Browse Items (16472 total)

Pizzorno, Patrizia Grimaldi.   Patrizia Grimaldi Pizzorno. Metaphor at Play: Chaucer's Poetics of Exemplarity (Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso, 1997), pp. 79-109.
In BD, Chaucer combines a series of sustained unconventional allusions to the Narcissus exemplum from the "Roman de la Rose" with the narrative of Ceyx and Alcyone from Ovid's "Metamorphoses" to produce a "moral lesson against suicide" with a…

Plumer, Danielle Cunniff.   Dissertation Abstracts International 59 (1999): 2490A.
Fourteenth-century English dialogue between Wycliffite heresy and religious orthodoxy brought a redefinition of authorship and authority.

Plummer John F.   Robert G. Benson and Susan J. Ridyard, eds. New Readings of Chaucer's Poetry (Rochester, N.Y., and Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2003), pp. 107-18.
Plummer explores sexual references and innuendoes in the speeches of the Host, arguing that sexual and textual power are inseparable for the Host. The Parson's concern with spiritual productivity balances the Host's concern with physical generation,…

Plummer, John F.   Chaucer Review 18 (1983): 49-60.
In his portrait of the village parson, the Reeve uses the language of traditional complaint literature, especially in attacking simony.

Plummer, John F.   Vox Feminae: Studies in Medieval Woman's Songs (Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, 1981), pp. 135-54.
In the character of Absolon in MilT, Chaucer exploits the literary fact that "the minor orders were not taken seriously as lovers, but were found precisely in the burlesque world of the 'fabliau'." The willfulness and sexual appetite of the Wife of…

Plummer, John F.   English Language Notes 18.2 (1980): 89-90.
As a number of bawdy lyrics attest, the comparison of the Wife's hat in GP (1.470-71) to a "bokeler" and "targe" suggest sexual and martial overtones. Through the intervening metaphor to joust/to have intercourse, both buckler and target signify what…

Plummer, John F.   T. L. Burton and John F. Plummer, eds. "Seyd in Forme and Reverenceœ": Essays on Chaucer and Chaucerians in Memory of Emerson Brown, Jr. (Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio Press, 2005), pp. 237-45.
Considers citations of Paul's epistles to Timothy in WBPT, PardPT, and ParsPT, reading them in light of late fourteenth-century concern with preaching and pastoral care--Lollard and anti-Lollard, mendicant and antimendicant. Chaucer was concerned…

Plummer, John F., ed.   Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, 1981.
Essays by various hands. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Vox Feminae under Alternative Title.

Plummer, John F., ed.   Norman and London: University of Oklahoma Press, 1995.
Edition of SumT, based on the Hengwrt manuscript. Collates nine additional manuscripts and the major editions from Caxton to "The Riverside Chaucer." Spelling is lightly modernized and punctuation is introduced. Notes, critical commentary, and…

Plummer, John F., III.   Leeds Studies in English 31: 269-92. , 2000.
Both Donne ("The Sun Rising") and Chaucer (TC 3.1415-1527) were familiar with Ovid's Amores 1.13), but Chaucer may well have influenced the Renaissance poet directly. Such intertextual issues are complicated by the fact that Renaissance editors had…

Plunkett, Michael.   Dissertation Abstracts International A80.03 (2018): n.p.
Suggests that in "Cymbeline," "The Tempest," and "The Taming of the Shrew," Shakespeare sets his work in conversation with the dream visions BD and HF, thereby allowing Shakespeare to claim a place in the Chaucerian line of English canon and to…

Pockell, Leslie, ed.   New York: Warner, 2001.
Includes the first eighteen lines of GP in Middle English.

Pockell, Leslie, ed.   New York: Grand Central, 2003.
Includes the first third of MercB in normalized Middle English.

Polasky, Patty.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 202-10.
Briefly describes eleven "ideas and activities that have been gleaned from various sources" for teaching the GP.

Pollard, Anthony J.   Stephen H. Rigby, ed., with the assistance of Alastair J. Minnis. Historians on Chaucer: The "General Prologue" to the "Canterbury Tales" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014), pp. 77-93.
Explains the role of the "yeoman in medieval society," providing different interpretations for understanding the social significance of Chaucer's Yeoman.

Pollner, Clausdirk,Helmut Rohlfing, and Frank-Rutger Hausmann,eds.   Bonn: Romanistischer Verlag, 1996.
For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Bright Is the Ring of Words under Alternative Title.

Polzella, Marion L.   Chaucer Review 10 (1976): 279-86.
In Scog and PF, Chaucer creates a vision of the world of love through which he may comment on his own craft. The poet-narrator's being uninitiated to love is a quality ideally suitable to this double focus on poetry and love.

Pomerleau, Mary Farrell, trans.   Arcadia, Calif.: Charlemagne Press, 1995.
Modern translation of ParsPT, Ret, and the GP description of the Parson, accompanied by brief notes and a glossary, Farrell's pen-and-ink illustrations, and her introduction (pp. 15-29) that comments on the structure and outlook of ParsT and what we…

Pompe, Hedwig.   Berlin: De Gruyter, 2012.
Uses media and communication theory to explore relations between modernity and the rise of the newspaper as a medium in Germany. Includes in Chapter III.3 an excursus ("Excurs") on fame and rumor in HF, observing in Chaucer's depiction of them a…

Ponce, Timothy.   Sigma Tau Delta Review 13 (2016): 25-31.
Traces the Jewish and Christian understandings of crucifixion, arguing that the image underlies the "didactic nature" of PhyT where "repeated images of injustice" are "placed in dialogue with the symbolism of the cross," reminding the reader of…

Pope, John C.   Mary J. Carruthers and Elizabeth D. Kirk, eds. Acts of Interpretation (Norman, Okla.: Pilgrim Books, 1982), pp. 345-62.
Explicates tensions within several poetic evocations of mutability in English poetry: the Old English "Wanderer," "Beowulf," the end of Chaucer's TC (5.1835-48), and Spenser's Mutability Cantos. Chaucer and Spenser both use "equivocation" to express…

Pope, John Collins, and Helge Kökeritz, readers.   New Haven, CT: Whitlock's, 1954.
Item not seen. WorldCat records indicate that these readings were released in LP recording and/or cassette tape recurrently by Whitlock's, Educational Audio Visual, and Lexington Records with slightly varied titles. The selections from Chaucer, read…

Pope, Rob.   New York : St. Martin's Press, 2001.
Originally published in 1988. Designed for examination preparation, this guide poses a series of issues for GP and the individual tales in CT; TC; and the dream poems, especially PF: kind of work, what it is about, characterization, the argument,…

Popescu, Dan Nicolae.   Messages, Sages, and Ages: The Bukovinian Journal of Cultural Studies 3.2 (2016): 31-35.
Maintains that Chaucer uses parody to critique discrepancies between Christian ideals and human realities, exploring ways that sexual activities and descriptions in MilT, an earthy fabliau, parody the courtly ideals of KnT, an idealized romance.…

Popova, M. K.   Vestnik Leningradskogo Universiteta. Serija Istorii, Jazyka i Literatury 14 (1980): 50-55.
In Russian; with English summary (p. 55): "The realistic tendencies of 'The Canterbury Tales,' a result of Chaucer's cultivating the traditions of medieval literature, are considered. According to contemporary scholars, the basis for these tendencies…
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