Browse Items (16320 total)

Johnston, Andrew James.   Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester 91.2 (2015): 5–20
Analyzes how KnT and SqT engage with the Orientalist discourses buttressing contemporary humanist Italian discussions of visual art, especially in terms of the subjects of classicism and of optics.

Chapman, Juliana.   Studies in Philology 112.4 (2015): 633–55.
Contends that Chaucer employs music as a literary aesthetic, which creates a "structure of narrative mirroring" in KnT and MilT.

Byeong-yong, Son.   Medieval and Early Modern English Studies 22.2 (2014): 61-81.
Looks at the political and social context of Chaucer's life, and claims that in KnT Chaucer appropriated and transformed the conventions of romance to reflect his own political views about medieval kingship.

Britton, Dennis Austin.   postmedieval 6.1 (2015): 64–78.
Establishes how Shakespeare and Fletcher used "images of Africanness to link race and class" in "The Two Noble Kinsmen," and claims this differs from Chaucer's concern with the "racial alterity" and "whiteness" of the Amazonian women in KnT.

Zuraikat, Malek.   Dissertation Abstracts International A76.07 (2015): n.p.
Argues that along with works by Langland and Gower, Chaucer's writings, especially CT, may be read as an indirect critique of crusading.

Wu, Hsiang-mei.   Dissertation Abstracts International C74.10 (2015): n.p.
Examines treatment of several CT narrators and characters and sees examples of "othering" and hostile prejudice toward those characters. Proceeds from there to possible continuations of those prejudices in contemporary readings.

Workman, Jameson S.   New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
Studies "the architecture of Chaucerian metapoetics" in CT and reads several tales as Neoplatonic texts. Criticism of MilT, ManT, and NPT is framed by a consideration of the corrupted natural philosophy of the old man in PardT. Nicholas's impalement…

Scala, Elizabeth.   Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2015.
Presents Lacanian analysis of desire in CT that focuses on the "circulation of the signifier" and the generative power of misrecognition/misreading. Clarifies the meaning and function of fundamental concepts (subject, signifier, Other, aggressivity,…

King, Pamela M.   Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011.
Provides close readings of canonical medieval texts, including "Piers Plowman," Malory's "Morte Darthur," and CT. Emphasizes KnT, GP, MilT, PrT, SumT, PardT, and FrT.

Ji-yeon, Choi.   Medieval and Early Modern English Studies 23.2 (2015): 145-59.
Focuses on fabliau and the clothing of Chaucer's women in MilT, WBT, and RvT, and claims that "women's desire and independent will are materialized by means of [the] Wife of Bath's clothing."

Duprey, Annalese.   Essays in Medieval Studies 30 (2014): 55–66.
Surveys how pity functions as a lover's emotional ploy that establishes a power relationship in CT. Focuses on MerT and FranT and explores to what extent May and Dorigen create agency for themselves by participating in the exchange of suffering for…

Archer, Jayne Elizabeth, Richard Marggraf Turley, and Howard Thomas.   Chaucer Review 50.1-2 (2015): 1–29.
Proposes connections between the CT--especially Chaucer's Plowman, the apocryphal Plowman's Tale, and RvT--and ideas about food supply. Provides an overarching argument that anxieties about farming and the politics of how food was distributed in late…

Magnani, Roberta.   Naoe Kukita Yoshikawa, ed. Medicine, Religion and Gender in Medieval Culture (Woodbridge Suffolk: Boydell and Brewer, 2015), pp. 45–64.
Explores interconnection among medicine, religion, and gender, as well as Chaucer's engagement with Marian doctrine, in PrPT and PhyT.

Yoshikawa, Naoe Kukita, ed.   Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell and Brewer, 2015.
Investigates religious and medical medieval discourses in the Middle Ages. For an essay that pertains to Chaucer search for Medicine, Religion and Gender in Medieval Culture under Alternative Title.

Toner, Anne.   Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Studies various kinds of narrative suspension and ellipsis in English literature, and includes comments on a reference to SqT in the expository essay that accompanies the Gothic tale "Sir Bertram, a Fragment" (1773). Connects the essay with Thomas…

Thomas, Alfred.   New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
Explores the influence of Anne of Bohemia, wife and consort of King Richard II, on Chaucer and his contemporaries. Proposes that Anne of Bohemia was a "possible female patron and reader" of Chaucer's texts. Focuses on PrT, SNT, KnT, WBT, and LGW.

Somerset, Fiona.   Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2014.
Comprehensive study of over 500 manuscripts containing Lollard writings from 1375 to 1530. Analyzes textual culture associated with Lollard movement. Brief references to MLT, PardT, PhyT, and TC.

Schmidt, A. V. C.   Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015.
Collection of published and previously unpublished studies of Chaucer and other writers, including the "Pearl"-poet, Hopkins, Yeats, Eliot, Jones, and Auden. Part 1, "Medieval: Chaucer and the Gawain-Poet," includes essays on Bo, Form Age, KnT, and…

Schiff, Randy P.   Exemplaria 27 (2015): 352–61.
Summarizes the discussions of Chaucer in Lynn
Staley's "The Island Garden" (2012), Jamie K. Taylor's
"Fictions of Evidence" (2013), and Jonathan Hsy's "Trading
Tongues" (2013).

Phillips-Jones, Robin.   Marginalia 18 (2015): 14-23.
Destabilizes the notion of a progression of "identifiable movements" in English vernacular writing culminating in Chaucer in the fourteenth century, arguing that "The Owl and the Nightingale" (c. 1200) should be taught as an early foundational…

Niebrzydowski, Sue.   English: The Journal of the English Association 64, no. 244 (2015): 1–4.
A general introduction to the "Chaucer Reconsidered" special issue of the journal that focuses on the many genres in which Chaucer worked, as well as his primary topics.

Milliken, Roberta.   Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2012.
Surveys depictions of "good" and "bad" women in medieval art and literature, concentrating on how their hair characterizes them and directs viewers' attention. Includes a brief discussion of the implications of Emelye's yellow/golden hair in KnT…

Meyer-Lee, Robert J.   New Literary History 46.2 (2015): 335–55.
In an analysis of the question of literary value, argues for a pragmatic approach to understanding the value of literature, especially at present when that value is on the decline. References GP as general example of medieval literary valuing.

Marshall, Camille.   Comitatus 46 (2015): 75–98.
Reads the Miller (whose mouth is compared to "a greet forneys" in GP) in the context of representations of rebel peasants in the chronicles of Thomas Walsingham, Henry Knighton, Jean Froissart, and the Anonimalle chronicler, as well as in Gower's…

Marenbon, John.   Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015.
Examines the influence of paganism on Christian writers from the fifth century to the eighteenth century. Includes a chapter on entitled "Langland and Chaucer: The Continuity of the Problem of Paganism" (pp. 214–34).
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