Browse Items (15544 total)

Alfano, Christine Lynne.   Dissertation Abstracts International 56 (1995): 2244A.
The popular tradition of conviviality in Merrie Olde England stretches back through Shakespeare to Chaucer.

Delasanta, Rodney.   Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 70 (1969): 683-90.
Identifies a "number of medieval commonplaces" in KnT that support the notion that "greater idealism" is what distinguishes Palamon from Arcite, i.e., a "loftier" view, more a matter of theodicy than determinism.

Haruta, Setsuko.   PoeticaT 69 (2008): 27-40.
Discusses the role of Criseyde as a niece and an aunt and how Chaucer depicts her mature persona.

Gaylord, Alan.   Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters 46 (1961): 571-95.
Describes how "the part Pandarus attempts to play" in TC "is intended by Chaucer, though not by Pandarus, as a parody of the philosophical counsel offered to Boethius" in the Consolation of Philosophy. Focuses on the comedy of the "first scene"…

Galloway, Andrew.   Studies in Bibliography 52: 59-87, 1999.
Reviews the theories and practices that underlie several works: George Russell and George Kane's edition of the C text of Piers Plowman (1997), Kane and Janet Cowen's edition of LGW (1995), Ralph Hanna's Pursuing History (1996), and A. V. C.…

Denery, Dallas D. II, Kantik Ghosh, and Nicolette Zeeman, eds.   Turnhout: Brepols, 2014.
Interdisciplinary collection examines "disciplinary and methodological forms" of medieval Scholasticism and questions of knowledge in the Middle Ages. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Uncertain Knowledge under Alternative Title.

An, Sonjae (Brother Anthony).   Jacek Fisiak and Hye-Kyung Kang, eds. Recent Trends in Medieval English Language and Literature in Honour of Young-Bae Park (Seoul, South Korea: Thaehaksa, 2005), vol. 1, pp. 283-308.
The compassion for human failure and potential failure in Chaucer's GP reflects Christian awareness of sin and grace. Like later poets Christopher Hill, Seamus Heaney, and Ko Un (Korea), Chaucer is a "prophet-poet" whose recognition of human…

Jufresa Muñoz, Montserrat.   Anuari de filologia: Antiqva et mediaevalia 9, no. 2 (2019): 121-31.
Analyzes the depiction of old age in MerT from a philosophical perspective, with particular emphasis on Epicureanism as it was understood during the Middle Ages. In Catalan.

Hernández Pérez, M. Beatriz.   RCEI 39: 275-94, 1999.
Examines the narrative approach and rhetoric of MLT to assess the Man of Law as a representative and defender of political stability.

Giaccherini, Enrico.   Revista di Letterature Moderne e Comparate 27 (1974): 165-76.
Assesses the terms used for varieties of dreams summarized in HF 1-12, comparing them with their source in Macrobius's "Commentary on the Dream of Scipio," with Latin usage, and with Chaucer's uses of the terms elsewhere in his works.

Boitani, Piero.   Rivista di Letterature Moderne e Comparate 51 (1998): 251-69.
Uses the "chunnel" as a metaphor of the literary and cultural interconnections between England and the European continent,assessing classical and medieval influence on HF: Virgil, Ovid, and Claudian, along with medieval writers of Italy, France, and…

Siemens, R. G.   Anglia: Zeitschrift für Englische Philologie 119: 423-455, 2001.
Mentions the electronic edition of Chaucer's Wife of Bath's Prologue, edited by Peter Robinson and others.

Colombi, Giulio, and Elena Armida Olivari, ed. and trans.   Brescia: Morcelliana, 2018.
Item not seen. WorldCat record indicates that this is a translation of Astro into Italian, with an introduction. The publisher's information indicates that the volume includes an essay by Paolo Rossi on the place of the astrolabe in the history of…

Buenos Aires: Editorial Biblos, 2005.
Item not seen; cited in WorldCat as an anthology in Spanish of selections from CT, Boccaccio's "Decameron," and Don Juan Manuel's "Conde de Lucanor," with selection and notes by Susana G. Artal.

Mertens-Fonck, Paule.   Bulletin de la Societe Royale Le Vieux-Liege 13 (1997): 707-18.
Argues that the GP portrait of the Monk evokes Jean le Bel, chronicler of Edward III, and suggests that MkT is a poetic chronicle. With the Knight and the Prioress, the Monk is evidence that contemporary personalities and events lie behind CT.

Serrano [Reyes], Jesús L.   Espéculo: Revista de Estudios Literarios 10 (1998): n.p. [Web publication]
Presents evidence that Juan Manuel's "El Conde Lucanor" 50 is an analogue to WBT, focusing primarily on their parallel structures as exempla.

Schirmir, Ruth   Neue Zürcher Zeitung, April 9, 1972, p. 52.
Playful discussion of how to use a literary concordance in literary interpretation, using TC as an example.

Collette, Carolyn P.   Chaucer Review 24 (1989): 132-38.
An application of some of Umberto Eco's semiotic heuristics to MerT.

Rowe, Britta B.   Ph.D. Dissertation. University of Virginia, 2017. Open access at https://libraetd.lib.virginia.edu/public_view/br86b3919; accessed May 26, 2024.
Articulates Chaucer's Catholic orthodoxy in CT, contrasting it with Wycliffite heterodoxy, and arguing that, in Chaucer, a robust poetics of pious hope is evident, despite his satire of several ecclesiastical characters. Focuses on the…

Bowden, Betsy.   Oral Tradition 17 : 169-207, 2002.
Bowden defines "sentence," "sawe," and "proverbe" in relation to terms used in the French and Latin sources of Mel, comparing Mel to pedagogical proverb collections to explore Chaucer's "creative interaction with oral tradition."

Klinr, Dan.   New Chaucer Studies: Pedagogy & Profession 1.1 (2020): 26-37.
Advocates robust participation in academic "shared governance" and general education curricula as a way for medievalists to serve their own professional interests; includes opinions about how Chaucerians are well equipped for such participation.

Kelen, Sarah A.   British Library Journal 25.1: 180-87, 1999.
A British Library copy of John Urry's Works of Chaucer, shelf-mark 642.m.1, contains Thomas Tyrwhitt's notes. These notes record Tyrwhitt's "progress towards his own edition," including commentary on glosses, source material, and apocrypha.

Heffernan, Carol Falvo.   Chaucer Review 17 (1983): 332-40.
Walter and Griselda embody qualities to be found in medieval discussions of tyrants and "commune profit," but they go beyond abstract ideas as characters in their own right.

Keenan, Hugh T., ed.   New York: AMS, 1992.
A series of essays by various authors, some with continental applications, with an annotated bibliography of medieval English literature through 1987.
For essays that pertain to Chaucer. search for Typology and English Medieval Literature under…

Benton, Megan L.   Paul C. Gutjahr and Megan L. Benton, eds. Illuminating Letters: Typography and Literary Interpretation ( Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001), pp. 71-93.
Exploring the relationship between gender identity and book production at the turn of the twentieth century, Benton assesses the format and typography of the Kelmscott Chaucer (1896) and Eric Gill's illustrations to The Canterbury Tales (1930). Also…
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