Browse Items (16012 total)

Bidard, Josseline.   Leo Carruthers and Adrian Papahagi, eds. Prologues et épilogues dans la littérature anglaise du Moyen Âge (Paris: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur, 2001), pp. 155-69.
Examines the use of prologues and epilogues in several narratives of the Reynard tradition (13th-15th centuries). NPT indicates Chaucer's preference for the prologue and the ambiguity of his assertions.

Dor, Juliette.   Roger Ellis and Rene Tixier, eds. The Medieval Translator/Traduire au Moyen Age, 5 ([Turnhout, Belgium]: Brepols, 1996), pp. 376-89.
Examines the differences between Chaucer's poverty prologue to MLT and its source, Innocent III's "De miseria condicionis humane," attributing these differences to the influence of Renaud de Louen's "Livre de Mellibee et Prudence," which Chaucer…

Velli, Giuseppe.   Studi e Problemi di Critica Testuale 5 (1972): 33-66.
Traces the classical and medieval sources (particularly Lucan and Boethius) of the ascent into the heavens of Arcita in Boccaccio's "Teseida," arguing that the author's efforts at historicizing classical attitudes are more than successful than…

Dor, Juliette.   André Crépin, ed. Angleterre et Orient au Moyen Age (Paris: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur, 2002.), pp. 65-78.
LGW examines possible heterosexual love relationships between pre-Christian Western and Oriental protagonists. Chaucer systematically deconstructs the cliché of female unfaithfulness and the racial prejudices against Oriental women; what matters…

Stévanovitch, Colette, and Henry Daniels, eds.   Paris: AMAES, 2005. xiv, 574 pp.
For two essays that pertain to Chaucer; search for L'Affect et le jugement under Alternative Title.

Azuela, Cristine.   Romania 115: 519-35, 1997.
Examines aspects of orality in CT (MilT, PardT), Boccaccio's "Decameron," and "Les cent nouvelles," focusing on features of transmission, secrecy, confession, and authentication. Considers HF.

Dor, Juliette.   Frédéric Duval and Fabienne Pomel, eds. Guillaume de Digulleville: Les pèlerinages allégoriques (Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2008), pp. 401-23.
Dor compares ABC with its source, revealing that Chaucer's translation is a rewriting that achieves intense dramatic power. Transformations of the figure of Mary ,some shifts in the poem's tone, and ironical remarks invite us to reconsider the poem's…

Machan, Tim William.   Exemplaria 5 (1993): 161-83.
Sir Francis Kynaston's 1635 translation of TC into Latin verse emblemizes the Renaissance need to valorize the present by simultaneously distancing the medieval past and articulating a tradition of continuity with it.

Datta, Maṇīndra, trans.   Calcutta: Tuli-kalama, 1989.
Translation of selections of CT into Bengali prose.

Ağıl, Nazmi.   Yeni Türk Edebiyatı Araştırmaları 10 (2013): 149–58.
Argues that MilT and WBPT influenced the plot, characters, and themes of Hüseyin Rahmi Gürpınar's twentieth-century novel "A Marriage under the Comet." In Turkish with an abstract in English.

Rohls, Jan.   Boston, Mass.: De Gruyter, 2021.
Chapter 7, “Chaucer: Die ‘Canterbury Tales,’ ” summarizes the individual tales of CT, following the Chaucer Society order, and provides brief explanations of religious backgrounds and details.

Takagi, Masako.   Eigo Seinen 150.1 (2004): 161.
Item not seen; cited in MLA International Bibliography as pertaining to electronic manuscripts of CT and "Beowulf."

Fichte, Joerg O.   Trude Ehlert, ed. Zeitkonzeptionen Zeiterfahrung Zeitmessung: Stationen ihres Wandels vom Mittelalter bis zum Moderne (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schoningh, 1997), pp. 223-41.
Assesses time and its relations with history and eschatology in CT, exploring how genre and variations in genre affect the depiction of time. Examines KnT and Th as romances, SNT and MLT as saints' lives, PhyT and MkT as exempla, and ShT as a…

Hum, Sue.   Style 31 (1997): 500-522.
Dreams in Chaucer function as authoritative texts within power structures. In PF, the systems represented by Affrycan and Nature protect authoritative knowledge and devalue individual experience. In TC, because knowledge and belief are interactive,…

Knapp, Peggy A.   Criticism 27 (1985): 331-45.
Interpretations of ClT that rely on the genre exemplum are often subverted through trope irony.

Grimes, Jodi.   Carmina Philosophiae 19 (2010): 49-68.
MkT reflects Boethian epistemology and demonstrates the limits of human reason. The Monk presents Fortune as in Books 1 and 2 of the "Consolation," but he lacks the faith necessary to understand the divine, while the mocking Knight and Host…

Powrie, Sarah.   Chaucer Review 50.3-4 (2015): 368-92.
Contends that PF challenges the medieval idea of judgment, based in reason, by also taking into account affective forces.

Carruthers, Leo.   Jacqueline Hamesse et al., eds. Medieval Sermons and Society: Cloister, City, University: Proceedings of International Symposia at Kalamazoo and New York. Textes et etudes du Moyen Age, no. 9 (Louvain-la-Neuve: Fłdłration Internationale des Instituts d'₁tudes Młdiłvales, 1998), pp. 219-40.
Shows how the Middle English sermon series :Jacob's Well" reflects many aspects of contemporary society. Carruthers likens its audience to that of CT.

Nolan, Edward Peter.   Edward Peter Nolan. Now Through a Glass Darkly: Specular Images of Being and Knowing from Virgil to Chaucer (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1990) pp. 193-217.
Contrasts Dante's clarity and order in the dead world of the "Commedia" with Chaucer's living world of CT, seen "in a glass darkly." Discusses Chaucer's appropriations from Dante: passages, images and ideas, and subtle influences--how the "living…

Miller, Margaret J., trans.   New York: David White, 1969.
Includes fourteen translations of materials from medieval British literary sources, from the "Mabinogion" to Thomas Malory, selected and adapted for a juvenile audience, and illustrated by Charles Keeping. Includes a translation of FranT (pp.…

Bruso, Steven Paul Woodcock.   Dissertation Abstracts International A78.10 (2017): n.p.
Argues that Middle English romances reflect "medieval awareness of the problems caused by militarization." Includes discussion of KnT where, "for hardened fighting men who have seen years of service in war, combat is always 'real,' and conduct…

Litsey, Barbara A.   [Jay Ruud, ed.] Papers on the "Canterbury Tales": From the 1989 NEH Chaucer Institute, Northern State University, Aberdeen, South Dakota ([Aberdeen, S.D.: Northern State University, 1989), pp. 24-35.
Comments on medieval knighthood and the appropriateness of KnT to the Knight.

Jackson, W. H., ed.   Woodbridge, Suffolk: D. S. Brewer, 1981.
Six articles by various hands dealing with French, Provencal, German, Scottish, and English knighthood in literature.

Waldron, R. A.   English Studies 46 (1965): 401-06.
Shows that lexical and stylistic evidence supports reading "the May" in KnT 1.1037 as "hawthorn blossom," rendering Emelye lovelier than lily, rose or hawthorn in bloom.

London 'Times', July 26, 1986, p. 14.
Terry Jones is reported as persisting in his belief that "Chaucer's 'parfit gentil knight' was no such thing," that Chaucer's portrait was ironic.
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