Browse Items (15534 total)

Melnarik, Tim George.   DAI 63: 2537A. , 2003.
Examines CT structurally in the context of the fourteenth-century popular view of games and gaming. Also deals with the rules of CT, its game in action, violations of the rules, and Chaucer himself as the game's most important piece.

Honegger, Thomas.   Irma Taavitsainen and Andreas H. Jucker, eds. Diachronic Perspectives on Address Term Systems (Philadelphia: Benjamins, 2003), pp. 61-84.
Honegger argues that analyses of international forms of address would gain depth if critics considered "situational" factors and even "competing interactional" factors along with traditional considerations of ye/thou pronouns. Focuses on addresses to…

Hilberry, Jane.   Chaucer Review 21 (1987): 435-43.
The verse is heightened by consonant repetition and reversal; rhyme; and assonance.

Pearcy, Roy J.   SAC 24 : 269-97, 2002.
Differences between eschatological and historical time in TC pose parallel differences between Troilus's personal Boethian tragedy and the epic tragedy of the fall of Troy. Similarities between Criseyde and analogous women in other siege stories (in…

Kamyabee, Mohammad Hadi.   Dissertation Abstracts International 59 (1998): 2036A.
Discusses how the narrative strategies and implied audiences of animal fables produce the didactic impact of the tales, assessing "The Owl and the Nightingale" and fables by Chaucer (NPT and ManT), Gower, Langland, Lydgate, and Henryson. Also…

Krochalis, Jeanne.   ANQ 18.4 (2005): 3ı8.
In GP, "Belmarye," one of the Knight's destinations, might well be glossed as a reference to Almerin (a province between Granada and Algezir), spelled "Balmarie" in a mid-fifteenth-century manuscript.

Barnett, Pamela E.   Women's Studies 22 (1993): 145-62.
Reflected in RvT and FranT, rape is "mystified" in various forms of male discourse--discourse that substitutes the symbolic for the semiotic and thus keeps women silent or turns "no" into "yes."

Ginsberg, Warren.   Criticism 20 (1978): 307-23.
The interpretive problems with ClT--our ambivalence between human sympathy for Griselda and recognition of the poem's stern moral import--stem largely from the teller himself, whose additions to the source in Petrarch indicate that he does not fully…

Sobecki, Sebastian.   Mediaevalia 25 (2004): 107-21.
Victims of lovesickness, lovers who commit suicide in Chaucer and Gower do so by stabbing themselves in the heart, an action not found in their sources. Nor is there medical precedent for regarding the heart as the central organ of the circulatory…

Stevens, Martin   Chaucer Review 7.2 (1972): 118-31.
Rejects readings of MerT as "savage and mordant self-revelation" of the Merchant, characterizing the Merchant's wife as more similar to the Wife of Bath and the Host's Goodelief than to May. MerP is an extension of the Clerk's Envoy, the Merchant…

Wimsatt, James I.   Chaucer Review 5.1 (1970): 1-8.
Argues that Anel is "more a stylized emotional history than a series of meaningful events." In its plot, mode, and formal features, it is more akin to French love narratives ("'dits' of complaint and comfort") than other models that have been…

Heyns, Michiel.   Theoria 80 (1992): 1-23.
In response to Edward Said's charge that modern academic criticism is compliant and depoliticized, Heyns argues that an astute critical reading renders KnT a "distant mirror" capable of showing us as much of contemporary reality as the daily…

Hamilton, Donna B.   Shakespeare Quarterly 24 (1973): 245-51.
Assesses Shakespeare's "Antony and Cleopatra" in the same tradition as Chaucer's account of Cleopatra in LGW, a tradition in which the protagonists along with "other famous lovers of antiquity" are "exemplars of truth and faithfulness."

Hardman, Phillipa.   Poetica (Tokyo): 37 (1993): 49-57.
Examines the two lyrics embedded in BD for what they reflect about the relation between the narrator and the Black Knight. Through this relation and its "delicate act of self-effacement," Chaucer credits John of Gaunt for commemorating his dead…

Delany, Sheila.   English Language Notes 11 (1973): 1-5.
Studies the "ape-image" in HF 1212, identifying analogues in Dante's "Inferno" and in Jean de Meun's "Roman de la Rose," and observing that the topos poses the "difficulty of distinguishing true from false, original from imposture," and art from…

O'Brien, Timothy D.   Mosaic 23:4 (1990): 1-22.
Fragment III of CT reflects ironically on a mechanistic view of life, a scientific method that could be applied even to purely logical problems, and the movement away from authoritative (or public) to experimental (or private) solutions.

Crocker, Holly A.   Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 43 (2013): 303-34.
Looks at Shakespeare's "Troilus and Cressida" in the context of its medieval legacy, including works by Chaucer, Lydgate, and Henryson, to argue that Shakespeare "continues an important late medieval poetic tradition, which highlights the problematic…

Bowers, Robert William.   DAI 62: 2342A, 2002.
Assesses the first-person narrator of CT as a "portrayal of a poet in the act of constructing a poem," focusing on how diction and syntax call attention to the narrator.

Somerset, Fiona.   Studies in the Age of Chaucer 21: 187-207, 1999.
SumT reflects contemporary controversy about the loss of clerical prerogative. The translation of Latin to English in the Tale, as well as its transfer of clerical authority and power to the laity, indicates Chaucer's lampooning of the posturing of…

Gerber, Amanda J.   Florilegium 29 (2013 for 2012): 171-200.
Argues that the condensing and synthesizing of sources in MkT mirrors the way in which clerical commentary changed in the fourteenth century to accommodate new readers uneducated in monastic tradition.

Mitchell-Smith, Ilan.   FCS 32 (2007): 83-99.
Violence and all excess reveal the uncontrollable nature of the world Theseus tries to order. Chaucer makes his story less chivalric than Boccaccio's to emphasize that humans, completely at the whim of Fortune, are incapable of maintaining any…

Yager, Susan.   Philological Quarterly 73 (1994): 151-68.
"As (s)he that" appears most frequently--twenty-five of forty-three occurrences throughout Chaucer's work--in TC, with twenty of these instances clustered in TC 4 and 5. Although in some of these passages the phrase clearly means "for" or "because,"…

Nitzsche, Jane Chance.   Chaucer Newsletter 2, 1 (1980): 6-8.
Chaucer uses herbal imagery of licorice and cetewale, breath sweeteners associated with love in MilT, to establish the theme of character dependence on them. Cetewale is aphrodisiac; licorice quenches thirst; love is reduced to the physical and…

Burnley, J. D.   Stewart Gregory and D. A. Trotter, eds. De mot en mot: Aspects of Medieval Linguistics. Essays in Honour of William Rothwell (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, with the Modern Humanities Research Association, 1997), pp. 1-15.
The use of "thise" plus a noun (e.g., "thise clerkes," "thise men"), rarely found in Old English, is "particularly common" in Chaucer and Gower; it probably developed in early clerical discourse and, encouraged by some French parallels,spread to…

Seaman, David M.   Medievalia et Humanistica 17 (1991): 41-58.
No single answer to the concluding question of FranT is satisfactory because the tale's real concern is the interpretive process itself. FranT emphasizes different kinds of "trouthe" and poses ambiguous promises and statements.
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