Browse Items (16041 total)

Nyffenegger, Nicole, and Katrin Rupp, eds.   Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2011.
Ten essays by various authors, with an introduction by the editors and an index. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, search for Fleshly Things and Spiritual Matters under Alternative Title.

McGuire, Brigit C.   Dissertation Abstracts International A76.08 (2015): n.p.
As part of an examination of the image of the virgin body as "a dwelling place for God's Word," looks at Aelfric, Kempe, and SNT.

Ganim, John M.   Helen M. Hickey, Anne McKendry, and Melissa Raine, eds. Contemporary Chaucer across the Centuries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 188-200.
Argues that the "erotics" of William Morris's "News from Nowhere" constitute "an allegorical emblem of its politics," and suggests that the narrative stance of the novel may have been influenced by Chaucer's dream-vision narrator, an "inquisitive, if…

Lopez-Pelaez Casellas, Jesus.   Teresa Fanego Lema, ed. Papers from the IVth International Conference of the Spanish Society for Medieval Language and Literature (Santiago de Compostela: Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, 1993), pp. 183-92.
Examines the interconnections of theme and genre in NPT, maintaining that rhetoric links the "fictive manner" and the "fictive matter" of the tale.

Houwen, L. A. J. R.   L. A. J. R. Houwen, ed. Animals and the Symbolic in Mediaeval Art and Literature. Mediaevalia Groningana, no. 20 (Groningen: Egbert Forsten, 1997), pp. 77-92.
Assesses references to mermaids' singing in medieval tradition to argue that Chaucer's reference (NPT 7.3270) suggests flattery and thereby anticipates Chauntecleer's fall.

Steadman, John M.   Medium Ævum 28 (1959): 172-79.
Observes that NPT differs from most of its cock-and-fox analogues "in its explicit, reiterated warning against flattery," a traditional feature of, instead, "fox-and-crow" tales. Also, the explicitness of the moral in NPT is a "convention…

McCall, John P.   Modern Language Quarterly 23 (1962): 297-308.
Argues that the "formal and thematic design" of TC--particularly its five-book structure--reflects the "ordered argument of Lady Philosophy" in Boethius's "Consolation of Philosophy" and "reveals a new facet of Chaucer's concept of tragedy." Altering…

Van Schuyver, Susan A.   Droitwich, Worcestershire: Hanbury Plays, 1988.
Adaptations in modern prose of five shortened selections from CT, designed for staging. Includes NPT, ClT, RvT, WBT, and PardT.

Macaulay, Richard.   Cardiff: Drama Association of Wales, 2007
Includes "A Canterbury Tale" (pp. 91-113), a play that presents a fictional account of events that inspired Chaucer to write the CT, framed as a meeting between Chaucer and Simon Burley on the occasion of Burley's arrest. Also published as a…

Lloyd-Evans, Barbara, ed.   New York: Peter Bedrick, 1989.
Selections from the works of twenty-two English poets, accompanied by brief introductions and notes, with a glossary of poetic terms and first-line index. The section pertaining to Chaucer (pp. 17-104) includes GP, WBPT, PardPT, and NPPT.

Utley, Francis Lee.   Chaucer Review 6.3 (1972): 198-228.
Explores how and where features of various genres inform the characterization, tone, atmosphere, and meaning of ClT, treating it as a scene in the "Canterbury drama," an exemplum of worldly and cosmic obedience, a fairy tale, a realistic novella, and…

Bowler, Bill.   Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.
Pedagogical workbook for language learners of modern English, centered on modern prose adaptations of selections from CT (GP, KnT, MerT, ClT, FranT, WBT), with accompanying vocabulary exercises and comprehension activities. Illustrated by Natalia…

Dane, Joseph A.   Studies in Bibliography 51 (1998): 48-62.
Argues that the printer's copy for most of Thomas Speght's 1602 edition of Chaucer's works was not only a copy of the 1561 edition but "the same copy as was previously marked up to serve as printer's copy for the 1598 edition."

Fowler, Alastair.   Yale Review 101.02 (2014): 47-58.
Includes brief commentary on the medieval use of "incipits," with specific reference to TC.

Robertson, Elizabeth.   Helen M. Hickey, Anne McKendry, and Melissa Raine, eds. Contemporary Chaucer across the Centuries (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 25-41.
Assesses Troilus's and Criseyde's first looks at one another in TC as examples of physiological sense perception, rather than as mental or emotional processes or stages. Resists feminist and patristic readings of these gazes, and reads them in light…

Beidler, Peter G.   ChauR 37 : 86-94, 2002.
Emerson's allusion in "The Poet" to the lecture on gentility in WBT attributes the sentiment to Chaucer (rather than to the Wife), concentrates on the fire's brightness, and suggests that the passage refers to "good blood in mean condition." Since…

O'Brien, Timothy D.   Chaucer Review 33 (1998): 157-67.
In KnT, Chaucer's use of the word "queynte," the dying and quickening fires in the temple, and the spurting and spewing of the flames to "suggest parturition, life's uncertainty and tenuousness and even menstruation." Emelye's tears at the sight of…

Le Saux, Francoise.   Europe: A Literary History, 1348-1418 (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 20168), 1:465-77.
Describes late-medieval Breton political status and summarizes the region's literary production in Breton and in French, commenting on drama, Arthurian materials, and religious literature. Includes discussion of the setting of FranT in Brittany as…

Kohl, Stephan.   Willi Erzgraber and Sabine Volk, eds. Mundlichkeit und Schriftlichkeit im englischen Mittelalter. Script Oralia, vol. 5 (Tubingen: Gunter Narr Verlag, 1988), pp. 133-46.
Kohl examines conscious "orality" and appeals to the reader by narrators in the poetry of Ricardian authors: Gower, the "Gawain" poet, and others, including Chaucer (CT, TC, PF, LGW, and HF). With the introduction of unreliable narrators, the…

Schmerling, Hilda L.   New York: Gordon Presss, 1977.
In a section called "Springtime in the Canterbury Tales: Chaucer's Inheritance of the Sacred and the Profane" (pp. 1-26), tallies a number of classical and medieval attitudes toward spring and comments on Chaucer's various allusions to and images of…

Green, Eugene.   Michael Bilynsky, ed. Studies in Middle English: Words, Forms, Senses and Texts (New York: Peter Lang, 2014), pp. 165-83.
Explores the pragmatic linguistic devices Chaucer uses to establish a common ground of communication and "create convincing exchanges" between the Dreamer and the Eagle in HF, identifying and analyzing various concerns: "back-channel," lexicon,…

Kaempfer, Lucie.   Dissertation Abstracts International C81.04 (2019): n.p.
Considers joy to be the "climactic centre" of TC, addressing the presence and forms of joy “in the poem's construction of language, themes, and characters" and assessing "whether joy, in medieval culture, is a physical emotion, an affective state,…

Farris, R. S.   Essays in Medieval Studies 32 (2016): 57-63.
Focuses on the relationship between WBT and its analogue, "The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle," to show how such a study traces cultural shifts.

Werthmuller, Gyongyi.   Juan Camilo Conde Silvestre and Javier Calle Martı ´n, eds. Approaches to Middle English: Variation, Contact and Change (New York: Peter Land, 2015), pp. 179-97
Considers several factors (apocope, compounding, etymology, and metrical environment) in the presence or absence of final "-e" in Gower's and Chaucer's monosyllabic adjectives, clarifying Gower's relative regularity by identifying the paucity of…

Werthmuller, Gyongyi.   South Atlantic Review 79.3-4 (2015): 6-19.
Tabulates evidence of the greater regularity of stress in Gower's verse than in Chaucer's, particularly in nouns and adjectives that feature the apocope of final unstressed -e. Attributes this regularity to the influence of Gower having written…
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