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Middle English: Chaucer
Bazire, Joyce, and David Mills, comps.
Year's Work in English Studies 49 (1970): 100-12.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1968.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce, and David Mills.
Year's Work in English Studies 48 (1969): 87-101.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1967.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce, and David Mills, comps.
Year's Work in English Studies 47 (1968): 93-105.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1966.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce..
Year's Work in English Studies 46 (1967): 87-101.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1965.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 45 (1966): 80-96.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1964.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 44 (1965): 90-99.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1963.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 43 (1964): 78-87.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1962.
Middle: English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 42 (1963): 74-81.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1961.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 41 (1963): 69-79.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1960.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 40 (1961): 73-81.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1959.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 39 (1960): 81-87.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1958.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 38 (1960): 92-105.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1957.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 37 (1958): 103-10.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1956.
Middle English: Chaucer.
Bazire, Joyce.
Year's Work in English Studies 36 (1957): 76-88.
A discursive review of Chaucerian scholarship and research published in 1955 divided into four sections: General, CT, TC, and Other Works.
Chaucer.
Pitard, Derrick, Lindsey Simon-Jones, and Krista Sue-Lo Twu.
Year's Work in English Studies 100 (2021): 289–305.
Presents a discursive bibliography of Chaucer studies for 2019, divided into five subcategories: general, CT, TC, other works, and reception.
Theory [Section 3 of Middle English].
Finn, Andrew.
Year's Work in English Studies 100 (2021): 200–210.
Discursive bibliography of theoretical approaches to Middde English literature published in 2019, including studies of the works of Chaucer.
Middle English: Chaucer
Allen, Valerie, and Margaret Connolly.
Year's Work in English Sstudies 84 (2005): 222-55
A discursive bibliography of Chaucer studies for 2003, divided into four subcategories: general, CT, TC, and other works.
Notable Bindings XVI
Greenfield, Jane.
Yale University Library Gazette 72.1-2: 68-72, 1997.
Describes a Yale University copy of the Kelmscott Chaucer (1896) printed on vellum and elaborately bound (apparently by Douglas Bennett Cockerell) in pigskin stamped with designs by William Morris. Includes 2 figures.
Chaucer's "House of Fame."
Wilson, William Smith
Yale University Dissertation, 1960. Dissertation Abstracts International 31.06 (1970): 2893-94A. Full text available at ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.
Considers HF to be an occasional poem, perhaps "written for Christmas Revels at the Inner Temple," and reads its three parts an "an allegorical representation of the trivium" that pertains to poetry, "testing the trivium, and rejecting it, and…
A Chaucerian Crux
Frost, William.
Yale Rreview 66 (1977): 551-61.
In TC 5.543, the use of the participle "queynt" (quenched) may have been meant by Chaucer as a pun on the noun "queynt" (pudendum). Although the pun may have been intentional, it is irrelevant to the passage in which it appears, syntactically…
Stepping Out and Stepping Over: The Figure of Hyperbation.
Warren, Rosanna.
Yale Review 103.1 (2015): 54–61.
Discusses the stylistic device of inverting or rearranging word order for poetic effect. Highlights the writing of William Dunbar, who acknowledged Chaucer to be included among the "masters who by making were remade."
First Phases
Fowler, Alastair.
Yale Review 101.02 (2014): 47-58.
Includes brief commentary on the medieval use of "incipits," with specific reference to TC.
Readers in/of 'Troilus and Criseyde'
Dinshaw, Carolyn.
Yale Journal of Criticism: Interpretation in the Humanities 1 (1988): 81-105.
The widely separate and influential readings of TC by E. Talbot Donaldson and D. W. Robertson, Jr., while based on diametrically opposed theoretical principles, nevertheless find themselves in areement by virtue of their attempt to effect some manner…
Morality Ovidized: Sententiousness and the Aphoristic Moment in the 'Nun's Priest's Tale'
Chapin, Arthur.
Yale Journal of Criticism 8:1 (1995): 7-33.
Compares the comic treatment of sententiousness in NPT with modern philosophical uses of aphorism. Both are "Menippean" in their contrasts of high and low discourse, and both ask us to perceive their points rather than to understand conceptually.
Chaucerian Romance?
Jordan, Robert M.
Yale French Studies 51 (1974): 223-34.
Assesses structural and stylistic features (rather than the subject matter) of medieval narratives classed as romance, analyzing the "compositional structure" of WBT, particularly its "inorganic" and "additive" incorporation of digressive materials.…