Chaucer and the Challenges of Medievalism: Studies in Honor of H.A. KellyP. Lang, 2003 - 403 pages Chaucer and the Challenges of Medievalism honors the extraordinary academic career of H. A. Kelly, whose scholarship covers a wide variety of topics, including medieval and Renaissance literature and history, ecclesiastical history and theology, and philology. In recognition of his broad historical sweep, authors addressed in this volume range from Aristotle to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, though, in the interest of cohesion, the contributions focus primarily on English medieval literature and philology, and on closely related European and historical fields. Theoretically and methodologically, the essays fulfill the dual task of taking stock and taking on the challenges now facing medievalism. The reader will encounter a broad variety of - texts here, as well as fresh perspectives on issues of current interest in medieval studies." |
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Page 8
... kind of second creation , requiring a rebuilding from nothing . Troilus was already depicted in Book I scoffing at love . But Criseyde too must be returned to a romantic null , uninterested in human love . As Pandarus reawakens her to ...
... kind of second creation , requiring a rebuilding from nothing . Troilus was already depicted in Book I scoffing at love . But Criseyde too must be returned to a romantic null , uninterested in human love . As Pandarus reawakens her to ...
Page 36
... kind of love - adventure she has never known . Soon it grows dusk , when " white thynges waxen dymme and donne " , and her women prepare her for bed . There , in a kind of reverie , she hears a nightingale sing its " lay / Of love ...
... kind of love - adventure she has never known . Soon it grows dusk , when " white thynges waxen dymme and donne " , and her women prepare her for bed . There , in a kind of reverie , she hears a nightingale sing its " lay / Of love ...
Page 65
... kind , bearing the richness and authority of an entire civilization , and it contributes something very important to the poem . I do not think Chaucer meant it to wholly overshadow all that has gone before . Proportion alone can tell us ...
... kind , bearing the richness and authority of an entire civilization , and it contributes something very important to the poem . I do not think Chaucer meant it to wholly overshadow all that has gone before . Proportion alone can tell us ...
Contents
Donka Minkova and Theresa Tinkle | 1 |
Christopher Baswell | 15 |
Gordon Kipling | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Amor Angeles Anne Ansgar arte mayor Bestiary boar body Bokenham Book Bovet Cambridge Castilian century Chaucer Chaucerian Christ Christian Nations Church context court courtly Criseyde's cuaderna vía Cupid device dream eagle edition Edward essay Facetus Fairfax 16 French Friar Gerard Godwin's Guil Michel hell images Irish Jean de Meun Joachim John king language Latin Legend lines literary literature London lovers Lydgate Lydgate's male manuscript Margery Margery Kempe Margery's marriage Mary Shelley medieval merchant metre metrical Mézières Middle Ages modern monk mumming narrative narrator Oxford pageant Pandarus Perkin Warbeck Philippe de Mézières poem poet poetic political Prioress Prologue reader reference religious Rimbert Roman rosary saint Samhain sche scriptures secular semen sexual Shipman's Tale stress Studies suggests syllable count Tale tion tradition trans translation Troilus and Criseyde Troilus's University of California University Press Valperga verse visual woman word writing þat