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Controversy in Literature: Fiction, Drama, and Poetry, with Related Criticism.
Freedman, Morris, ed.
Davis, Paul B. ed. New York: Scribner, 1968.
Davis, Paul B. ed. New York: Scribner, 1968.
An introduction to the study of literature for classroom use, arranged by literary mode and focused thematically on social, religious, and literary controversies. Includes a section titled "Medieval and Modern Chaucer" (pp. 457-81) that raises…
A Poetry Anthology.
Danziger, Marlies K., ed,
Johnson, Wendell Stacy, ed. New York: Random House, 1968.
Johnson, Wendell Stacy, ed. New York: Random House, 1968.
An introduction to poetry for classroom use, with an anthology that includes MercB, Ros, Truth, and Purse, with notes and glosses, based on the edition of F. N. Robinson.
Romance.
Brown, Ashley, ed.
Kimmey, John L., ed. Columbus, Ohio: Merrill, 1968.
Kimmey, John L., ed. Columbus, Ohio: Merrill, 1968.
A classroom anthology of sixteen examples of the literary mode of romance, including FranT in Nevill Coghill's modern poetic translation. The volume describes the mode of romance, offers brief biographies of the writers included, and lists discussion…
Comedy.
Brown, Ashley, ed.
Kimmey, John L., ed. Columbus, Ohio: Merrill, 1968.
Kimmey, John L., ed. Columbus, Ohio: Merrill, 1968.
A classroom anthology of twelve examples of the literary mode of comedy, including MerT in Nevill Coghill's modern poetic translation. The volume describes the mode of comedy, offers brief biographies of the writers included, and lists discussion…
Chaucer's Retraction and the Parson.
Coles, E. R.
University of Portland Review 20.2 (1968): 35-41.
Comments on ParsT as a "literary embodiment of the attitude" the Parson expressed in the GP "as well as the attitude Chaucer reveals" in Ret, suggesting that "the Chaucer of the Retraction is also the Parson of the Tales, by means of whom he…
The Nun's Priest and the Hebrew Pointer.
Cook, James W.
American Notes and Queries 7 (1968): 53-54.
Surmises that, as a satiric response to the anti-Semitism of PrT, NPT may reflect Chaucer's possible knowledge of a twelfth-century "Anglo-Jewish collection of 107 animal fables," the "Mishle Shu' alim," generally attributed to Berechiah Ben Natron…
The Real and the Ideal in the Novella of Italy, France and England: Four Centuries of Change in the Boccaccian Tale.
Rodax, Yvonne
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1968.
Includes (pp. 8-28) impressionistic appreciation of CT for its fusions of realism and idealism in poetic narrative, discussing it as a prelude to assessment of the Boccaccian tradition of novella writing. Treats PrT and NPT as the two best of the…
The Reynardian Tradition in Medieval and Renaissance English Literature.
Pichaske, David Richard.
Ph.D. Dissertation. Ohio University, 1968. Dissertation Abstracts International 30 (1970): 3953A.
Distinguishes between "the Aesopic and the Reynardian" fable traditions, their uses in the sermon tradition, and their impact on various medieval and Renaissance English literary works, including NPT.
Proverbs, Sentences, and Proverbial Phrases from English Writings Mainly Before 1500.
Whiting, Bartlett Jere, with the collaboration of Helen Wescott Whiting
Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1968.
Lists proverbs, proverbial phrases, and sententia from early English writings, arranged alphabetically by topic, with quotations and citations of multiple occurrences in chronological order and indexes of important words and proper nouns. Chaucer is…
Chaucer's Melibee and Tales of Sondry Folk
Hoffman, Richard L.
Classica et Mediaevalia 30 (1969): 552-77.
Defends Mel as a meaningful allegory, considering in turn Chaucer's use of the name "Sophia," his reference to wounded feet, and the "extended account" of Christ's passion which indicate framing attention to the Crucifixion. Then tabulates "three…
Comic Irony and the Sense of Two Audiences in the 'Tale of Gamelyn'
Menkin, Edward Z.
Thoth 10 (1969): 41-53.
The Canterbury tale not written by Chaucer operates both as fabliau and as folk tale, with the relentlessly stupid hero both laughed at by the nobility and empathized with by the bourgeoisie, for whom he represents a triumph of the simple classes…
Geoffrey Chaucer: The Workes, 1532 (a facsimile)
Thynne, William ed. Intro. by D. S. Brewer.
London: Scolar Press, 1969.
Thynne's edition was the first substantial effort at a complete edition of the "Works" of Chaucer. A facsimile of the 1532 edition is here accompanied by appendices containing material from the later editions of 1542, 1561, 1598, and 1602.
The Canterbury Tales: A Selection
Howard, Donald R., ed., with the assistance of James Dean.
New York : New American Library, 1969.
An annotated edition of selections from CT in Middle English, including KnT, MilT, MLT, ClT, SNT, FrT, NPT, RvT, FranT, WBT, MkT, PardT, PrT, and Mel. Reprinted in 2005 with a new foreward (pp. 7-15) by Frank Grady, and in 2013 with an afterword by…
The Prologue and Three Tales
King, Francis W., and Bruce Steele, eds.
[Melbourne]: Cheshire, 1969; [London]: J. Murray, 1971.
Item not seen. The WorldCat record indicates that this is an edition, with notes and commentary, of GP, PardPT, PrT, and NPT.
Romaunt of the Rose
Piehler, Paul, and George Bland.
Hudson, Québec: Golden Clarion Literary Services, 1969(?).
Item not seen; the WorldCat records indicate that this is a reading by Piehler and Bland of selections from Rom in Middle English.
Chaucer's Mind and Art
Cawley, A. C., ed.
New York: Barnes & Noble; Edinburgh and London: Oliver & Boyd, 1969.
Ten essays by various authors, six of them previously published. For the newly published essays, search for Chaucer's Mind and Art under Alternative Title.
Understanding Chaucer and The Canterbury Tales: A Lecture Read by Raymond S. Burns
Burns, Raymond S.
[Old Greenwich, Conn.]: Listening Library, 1969. PC 3375.
Item not seen. The WorldCat records indicate that this lecture is read by the author; also released as an audio cassette in 1973.
Cuentos de Canterbury
Cantí Bonastre, Juan, trans.
Barcelona: Bruguera, 1969.
Item not seen. WorldCat records indicate that this Spanish translation of CT includes an introduction and bibliography by Maria Teresa Suero Roca and that it is illustrated by Angel Badía Camps; also it was issued with an introduction and…
The Criticism of Chaucer in the Twentieth Century
Brewer, D. S.
A. C. Cawley, ed. Chaucer's Mind and Art (New York: Barnes & Noble; Edinburgh and London: Oliver & Boyd, 1969), pp. 3-28.
Discusses representative examples of book-length studies of Chaucer written in the twentieth century (by Kittredge, Chesterton, Lowes, Dempster, Speirs, Donaldson, Muscatine, Payne, and Robertson); surveys several "main literary topics" in Chaucer…
Chaucer's Reading
Elliott, R. W. V.
A. C. Cawley, ed. Chaucer's Mind and Art (New York: Barnes & Noble; Edinburgh and London: Oliver & Boyd, 1969), pp. 46-68.
Describes the literary resources available to Chaucer (and their limitations), comments on the works that influenced him most pervasively, and explores the "close links" between dreaming and reading in his dream visions (BD, PF, HF, and LGWP) and…
Chaucer's Valentine: The 'Parlement of Foules'
Cawley, A. C.
A. C. Cawley, ed. Chaucer's Mind and Art (New York: Barnes & Noble; Edinburgh and London: Oliver & Boyd, 1969), pp. 125-39.
Reads the garden in PF as a "picture of the world in a fallen state," in contrast with Scipio's "celestial paradise." The contrast is highlighted by different "time-schemes," and the work leaves unresolved the paradoxes of love's varieties.
Chaucer and Shakespeare
Loomis, Dorothy Bethurum.
A. C. Cawley, ed. Chaucer's Mind and Art (New York: Barnes & Noble; Edinburgh and London: Oliver & Boyd, 1969), pp. 166.90.
Discusses similarities and differences between Chaucer and Shakespeare, concentrating on biography, theme, and literary techniques as well as borrowings. Comments on Shakespeare's adaptations of TC and KnT, and explores the writers' audiences, their…
The Status of Chaucer's Monk: Clerical, Official, Social, and Moral
Ussery, Huling E.
Tulane Studies in English 22 (1969): 1-30.
Investigates the historical backgrounds to the "status" of Chaucer's Monk, concluding that he is "probably" Benedictine and "perhaps the prior" of a "dependent cell," with a "reasonably good income." As an "important administrator," he is "qualified…
The Middle English Subject-Verb Cluster
MacLeish, Andrew.
The Hague: Mouton, 1969
Describes, tabulates, and analyzes the "word-order patterns in the Subject-Verb cluster in twelve texts of Late East Midland prose and poetry, 1369-1400," including BD, KnT, TC (Book 5), GP, PardT, NPT, ParsT, Mel, and Astr, as well as texts by…
Alisoun through the Looking Glass: Or Every Man His Own Midas
Allen, Judson Boyce, and Patrick Gallacher.
Chaucer Review 4.2 (1969): 99-105.
Excavates the multi-layered ironies of WBT, focusing on the motifs of transformation and bad judgment and on the Wife of Bath's manipulations of her narrative materials, particularly the Ovidian Midas exemplum.
