Chaucer Bibliography Online
Title
Chaucer Bibliography Online
Collection Items
Deux Contributions à l'Histoire des Pratiques Contraceptives, II: Chaucer et Mme de Sévigné.
Contrasts lack of commentary on birth control in ParsT with its presence in the letters of Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, Marquise de Sévigné, arguing that Chaucer was pre-Malthusian ("prémalthusien") rather than proto-Malthusian ("protomalthusien").…
Chaucer and Shakespeare: The Dramatic Vision,
Anthologizes a selection of works by Chaucer and by Shakespeare, with a brief general introduction to each and bottom-of-page glosses and notes. The selection from Chaucer, edited by Bethurum and based on the text by Walter W. Skeat, includes GP,…
The Knight's Tale.
Edits KnT, with an Introduction, bottom-of-page textual notes, end-of-text explanatory notes and glossary, and appendices (by R. T. Davies, reprinted), on Chaucer's language and meter, astrology and astronomy, and suggestions for further reading. The…
Canterbury Tales A 24.
Reconsiders possible explanations for the evident inaccuracy of the number of pilgrims given in GP 1.24 as twenty-nine. Suggests two possibilities: the Squire may have been a later addition and/or the addition of the "last five pilgrims" might have…
Symbol and Theme in Chaucer's Vision Poems.
Examines the imagery, symbols, and themes of BD, HF, PF, and LGW, focusing on the themes of love (courtly and spiritual) and the poet's responsibilities in depicting love, with attention to various aspects of style, form, and structure, and recurrent…
Loke who, what, how, when.
Clarifies the basic meaning and history of the Middle English collocation "look who," meaning "whoever," analyzing the usage at WBT 1113 and discussing similar usages elsewhere in Chaucer, with two instances in Gower. Explains how scribal and…
A Tale of Wonder: A Source Study of "The Wife of Bath's Tale."
Provides evidence for the "strongest possibility" that WBT "did not differ from other Arthurian tales but came to Chaucer from Ireland through Wales, Brittany, and France."
The Prosody of Chaucer and His Followers: Supplementary Chapters to "Verses of Cadence."
Supplements "Verses of Cadence" (1954) to reinforce arguments that Chaucer's prosody was rhythmic, not metrical, and that final -e should not be pronounced in reading Chaucer. Considers the influence on Chaucer's rhythms--in prose as well as…
Recursive Origins: Writing at the Transition to Modernity.
Theorizes "recursivity"--an alternative to "originality"--as a trope in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century English literary history, arguing that much often considered to be "original" or "revolutionary" in modernity is better understood as remaking…
Middle English I: Chaucer.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1953.
Troilus en Criseyde: Gedicht door Geoffrey Chaucer omstreeks 1385.
Translation of TC into Dutch verse, with notes and introduction.
A Medieval Madwoman in the Attic: Chaucer's Wife of Bath in "The Canterbury Tales."
Argues that in "attempting the pen" by telling her own story, the Wife of Bath rebels against patriarchal strictures and escapes suggestions of madness that beset such rebellious women in late medieval England.
Hybridity in Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales": Reconstructing Estate Boundaries.
Describes the "large scale social mobility" of late medieval England and argues that its modifications of traditional estates categories are reflected in CT. Uses Homi Bhabha's "postcolonial concepts of hybridity, in-betweenness, third space and…
A Complete Rime-index to Manly & Rickert's Text of "The Canterbury Tales." Part One, A.
Item not seen. Information derived from WorldCat record.
Humorous Structures of English Narratives, 1200-1600.
Tests several theories of humor--especially Victor Raskin and Salvatore Attardo's "General Theory of Verbal Humor" (1985) and Thomas D. Cooke's "Comic Climax" (1978)--for their value in analyzing Elizabethan jests and medieval fabliaux, parodies,…
Chaucer’s Man of Law and Clerk as Rhetoricians: Narrative and Dramatic Levels of Decorum.
Shows how MLT and ClT "prove Chaucer's functional use of rhetoric for purposes of decorum," considering the characterizations of the narrators', their uses of rhetoric, and their intentions. Considers source materials, comments on the Wife of Bath,…
The Plowman's Tale.
A critical edition of the "Plowman's Tale," with notes, glossary, and extensive critical commentary, including discussion of it as an example of Chaucerian apocrypha. Also includes discussion of its relation to "Piers Plowman," the "Pilgrim's Tale,"…
"Blyndes Bestes": Aspects of Chaucer's Animal World.
Explores the sources and meanings of Chaucer's "analogies" between animals and humans, focusing on hares, dogs, horses, wolves, and sheep, arguing that, generally, Chaucer uses them to indicate the need for humans to control their "natural passions."
Concepts of Love in Dante and Chaucer.
Describes the hierarchical, mystical, Italianate view of love that emphasizes the gentle heart, epitomized in Dante, exploring its influence on Chaucer in TC, comparing and contrasting Chaucer's lovers with Paolo and Francesca as well as Dante and…
Shapeshifting and Associated Phenomena as Conventions of the Middle English Metrical Romances.
Traces the "shapeshifting motif" in English literature from "Beowulf" to the late-medieval metrical romances, focusing on the latter. Chapter five includes attention to WBT as an example of the "human-to-human type of shapeshift," along with seven…
Similes in the Works of Chaucer.
Assesses Chaucer's uses of various kinds of similes and similetic comparisons--Homeric, epic similes; biblical "similitudes"; proverbial comparisons, Ovidian and Dantean comparisons; and more--demonstrating his variety, borrowings, and adaptations.…
Lucio Anneo Séneca en Chaucer.
Comments on Senecan material in several of the CT (MkT; ManT, WBP, and Mel) and on Chaucer’s access to Senecan sources.
A Comparative Study of Scansion in Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde and Canterbury Tales.
Item not seen.
Juxtaposed Adjectives in "Troilus and Criseyde."
Item not seen.
A Study on the Adjectives Modifying Criseyde.
Assesses the characterization of Criseyde in TC in light of the adjectives she uses and those used of her by the narrator, Troilus, and Pandarus, helping to characterize them as well. Includes comparable data from Boccaccio's "Filostrato."
