptions and, when appropriate, bibliography. One entry on Chaucer (1.167-73); multiple references to motifs in his works, especially in CT.

Arn, Mary-Jo, ed.   Binghamton, N.Y.: Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies, 1995.
Nine essays on medieval food and drink, including their representation in medieval art and poetry.

Burrow, J. A., and Ian P. Wei, eds.   Woodbridge, Suffolk; and Rochester, N.Y. : Boydell, 2000.
Nine essays by various authors on topics related to common attitudes toward the future in the Middle Ages, i.e., theories and practices rather than apocalyptic concerns. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Medieval Futures under…

Rogers, Will, and Christopher Michael Roman, eds.   Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute Publications, 2020.
Discusses medieval English, French, and Latin sources and offers directions for discovering queerness by connecting these texts to recent developments in queer theory, including queer phenomenology and queer failure. For two essays pertaining to…

Brosamer, Matthew James.   Dissertation Abstracts International 58 (1998): 4643A.
Assesses gluttony in CT and Piers Plowman, arguing that each presents consumption as both an occasion of the sin and part of its symbolic apparatus. In these works and in scriptural and patristic traditions, gluttony signifies human potential for all…

Mieszkowski, Gretchen.   New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.
Western tradition bifurcates the go-between into two separate traditions: the first, working for idealized love; the second, working for lustful sexual conquest. Mieszkowski surveys go-between figures in medieval tradition and discusses how Pandarus…

Shiomi, Tomoyuki.   Tokyo : Kobundo, 2005.
Assesses Chaucer's works in the light of medieval English and European art.

Irvine, Martin.   Speculum 60 (1985): 850-66.
In HF, Chaucer makes parodic use of traditional topics of the "artes grammaticae," especially in the Eagle's explanation of the propagation of sound and in Chaucer's treatment of the reliability and importance of "auctores."

Jones, Dylan.   Studies in Medieval Language and Literature 29 (2014): 85-101.
Identifiess medieval and Renaissance characteristics of RvT and an early modern analogue,"The Mylner of Abyngton," and concludes that the two works share much in common.

Nolan, Maura.   Chaucer Review 47.4 (2013): 465-76.
Examines what is lost when we look at a digitized manuscript instead of the material book, which invokes the senses of touch, smell, and taste and the habits of the medieval reader. Mentions the graphic tail-rhyme in Th as a type of habit that…

Kanno, Masahiko, Hiroshi Yamashita, Masatoshi Kawasaki, Junko Asakawa, and Naoko Shirai, eds.   Tokyo: Yushodo, 1997.
In Japanese and English. For eight essays that pertain to Chaucer; search for Medieval Heritage under Alternative Title.
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