Browse Items (15542 total)

James, Clair F.   David Chamberlain, ed. New Readings of Late Medieval Love Poems (Lanham, Md.; New York; and London: University Press of America, 1993), pp. 95-118.
Argues for an ironic reading of "The Kingis Quair," interpreting Minerva as an ally of Venus. TC influenced the author's view of Minerva, and the protagonist's decision to follow his will rather than reason places him in sinful subjection to…

Brimer, Alan.   Journal of Literary Studies/Tydskrif Vir Literaturwetenskap 6 (1990): 333-56.
This Bakhtinian discussion of KnT argues that the "flaws" perceived by earlier critics result from misguided efforts at finding homogeneity in the poem. As a product of a complex literary culture, KnT reflects the culture's "heteroglossia" and…

Cherchi, Paolo.   Modern Philology 76 (1978): 46-48.
These lines state the knight's code of honor and are closely adapted from the sixth book of the "Aeneid," lines 851-53.

Otey, Kirsten Johnson.   Dissertation Abstracts International 60: 4443A, 1999.
Most studies of the vernacular used in religious writing of the late-fourteenth century focus on clerical authors. Clanvowe, a layperson and chamber knight of Richard II, uses the vernacular to discuss Lollardy covertly. Otey examines works of…

Mieszkowski, Gretchen.   Chaucer Review 41 (2007): 299-310.
In his analyses of the TC narrator as a character in his own right--most notably in "The Ending of Chaucer's Troilus" and "Criseide and Her Narrator"--E. Talbot Donaldson "created the most clear-cut paradigm shift in twentieth-century readings of the…

Moon, Hi Kyung.   Medieval English Studies 11.1 : 117-30, 2003.
Human experience explodes the reductive and stereotypical distinctions between good and bad and between women and men posed in LGW, undercutting the title of the poem, rendering the narrator's task pointless, and encouraging the reader to reject the…

Kiser, Lisa J.   ELH 54 (1987): 741-60.
Despite totally different tone and purpose, Chaucer's LGWP parallels Dante's "Purgatorio" significantly: both poets present their narrators as undergoing penance; both Alceste and Beatrice, allegorically garbed and attended, serve as spiritual…

Patterson, Lee.   Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 31: 507-60, 2001.
The narrator of PrT desires to transcend the particularities of language and history, echoing patterns of medieval Jewish martyrdom connected to the "kiddush ha-Shem," which may have been known in Chaucer's England. Complex textual and historical…

Kuskin, William.   Textual Cultures 2.2 (2007): 9-33.
The prefaces to Spenser's "Shepheardes Calendar" (1579) and to Thomas Speght's "Workes of Chaucer" (1598) share similarities with Lydgate's" Fall of Princes" and thus belie the claims made for a break in continuity with the past in sixteenth-century…

Oswald, Dana.   SMART 17.1 (2010): 95-118.
Advocates the use of translation and translation exercises in teaching Chaucer's works in surveys of British literature. Criticizes major anthologies for promoting original-language study only and offers a syllabus, description of in-class…

Partridge, Stephen.   Stephen B. Partridge and Erik Kwakkel, eds. Author, Reader, Book: Medieval Authorship in Theory and Practice (Toronton: University of Toronto Press, 2012), pp. 106-53..
Argues that Ret elevates Chaucer's status as author, and creates the "illusion of Chaucer's presence and agency" for the reader of CT. Connects Chaucer's use of Ret to French literary culture, which helped define Chaucer's own sense of authorship.

Baldwin, Anna.   Yearbook of English Studies 22 (1992): 181-89.
In ClT and especially MLT, Chaucer examines the problem of undeserved suffering. He combines embodiments of patience with realism, producing not exempla but "semi-allegorical" narratives which set out "universal positions."

Marzec, Marcia Smith.   Proceedings of the ... International Patristic, Mediaeval and Renaissance Conference 12-13 (1987-88): 197-208.
Critically regarded as a failure, MLT may be seen in better light if we look at its overriding theme: the efficacy of God's will at work in the world. But while the tale succeeds in explicating that theme, it fails in its portrayal of Constance,…

Weiss, Merle Madelyn.   Dissertation Abstracts International 36 (1975): 2861A.
In MLT and ClT scenes are juxtaposed and time spatialized. Dramatic moments never occur. In both tales, the shaping of expectations underscores the artifice of the poet.

Kanno, Masahiko.   Nobuyuki Yuasa et al., eds. Essays on English Language and Literature in Honour of Michio Kawai.
As the Manciple uses his tale to warn the Cook not to accuse him, so Chaucer uses ManT to warn his audience to be careful of the stories they tell.

Shigeo, Hisashi, trans.   Meiji Gakuin Ronso (Tokyo) 337 (1983): 1-40.
Japanese prose translation with notes.

Edwards, A. S. G.   Modern Language Quarterly 51 (1990): 409-26.
Surveys earlier responses to MerT and argues that the problems they identify cannot be solved; the "moral vacuum" of the tale leaves no criteria for moral evaluation. MerT is Chaucer's "bleakest" view of the relationship between poetry and morality.

Bloomfield, Morton W.   Siegfried Wenzel, ed. Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Proceedings of the Southeastern Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1978), pp. 37-50.
MerT is about limits and trangressions. January violates a limit marrying May; May violates moral limits; modes of parody and irony raze barriers between tragic and comic, making the tale its own anti-tale. The explicit cynicism and "realism" of…

Brown, Emerson, Jr.   Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 74 (1973): 92-106.
Attends to the details and imagery of old age in MerT in order to clarify the "precision and complexity" of Chaucer's art, commenting on January's name, age (60 years), physical condition, sexual prowess, attitude toward counsel, etc., and exploring…

Grove, Robin.   Critical Review 18 (1976): 23-38.
Beauty and cynicism co-exist in MerT: we feel the characters capable of tenderness and right self-affirmation as well as nastiness; January's abandoning the knowledge his recovery brings shows that we see more truly by rejecting "knowing" on the…

Shores, David L.   Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 71 (1970): 119-33.
Argues that the primary concern of MerT is January's foolish lechery, that the tone of the Tale is not mordant, and that its various parts cohere as a harmonious whole. Challenges the idea that the Tale is essentially a contribution to the Marriage…

Brown, Emerson, Jr.   Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 71 (1970): 654-58.
Provides examples of medieval English stereotyping of Pavia as a "city of delight," helping to connect January of MerT with the vice of sensuality.

Edwards, Robert R.   Vinay Dharwadker, ed. Cosmopolitan Geographies: New Locations in Literature and Culture. Essays from the English Institute (New York: Routledge, 2001), pp. 33-62.
Crossing tendencies characterize the "cosmopolitanism" of the late Middle Ages, and the story of Troy is the "paradigmatic cosmopolitan narrative." Edwards comments on Lydgate's "Troy Book" and addresses the mysterious pagan judge of "Saint…

Royle, Nicholas.   Bill Readings and Bennet Schaber, eds. Postmodernism Across the Ages: Essays for a Postmodernity That Wasn't Born Yesterday (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1993), pp. 63-71.
Impressionistic commentary on the levels of narration in MilT, its self-conscious concern with auditory and visual perspective, its mockery of the Bible, and the process of its humor. The reader's point of view is that of a panopticon that turns out…

Cowen, J. A.   Edward Donald Kennedy, Ronald Waldron, and Joseph S. Wittig, eds. Medieval Studies Presented to George Kane (Woodbridge, Suffolk, and Wolfeboro, N.H.: D. S. Brewer, 1988), pp. 147-52.
Examines the lexicographical records of "child" in Middle English and suggests that like Thopas, Absolon may be a Narcissistic figure, influenced by the "Roman de la Rose."
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