Browse Items (15987 total)

Rude, Donald W.   American Notes and Queries 16 (1978): 82-83.
Two references by Stephen Hawes to Chaucer (along with Gower and Lydgate) not noted by Spurgeon are contained in "The Comforte of Hope." The unique copy of this work, printed by Wynkyn de Worde about 1512, is in The British Library.

Heffernan, Carol F.   Neophilologus 90 (2006): 333-49.
Heffernan discusses the nature, origins, and development of Italian "novelle"; Boccaccio's innovations with the form; and the likelihood that Chaucer had direct knowledge of The Decameron. Argues that the influence of Italian novelle generally, and…

Aciman, Alexander, and Emmett Rensin.   New York: Penguin, 2009.
Parodies more than eighty works, most from the western literary canon, in strings of 140-word "tweets," with an Introduction, Glossary, and Index. Includes CT (pp. 184-85) in seventeen tweets, with emphasis on GP, WBP, and MilT, and touches of faux…

Smigen-Rothkopf, David.   Ph.D. Dissertation. Fordham University, 2022.
Open access at ProQuest Dissertations & Theses; accessed November 19, 202).
Argues that "evolving discourses of gentility . . . served as models" for Chaucer, Sir Thomas Malory, and Henry Medwall, inspiring them "to write, variably, about socio-linguistic reform . . . and meta-literary reflection on the impact of newly…

Pearman, Tory Vandeventer.   Dissertation Abstracts International A70.07 (2010): n.p.
Arguing that medieval thought links disability with the feminine, Pearman examines "medieval female disability" in works of Chaucer (WBPT, MerT), Marie de France, Henryson, and Margery Kempe, among others.

Cawsey, Kathleen Eleanor.   DAI A67.06 (2006): n.p.
Cawsey examines the impact of assumptions about audience in the criticism of six twentieth-century Chaucer scholars (Kittredge, Lewis, Donaldson, Robertson, Dinshaw, and Patterson). These assumptions include whether the audience is diachronic or…

Cawsey, Kathy, ed.   Burlington, Ver.: Ashgate, 2011.
Six previously published essays by individual authors, an introduction, and a conclusion look at how Chaucer addresses audiences and how contemporary audiences interpret Chaucer's works. Describes the "audience function" and traces the "effect of…

Faulkner, Dewey R., ed.   Englewood Cliffs, N. J.: Prentice-Hall, 1973.
An anthology of thirteen new and previously printed essays and excerpts pertaining to PardPT, with a critical introduction, a brief chronology, and a selected bibliography. The Introduction (pp. 1-14) focuses on characterization, the place of PardPT…

Cawsey, Kathy.   Studies in Philology 102 (2005): 434-51.
Cawsey examines features of medieval tales of Tutivillus and explores how representations of female "discursive communities" and gossip in WBPT and plays about Noah illuminate these features through similar concerns with marginalized speech.

Kim, Jae-Whan, trans.   Seoul, Korea : Kkach'i, 2001.
Korean translation of TC, with an introduction.

Lavinsky, David.   Chaucer Review 50.3-4 (2015): 442-64.
Argues for the effectiveness of the Pardoner's speech in light of his use of fables and exempla rather than "officium." PardT affirms the power of literature over that of the Pardoner's own duplicitous nature.

Gavin, Sister Rosemarie Julie.   Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching 15:1 (1988): 3-4; 15:2 (1988): 3-5.
Pedagogical information.

Grennen, Joseph E.   Studia Neophilologica 57 (1985): 165-73.
Tudd, the third shepherd of the Chester play, may be a priest's bastard (son of Tibb); his hauteur recalls the Miller's wife in RvT.

Saito, Isamu.   Chaucer to Kirisutokyo (Chaucer and Medieval Christianity) Symposium Series of Medieval English Literature 1. (Tokyo: Gaku-shobo, 1984)
Discusses use of exempla in vernacular preaching manuals in fourteenth-century England and the literary evolution of exempla, especially in Chaucer.

Condict, Ellen Marie.   DAI A71.10 (2011): n.p.
Places HF in the intellectual and philosophical contexts of its era, particularly the tradition of Boethius and Wyclif, arguing that Chaucer supports the existence of universals.

Kiser, Lisa J.   Hanover, N. H., and London: University Press of New England, 1991
Chaucer's epistemology is skeptical: he subverts written authority, obscures traditional distinctions between history and fiction, and questions the validity and representability of experience. Formalist analysis of narratorial voices discloses (1)…

Somerset, Fiona, and Nicholas Watson, eds.   Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2015.
Includes essays dedicated to Richard Green Firth that explore a variety of medieval topics. Examines issues related to oral and written cultural networks, book and social history, vernacular studies, and media studies. For three essays that pertain…

Kearney, A. M.   Essays in Criticism 19 (1969): 245-53.
Argues that tensions within FranT indicate that Chaucer was subtly reinforcing the notion that male sovereignty in marriage is, realistically, advisable when combined with mutual trust and cooperation between the partners.

Brody, Saul Nathaniel.   Chaucer Review 14 (1979): 33-47.
By constantly breaking the dramatic illusion, the Nun's Priest forces his audience to consider the implications not only of his storytelling but of storytelling itself. The interruptions of his narrative, the comparisons of chickens and people, the…

Morse, Ruth.   Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991.
Medieval notions of historical and literary truth derive from classical rhetorical tradition and differ from modern, empirically based notions of factuality. Basing her argument on a description of education in rhetoric, Morse demonstrates that…

Benson, C. David.   Wendy Harding, ed. Drama, Narrative and Poetry in The Canterbury Tales (Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2003), pp. 22-33.
Benson argues against interpreting CT in terms of dramatic theory: the pilgrims are not fully developed human characters, nor are their tales expressions of their individual psychologies. The most developed pilgrims-the Pardoner and the Wife of…

Greenwood, Maria K.   Andre Lascombes, ed. Identites et differences (Paris: Publications de l'Association des Medievistes de l'Enseignement Superieur, no. 17, 1992), pp. 27-43.
The Prioress's duplicity has been constructed. Appealing to one or both of the codes by which we define her as a nun or a lady, she manages to invite excuses and build trust whenever mistrust is possible.

Price, Paul.   Chaucer Review 36: 158-83, 2001.
In his account of Katherine in the "Legendys of Hooly Wummen," fifteenth-century poet Osbern Bokenham "rebels" against his poetic fathers, namely Chaucer, Gower, and Lydgate. Bokenham allows Katherine to persuade her audience with the Nicene Creed…

Benson, C. David.   Piero Boitani, ed. The European Tragedy of Troilus (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989), pp. 153-70.
After Chaucer's TC, minor writers of the fifteenth, sixteenth,and early seventeenth centuries generally ignore "both the high passion and the tragedy of the lovers." The two type characters appear chiefly in brief allusions, "with none of Chaucer's…

Otis-Cour, Leah.   ChauR 47.2 (2012): 160-86.
Offers Richard de Fournival's "Consaus d'amours," a thirteenth-century French "art d'aimer" (art of love), as a possible source for FranT.
Output Formats

atom, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2

Not finding what you expect? Click here for advice!