Browse Items (16041 total)

Tracy, Kisha G.   Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching 24, no. 1 (2017): 45-60.
Exemplifies the utilities of Google Maps in creating instructor-generated and student-generated maps for teaching aspects of undergraduate coursework in medieval literature, with five sample maps and an assignment designed for a course in English…

Reed, Thomas L.,Jr.   Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 89 (1988): 44-56.
The fall of Nebuchadnezzar is the only history in MkT that ends favorably for its protagonist; in its tragicomic structure and its transformation of the hero to a birdlike beast, this episode anticipates some main features of NPT.

Jacobs, Nicolas.   In Nicolas Jacobs and Gerald Morgan, eds. "Truth is the beste": A Festschrift in Honour of A. V. C. Schmidt (New York: Lang, 2014), pp. 109-25.
Reads NPT in light of the Nebuchadnezzer account in MkT--the only one of the Monk's tragedies with a "happy ending," the result of a lesson learned. Contrasts MkT as an early work of Chaucer's with NPT as one of his maturity, focusing on the "rival…

Doob, Penelope B. R.   New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1974.
This study of madness in Middle English literature generally mentions Chaucer only in passing, but includes a brief discussion of a "pedestrian and highly traditional account of Nebuchadnezzer" in MkT. Clearly based on the Book of Daniel, the account…

Iyeiri, Yoko.   English Studies 91 (2010): 826-37.
Iyeiri investigates negative constructions in five versions of Bo, discussing the relative chronology of the witnesses to the text and, more generally, the editing of Middle English texts.

Iyeiri, Yoko.   Merja Kytö, John Scahill, and Harumi Tanabe, eds. Language Change and Variation from Old English to Late Modern English: A Festschrift for Minoji Akimoto (New York: Peter Lang, 2010), pp. 79-101.
Iyeiri analyzes the "various forms of negation" in the fragments of Rom, commenting on their implications for attribution. Fragment C is more like B than like the Chaucerian A in many of its forms of negation; hence, it is unlikely to be by Chaucer.

Ingham, Richard.   Studia Anglica Posnaniensia 42 (2006): 77-97.
Includes several examples from Chaucer's prose writings.

Nevalainen, Terttu.   Journal of English Linguistics 34 (2006): 257-78.
Addresses historical sociolinguistic trends between 1400 and 1800, tracing the disappearance of multiple negative (negative concord) usage to the latter half of the eighteenth century. However, data also suggest that Late Middle English initiated the…

Jimura, Akiyuki.   Bulletin of the Faculty of the School of Education (Hiroshima Unviersity) 17 (1995): 1-9.
An investigation of the relationship between negatives and negative expressions, content, and characterization in ClT.

Johnson, Valerie B. and Kara L. McShane, eds.   Boston: De Gruyter; Kalamazoo: Medieval Institute, 2022.
Includes fifteen essays on early English, Irish, Scottish, and Robin Hood studies, with an Introduction by the editors, an appreciation of Thomas Hahn's career by Theresa Coletti, and a comprehensive Index. For five essays that pertain to Chaucer,…

Blum, Martin.   Peter G. Beidler, ed. Masculinities in Chaucer: Approaches to Maleness in the Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde (Cambridge; and Rochester, N.Y.: D. S. Brewer, 1998), pp. 37-52.
John, Nicholas, and Absolon are, each in his own way, feminized in MilT, while Alison is masculinized and thereby escapes punishment.

Reis, Huriye.   Interactions: Ege University Journal of British and American Studies 12.1-2 (2012): 69-78.
Uses Michel Foucault's notions of power, subversion, and discourse to argue that LGWP "illustrates the medieval writer's relationship to hegemonic power" and "presents the potential ways authors are involved in the production and subversion of…

Utz, Richard J.   Richard Utz, ed. Literary Nominalism and the Theory of Rereading Late Medieval Texts: A New Research Paradigm (Lewiston, N.Y.; Queenston, Ont.; Lampeter, Wales: Edwin Mellen, 1995), pp.1-30.
Surveys the critical application of nominalism to medieval literary texts, suggesting three main approaches: nominalist text as source, as coeval philosophical substratum, and as historical corroboration of modern perceptions.

Patterson, Lee.   Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987.
Considers "political agendas" that governed the development of Chaucer scholarship and textual criticism and analyzes medieval studies in terms of current theories about historicism. CT bears "a privileged relation" to the historic moment. Chapters…

Schutz, Andrea.   Jean E. Godsall-Myers, ed. Speaking in the Medieval World (Boston: Brill, 2003), 105-24.
Language itself is important in FranT, but so is the intention of the speaker. Moreover, authorial intention in CT as a whole affects how we use language for our own ends, because we learn from everything we read. Authors must consider consequences…

Elmes, Melissa Ridley.   Ph.D. Dissertation. The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, 2016. Dissertation Abstracts International A77.11(E). Fully accessible via ProQuest Dissertations & Theses and at https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/listing.aspx?id=19566.
From Elmes's abstract: "Making use of theoretical underpinnings from anthropology and history that characterize the feast as a culturally essential event and medieval violence as a rational and strategically-employed tool of constraint, coercion, and…

Milliken, Roberta.   Women's Studies 24 (1995): 191-204.
In TC, Chaucer amplified traits in Criseyde that Boccaccio emphasized less in "Filostrato."

Milliken, Roberta Lee.   Dissertation Abstracts International 56 (1996): 2672A.
Comparison of Criseyde with Boccaccio's Criseida shows that Chaucer sets forth her characterization in Books 1-3: She is fearful, alone, aware of her position, and easily manipulated. These traits, which foreshadow her future, are less evident in…

Chapman, Don.   Ian Lancashire, ed. Computer-Based Chaucer Studies (Toronto: Centre for Computing in the Humanities, University of Toronto, 1993), pp. 87-98.
Computer-assisted analysis of the 276 neologisms in Bo produces statistical descriptions of their source languages,their distribution in Bo, and their occurrences in other works by Chaucer. The analysis underpins surmises about the range and nature…

Clements, Pamela.   Carol L. Robinson, Pamela Clements, and Richard Utz, eds. Neomedievalism in the Media: Essays on Film, Television and Electronic Games (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2012), pp. 35-54.
Essay on adaptations of CT, focusing on Powell and Pressburger's "A Canterbury Tale (1944), Piero Pasolini's "I racconti di Canterbury" (1972), and Brian Helgeland's "A Knight's Tale" (2001), which treat CT in a "neomedievalist fashion" and also…

Robinson, Carol L., and Pamela Clements, eds., with Preface by Richard Utz   Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2012.
Series of essays by members of the Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO) related to differing interpretations of neomedievalism in various forms of media. For an essay related to Chaucer, search for Neomedievalism in the Media under…

Clements, Pamela, and Carol L. Robinson.   Studies in Medievalism 21 (2012): 191-205.
Includes a brief discussion of ways in which teachers have integrated medievalist material into curricula of their undergraduate Chaucer classes.

Erickson, Sandra S. F., and Glenn W. Erickson.   Sandra S. F. Erickson and Glenn W. Erickson. Logos e Poesis: Neoplatonismo e Literatura (Natal, Brazil: EDUFRN, Editora da UFRN, 2006), pp. 35-60.
Argues that Biblical and Neoplatonic number symbolism conveys the message of BD: that souls return to heavenly happiness. Considers Chaucer's summary of Scipio's dream, traces references to Pythagoras in BD, and identifies places where it…

Schrock, Chad.   Studies in Philology 108 (2011): 27-43.
Assesses how the invocation to the "yevere of the formes" (2228ff.) that opens the "Legend of Philomela" in LGW contributes to the "primary rhetorical effect" of the legend, i.e.,"secondary pathos." As an appeal to an absent god, the invocation, like…

Gutiérrez Arranz, José Maria.   José F. González Castro, ed. Perfiles de Grecia y Roma: Actas del XII Congreso Español de Estudios Clásicos, Valencia, 22 al 26 de Octubre de 2007 (Madrid: Sociedad Española de Estudios Clásicos, 2011), pp. 433-41.
Examines Chaucer's use of classical mythology from the perspective of how it is reinterpreted, sometimes following Neoplatonism (through St Augustine), and sometimes through other allegorical and moralizing reading.
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