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Annotated Chaucer bibliography: 1997–2010
Annotated Chaucer bibliography: 1997–2010
Annotated Chaucer bibliography: 1997–2010
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Annotated Chaucer bibliography: 1997–2010

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An extremely thorough, expertly compiled and crisply annotated comprehensive bibliography of Chaucer scholarship between 1997 and 2010
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 1, 2015
ISBN9781784996451
Annotated Chaucer bibliography: 1997–2010
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Mark Allen

Mark Allen is co-author of the book Master Data Management in Practice: Achieving True Customer MDM (John Wiley & Sons, 2011) and is a senior IT consultant and enterprise data governance lead at WellPoint, Inc. Before joining WellPoint, Mark was a senior program manager in customer operation groups at both Sun Microsystems and Oracle Corporation. At Sun Microsystems, Mark served as the lead data steward for the customer data domain throughout the planning and implementation of Sun’s customer data hub. Mark has over 20 years of data management and project management experience including extensive planning and deployment experience with customer master initiatives, data governance, and leading data quality management practices. Mark speaks at Data Governance and Information Quality (DGIQ) conferences and has served on various customer advisory boards focused on sharing and enhancing MDM and data governance practices.

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    Annotated Chaucer bibliography - Mark Allen

    ANNOTATED CHAUCER BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Series editors: Anke Bernau and David Matthews

    Series founded by: J. J. Anderson and Gail Ashton

    Advisory board: Ruth Evans, Nicola McDonald, Andrew James Johnston, Sarah Salih, Larry Scanlon and Stephanie Trigg

    The Manchester Medieval Literature and Culture series publishes new research, informed by current critical methodologies, on the literary cultures of medieval Britain (including Anglo-Norman, Anglo-Latin and Celtic writings), including post-medieval engagements with and representations of the Middle Ages (medievalism). ‘Literature’ is viewed in a broad and inclusive sense, embracing imaginative, historical, political, scientific, dramatic and religious writings. The series offers monographs and essay collections, as well as editions and translations of texts.

    Titles Available in the Series

    Language and imagination in the Gawain-poems

    J. J. Anderson

    Water and fire: The myth of the Flood in Anglo-Saxon England

    Daniel Anlezark

    Rethinking the South English legendaries

    Heather Blurton and Jocelyn Wogan-Browne (eds)

    The Parlement of Foulys (by Geoffrey Chaucer)

    D. S. Brewer (ed.)

    Sanctity and pornography in medieval culture: On the verge

    Bill Burgwinkle and Cary Howie

    Between earth and heaven:

    Liminality and the Ascension of Christ in Anglo-Saxon literature

    Johanna Kramer

    Reading Robin Hood:

    Content, form and reception in the outlaw myth

    Stephen Knight

    In strange countries:

    Middle English literature and its afterlife: Essays in Memory of J. J. Anderson

    David Matthews (ed.)

    A Knight’s Legacy:

    Mandeville and Mandevillian Lore in early modern England

    Ladan Niayesh (ed.)

    Greenery:

    Ecocritical readings of late medieval English literature

    Gillian Rudd

    Annotated Chaucer bibliography 1997–2010

    Edited by

    MARK ALLEN AND STEPHANIE AMSEL

    Manchester University Press

    Copyright © Mark Allen and Stephanie Amsel 2016

    The rights of Mark Allen and Stephanie Amsel to be identified as the editors of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    Published by Manchester University Press

    Altrincham Street, Manchester m1 7ja

    www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk

    British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

    Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data applied for

    ISBN 978 0 7190 96099

    First published 2016

    The publisher has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for any external or third-party internet websites referred to in this book, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

    Typeset in Arno with Scala display

    by Koinonia, Manchester

    Table of contents

    Preface

    The core of this volume is a compilation of fourteen years (1997–2010) of the annual bibliography published in the journal of the New Chaucer Society, Studies in the Age of Chaucer (SAC), augmented by additional research that discovered more than 650 items not included in the SAC bibliographies for these years or missed in previously printed cumulative bibliographies of Chaucer (for the latter, see nos. 4449–4632). The volume extends the legacy of cumulative Chaucer bibliographies: Eleanor Prescott Hammond, Chaucer: A Bibliographical Manual (1908); Dudley D. Griffith, A Bibliography of Chaucer, 1908–1924 (1926) and Bibliography of Chaucer, 1908–1953 (1955); Willard E. Martin, A Chaucer Bibliography, 1954–63 (1967); Lorrayne Y. Baird, A Bibliography of Chaucer, 1964–1973 (1977); Lorrayne Y. Baird-Lange and Hildegard Schnuttgen, A Bibliography of Chaucer, 1974–1985 (1988); and Bege K. Bowers and Mark Allen, Annotated Chaucer Bibliography, 1986–1996 (2002). Generally, we follow the taxonomy of the latter and, as it does, include a descriptive annotation for each item (except those we identify as Item not seen, fewer than fifty).

    Like our predecessors, we seek to record all publications that pertain to Chaucer, although the elusive goal of comprehensiveness has been made both easier and more difficult to achieve by the development of digital tools and digital media. We have been very well served by electronic finding aids such as WorldCat and the MLA International Bibliography, but daunted by the possibilities of publication on the Internet (including self-publication) and its many modes of mirroring, reproducing, and reissuing materials. For both print and electronic media, we have sought to include Chaucer material, academic and popular, that is original and that is generally available to the public through university libraries and the Internet. When identical print and electronic materials are published concurrently, we give priority to the printed version, and we have generally excluded reprinted materials in any form (printed or electronic, including e-books). By analogy, we also have excluded Internet hubs that provide, primarily or exclusively, links to other sites and publications. Moreover, we have excluded e-mail discussions, blogs, podcasts, course syllabi, student essays or projects posted as classwork, and materials that have indications of temporary web-life or have disappeared since we encountered them. We do include pedagogical materials that offer advice to teachers or students (see nos. 4284–448), and collect under the heading Audio-visual aids and electronic media (nos. 4205–83) films, recordings, and digital files designed to help students of all sorts learn about and appreciate Chaucer, his culture, and his language. Where possible, we have tried to include and provide dates for substantially revised versions of previously printed or electronically produced materials, although these are not exhaustive.

    Academic items outnumber popular ones in this bibliography, but the growing interest in medievalism and Chaucer’s popular reception has prompted us to include a section not found in previous bibliographies: Chaucer in fiction (nos. 1102–33). Works in this section generally include Chaucer or his characters as participants in fiction, poetry, or drama—not adaptations or allusions to Chaucerian material, but original works that capitalize on his familiarity or prestige. There is conceptual overlap between this section and its more traditional antecedent, Chaucer’s influence and later allusion (nos. 829–1101), although we do not include in either section works that allude to Chaucer merely by the use of vocational titles (e.g., The Time-Traveler’s Tale, The Baker’s Tale, etc.), unless they also engage his life or works more extensively. Many items could well be placed in more than one section (essays that discuss the Knight’s Tale and the Miller’s Tale together, for example), but we include each item only once in this bibliography, in the category that seems most appropriate or convenient, and cross-listed by item-number to other pertinent categories. To ensure thoroughness in their research, users should use the cross-listings included at the end of each category and the Subject index at the end of the volume.

    The sheer bulk of material has compelled us to follow several space-saving practices. We generally include only one place of publication (e.g., New York rather than New York, London, and Sydney); for convenience we usually select the U.S. location closest to our sites of research. Similarly, when two companies (usually in different nations) publish a given work, we provide information for only the one most readily available to us (again, usually U.S.) unless the title varies. We have followed U.S. spelling conventions, except in titles and quotations where we retain the original. We provide transliterated or translated titles for items published in non-Roman alphabets, but do not translate non-English titles that use the Roman alphabet. We use short titles (i.e., we omit subtitles) when cross-referencing essays and the volumes in which they appear. Similarly, we omit author names in our descriptive summaries, opting for subject-less verbs (e.g., Explores the similarities … rather than Brewer explores the similarities …).

    For much of this practice we are consistent with the annual SAC bibliographies and the Chaucer Online Bibliography available at http://uchaucer.utsa.edu. Indeed the three formats (serial, electronic, and cumulative) present much the same data, although each version has its own uses and, we hope, its own usefulness.

    Acknowledgments and dedication

    First and foremost, we wish to thank Bege K. Bowers, Professor Emerita of Youngs-town State University, whose expert and untiring contributions to Chaucer bibliography extended from 1984 through 2012. During that time as Assistant Bibliographer to the New Chaucer Society, Professor Bowers shared responsibility for the production of the annual bibliography published in Studies in the Age of Chaucer. She contributed many of the entries included here and the great majority of them came under her careful review, correction, and editing. She also provided the template for this volume. For all of this, for her good sense, and for her genial humor we are grateful, and we dedicate the volume to her as a token of that gratitude.

    For research assistance and service—especially interlibrary loan service—we thank the staffs at the libraries of The University of Texas at San Antonio, Southern Methodist University, and the Maag Library of Youngstown State University. For their editorial help and advice, we are grateful to the editors of Studies in the Age of Chaucer during the years 1998-2012: Lisa Kiser, Larry Scanlon, Frank Grady, and David Matthews. We are also grateful to the New Chaucer Society for its financial support of the production of this volume.

    Many others have contributed over the years as well, keeping watch over the many publications that pertain to Chaucer and providing annotations and notices of reviews. We are especially grateful to those who have served regularly for many years: Michelle Allen, Valerie Allen, Brother Anthony (Sonjae An), Rebecca S. Beal, Debra Best, Norman F. Blake, Mary Flowers Braswell, Larry L. Bronson, Jan Cermák, Margaret Connolly, Robert Correale, John M. Crafton, Stefania D’Agata D’Ottavi, Elizabeth Dobbs, Juliette Dor, Hisato Ebi, R. D. Eaton, W. Dansby Evans, Joerg O. Fichte, Amy Goodwin, Cynthia Gravlee, Thomas Hahn, Stanley R. Hauer, Cynthia Ho, Bruce W. Hozeski, Andrew James Johnston, Gail Jones, Stephen Jones, Masatoshi Kawasaki, Erik Kooper, Wim Lindeboom, Joyce T. Lionarons, Andrew Lynch, Olivia Mair, Hillary K. Miller, Warren S. Moore III, George Nicholas, Glending Olson, Richard H. Osberg, Daniel J. Pinti, Teresa P. Reed, Martha Rust, Constance Sabo-Risley, Gregory M. Sadlek, Ana Saez Hidalgo, William Schipper, Jesús Luis Serrano Reyes, Brian A. Shaw, R. L. Smith, William Snell, David Sprunger, Denise Stodola, Marilyn Sutton, Matsuji Tajima, Anne Thornton, Richard J. Utz, Cindy L. Vitto, Martha S. Waller, Winthrop Wetherbee, Elaine Whitaker, Elaine Wong, and Martine Yvernault.

    Additional individual entries or help with research or translation was provided by the following: Paul Alessi, Kathleen A. Bishop, John Boje, Thies Bornemann, Laurel Boshoff, Kristi Byrd, Shannon O. Cotrell, Edwin D. Craun, Sven Duncan Durie, Corey Goethe, Philipp Hinz, Elisabeth Kempf, Eileen Krueger, Brian S. Lee, Sharon Lewis, Przemyslaw Lozoski, Rebecca McCracken, Paule Mertens-Fonck, Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Murphy, Laszlo Nagypal, Claudia Ortega, Terri Pantuso, Kiani Pierce, Susan Presley, Susan F. Priestley, Nicole Provencher, Stephen H. Rigby, Rebecca Sansky, Juliet Sloger, Toni K. Thayer, Paul R. Thomas, Jeremy Tirrell, Arturo Vasquez III, Kathryn Yerkes, and Franck Zeitoun.

    Our thanks to all of the above, and our apologies to those we may have missed.

    Abbreviations

    Chaucer’s Works

    Periodicals

    Miscellaneous

    Annotated Chaucer bibliography 1997–2010

    Festschriften and collections

    1 Aers, David, ed. Medieval Literature and Historical Inquiry: Essays in Honor of Derek Pearsall. Cambridge: Brewer, 2000. xvi, 212 pp. Nine essays on medieval English literature, a preface by Derek Brewer, an introduction by Aers, and a bibliography of Pearsall’s publications through 1998. Two essays pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2610 and 3274.

    Reviews: John M. Ganim, SAC 25 (2003): 339–44; Wendy Scase, Speculum 78 (2003): 1239–40.

    2 Akehurst, F. R. P., and Stephanie Cain Van D’Elden, eds. The Stranger in Medieval Society. Medieval Cultures, no. 12. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1997. xii, 149 pp. Nine essays by various authors on representation of and attitudes toward strangers in medieval literature and society. Topics include merchants as strangers, Jews in France, Wolfram von Eschenbach, Renaut de Montaubon, the German poet Kelin, and renown as a form of identity in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. For an essay that pertains to Chaucer, see no. 3374.

    Reviews: Richard Fehrenbacher, SAC 21 (1999): 315–17; Cynthia Ho, TMR 98.11.02, n.p.

    3 Alamichel, Marie-Françoise, ed. La complémentarité: Mélanges offerts à Josseline Bidard et Arlette Sancery à l’occasion de leur départ en retraite. Publications de l’Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur. Hors série, no. 11. Paris: AMAES, 2005. 290 pp. Includes seven essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 1250, 1461, 2247, 2686, 2731, 3880, and 4170.

    4 Alamichel, Marie-Françoise, and Derek Brewer, eds. The Middle Ages After the Middle Ages in the English-Speaking World. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell and Brewer, 1997. ix, 166 pp. Eleven essays by various authors study the influence and impact of the Middle Ages on Western life and culture from the sixteenth century to the present. The essays cover a wide range of topics—literature, stylistics, lexicography, art, the cinema, philosophy, history and myth-making, oral traditions, feminist issues—and reflect the enduring influence of the Middle Ages on European art and life. For the two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 598 and 630.

    5 Amano, Masachiyo, Michiko Ogura, and Masayuki Ohkado, eds. Historical Englishes in Varieties of Texts and Contexts: The Global COE Programme, International Conference 2007. Studies in English Medieval; Language and Literature, no. 22. New York: Lang, 2008. xi, 403 pp. Twenty-eight essays by various authors on linguistic aspects of Old and Middle English, including three that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 1324, 1329, and 1369.

    6 Amtower, Laurel, and Dorothea Kehler, eds. The Single Woman in Medieval and Early Modern England: Her Life and Representation. Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, no. 263. Tempe: Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2003. xxii, 242 pp. Eleven essays by various authors on topics ranging from Anglo-Norman literature to early modern portraiture and drama. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1533 and 2754.

    7 Ashton, Gail, and Louise Sylvester, eds. Teaching Chaucer. Teaching the New English. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. xi, 167 pp. Nine essays on pedagogical topics by various authors, with web resources, suggestions for further reading, and index. The introduction (by Ashton) emphasizes the need for teachers to facilitate active learning. For individual essays, see nos. 388, 4363, 4380, 4392, 4407, 4409, 4433, 4438, and 4441.

    Reviews: Louise D’Arcens, SAC 30 (2008): 337–40; Stephen F. Evans, SMART 17.2 (2010): 149–59. Malcolm Hebron, UoE 59 (2008): 261–65; Tison Pugh, TMR 08.02.21, n.p.

    8 Astell, Ann W., and J. A. Jackson, eds. Levinas and Medieval Literature: The Difficult Reading of English and Rabbinic Texts. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Duquesne UP, 2009. x, 374 pp. Twelve essays by various authors, plus an introduction by the editors, consider interactions among Christian allegory, talmudic hermeneutics, and the interpretive theory of Emmanuel Levinas. Three essays pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2922, 3065, and 3689.

    Review: David Williams, JEGP 109 (2010): 515–17.

    9 Baker, Denise N., ed. Inscribing the Hundred Years’ War in French and English Cultures. Albany: State U of New York P, 2000. x, 277 pp. Eleven essays by various authors examine the reciprocity between literature and history in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 731 and 3281.

    Reviews: Peter Brown, Speculum 78 (2003): 132–34; Richard W. Kaeuper, SAC 24 (2002): 366–68.

    10 Baker, Peter S., and Nicholas Howe, eds. Words and Works: Studies in Medieval English Language and Literature in Honour of Fred C. Robinson. New York: U of Toronto P, 1998. xi, 310 pp. Seventeen essays by various authors, focusing primarily on Old English language and literature. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1136, 2478, and 3344.

    Reviews: David Johnson, TMR 99.03.02, n.p.; Ursula Schaefer, Archiv 237 (2000): 165–67.

    11 Bayer, Gerd, and Ebbe Klitgård, eds. Narrative Developments from Chaucer to Defoe. Routledge Studies in Renaissance Literature and Culture, no. 11. New York: Routledge, 2010. vi, 270 pp. Eleven essays by various authors and an introduction by the editors consider various aspects of narrative technique from Chaucer to Daniel Defoe. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1430, 1708, 3672, and 4065.

    12 Beer, Jeanette, ed. Translation Theory and Practice in the Middle Ages. Studies in Medieval Culture, no. 38. Kalamazoo, Mich.: Medieval Institute, 1997. 282 pp. Includes two essays that pertain to Chaucer: nos. 840 and 2853.

    Reviews: Betsy Bowden, Arthuriana 10.3 (2000): 105–8; Joan Tasker Grimbert, TMR 98.02.06, n.p.; Barbara Nolan, MP 96 (1998): 65-69.

    13 Beidler, Peter G., ed. Masculinities in Chaucer: Approaches to Maleness in the Canterbury Tales and Troilus and Criseyde. Chaucer Studies, no. 25. Rochester, N.Y.: Brewer, 1998. xii, 252 pp. An introduction by the editor, plus seventeen essays by various authors. For individual essays, see 2336, 2404, 2474, 2559, 2668, 2822, 2932a, 3024, 3037, 3144, 3254, 3300, 3338, 3382, 3716, 3726, and 3763.

    Reviews: Malcolm Andrew, ES 81 (2000): 389–90; Christopher Cannon, 68 (1999): 369; Nicola Chatten, LeedsSE 31 (2000): 303–5; Robert W. Hanning, Anglia 117 (1999): 582–86; Andrew King, M&H 26 (1999): 167–69.

    14 Benson, Robert G., and Susan J. Ridyard, eds. New Readings of Chaucer’s Poetry. Chaucer Studies, no. 31. Rochester, N.Y.: Brewer, 2003. vii, 200 pp. Ten essays by various authors and a descriptive introduction by Derek Brewer. The papers were originally delivered at the Sewanee Medieval Colloquium at the University of the South in April 2000; the colloquium was devoted to Chaucer’s work on the 600th anniversary of his death. The volume includes an index. See nos. 747, 1438, 1679, 1928, 2346, 2704, 3039, 3164, 3681, and 4006.

    Reviews: Catherine A. M. Clarke, MLR 101 (2006): 513–14; Aidan Conti, N&Q 51 (2004): 434–35; Thomas Honegger, Anglia 123 (2005): 296–98; Anita Obermeier, TMR 04.04.06, n.p.; Glending Olson, Speculum 80 (2005): 514–16.

    15 Bishop, Kathleen A., ed. The Canterbury Tales Revisited—21st Century Interpretations. Newcastle on Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2008. xvi, 337 pp. Eighteen essays by various authors, with a foreword by David Matthews (pp. x–xiv) and a preface by the editor (pp. xv–xvi). For individual essays, see nos. 1425, 2117, 2324, 2367, 2461, 2471, 2536, 2541, 2744, 2807, 2907, 3147, 3194, 3215 3244, 3302, 3314, and 4095.

    16 Bishop, Kathleen A., ed. Standing in the Shadow of the Master? Chaucerian Influences and Interpretations. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2010. x, 317 pp. Thirteen essays by various authors, focusing on the influence of Chaucer’s work or his reception. See nos. 438, 717, 871, 943–44, 1039, 1060, 1070, 2758, 4194, 4198, 4265, and 4374.

    17 Blake, Norman, and Peter Robinson, eds. The Canterbury Tales Project Occasional Papers, Volume II. Office for Humanities Communications Publications, no. 9. London: King’s College, Office for Humanities Communications, 1997. viii, 184 pp. Nine essays by various authors and a preface by the editors, all of which pertain to textual issues of CT or to the principles and practices of the Canterbury Tales Project. See nos. 1974, 2000, 2014, 2022–23, 2029, 2035, 2732, and 2796.

    Review: Ebbe Klitgård, ES 80 (1999): 266–67.

    18 Bloom, Harold, ed. Geoffrey Chaucer. Bloom’s Biocritiques. Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 2003. xiii, 159 pp. Five essays by various authors, a brief introduction by the editor, a chronology, and selective bibliographies on Chaucer’s work, primary and secondary. Three essays are reprints; for two newly published essays, see nos. 346 and 1241.

    19 Bloom, Harold, ed. Geoffrey Chaucer: Updated Edition. Bloom’s Modern Critical Views. New York: Bloom’s Literary Criticism, 2007. vii, 259 pp. Ten previously printed or excerpted essays by various authors, with an introduction by the editor, a Chaucer chronology, and a bibliography. Topics include the ending of TC (E. Talbot Donaldson); LGWP (Robert Worth Frank Jr.); interplay between KnT and MilT (Richard Neuse); sovereignty in WBT (Manuel Aguirre); Ovidianism and the Wife of Bath (Michael A. Calabrese); SNT and apocalyptic imagination (Eileen Jankowski); Oedipal fantasies in ClT, MLT, and PrT (Barrie Ruth Strauss); ShT as fabliau (John Finlayson); time as topos in Chaucer’s poetry (Martin Camargo); and joy in TC (John M. Hill).

    20 Boenig, Robert, and Kathleen Davis, eds. Manuscript, Narrative, Lexicon: Essays on Literary and Cultural Transmission in Honor of Whitney F. Bolton. Lewisburg, Pa.: Bucknell UP, 2000. 261 pp. Eleven essays by various authors, a bibliography of Bolton’s publications, and an index. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1383, 1984, 2475, 3062.

    Reviews: Michiko Ogura, N&Q 246 (2001): 166–67; R. F. Yeager, SAC 24 (2002): 371–77.

    21 Boitani, Piero, and Anna Torti, eds. The Body and the Soul in Medieval Literature. The J. A. W. Bennett Memorial Lectures, 10th Ser. Perugia, 1998. Rochester, N.Y.: Brewer, 1999. xii, 211 pp. Ten essays by various authors, originally presented at a symposium on The Body and Soul in Medieval Literature. Most of the essays focus on Middle English literature, including some comparisons with medieval French and Italian works and some later literature. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1943, 2092, 3994, and 4071.

    22 Boitani, Piero, and Jill Mann, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Chaucer. 2d ed. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003. xiv, 317 pp. Revised version of the 1986 original, now with seventeen essays, five of which are new. Revised pieces are The Social and Literary Scene in England (Paul Strohm); Chaucer’s Italian Inheritance (David Wallace); "Old Books Brought to New Life in Dreams: The Book of the Duchess, the House of Fame, the Parliament of Birds (Piero Boitani); Telling the Story in Troilus and Criseyde (Mark Lambert); Chance and Destiny in Troilus and Criseyde and the Knight’s Tale (Jill Mann); The Canterbury Tales: Personal Drama or Experiments in Poetic Variety?" (C. David Benson); essays on romance, comedy, pathos, and exemplum and fable in CT by J. A. Burrow, Derek Pearsall, Robert Worth Frank Jr., and A. C. Spearing, respectively; and a bibliography of further reading by Joerg O. Fichte. For the five new essays, see 738, 1054, 1147, 1692, and 3966.

    Reviews: Robert Boenig, M&H 32 (2007): 137–38; R. D. Eaton, ES 87 (2006): 112–13; Mary Theresa Hall, SCJ 36 (2005): 514; Scott Lightsey, TMR 05.01.08, n.p.; Lilo Moessner, Anglistik 18 (2007): 205–9.

    23 Böker, Uwe, et al., eds. Of Remembraunce the Keye: Medieval Literature and Its Impact Through the Ages. Festschrift for Karl Heinz Göller on the Occasion of His 80th Birthday. Frankfurt am Main: Lang, 2004. 378 pp. Twenty-one essays by various authors and a bibliography of Göller’s publications. The essays focus on medieval romances and their reception in later traditions, German and English. Four essays pertain to Chaucer: nos. 1747, 3264, 3649, and 3786.

    24 Børch, Marianne, ed. Text and Voice: The Rhetoric of Authority in the Middle Ages. Odense: UP of Southern Denmark, 2004. 272 pp. Ten essays by various authors on medieval verbal and visual rhetoric, with recurrent attention to authority, glossing, and vernacularity. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 398, 2087, and 2477.

    Review: Michael Foster, TMR 06.05.05, n.p.

    25 Borroff, Marie. Traditions and Renewals: Chaucer, The Gawain-Poet, and Beyond. New Haven, Conn.: Yale UP, 2003. xii, 275 pp. Ten essays by the author, three of them published here for the first time. Topics include CT, Pearl, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and Shakespeare’s Hamlet. For two new essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1894 and 2054.

    Reviews: Lawrence M. Clopper, JEGP 105 (2006): 340; Laura Howes, TMR 04.02.46, n.p.; Margaret Lamont, Comitatus 35 (2004): 189–91.

    26 Bourquin, Guy, ed. Hier et aujourd’hui: Points de vue sur le moyen âge anglais. Publications de l’Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, no. 21. Nancy: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 1997. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1150 and 2396.

    27 Brandt, Bruce E., and Michael S. Nagy, eds. Proceedings of the 14th Northern Plains Conference on Earlier British Literature, April 7–8, 2006. Brookings: English Department, South Dakota State U, 2006. 220 pp. Thirteen papers on topics ranging from Old English to eighteenth-century British literature. For three papers that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 970, 2690, and 4044.

    28 Brown, Peter, ed. A Companion to Medieval English Literature and Culture, c.1350–c.1500. Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture, no. 42. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2007. xvii, 668 pp. 12 b&w illus. Thirty-eight essays by various authors, arranged in seven subheadings: Overviews; The Production and Reception of Texts; Language and Literature; Encounters with Other Cultures; Special Themes; Genres; and Readings. Each essay includes suggestions for further reading, and the volume is indexed. Includes recurrent references to Chaucer, with one essay dedicated to him (no. 1937).

    29 Brown, Peter. Reading Dreams: The Interpretation of Dreams from Chaucer to Shakespeare. Introd. A. C. Spearing. Oxford: Oxford UP, 1999. x, 194 pp. Six essays by various authors on dreams in medieval and early modern literature. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 986, 1452, 3800, and 3852.

    Reviews: Andrew Barnaby, RenQ 55 (2002): 755–56; L. S. Davidson, Parergon 18.3 (2001): 155–56; Eileen Gardiner, TMR 00.03.06, n.p.; James A. Knapp, SCJ 32 (2001): 1201–3; Helen Phillips, MLR 96 (2001): 1043–45; Daniel Pinti, SAC 23 (2001): 524–26; J. Stephen Russell, JEGP 100 (2001): 131–33; Hugh White, RES 51 (2000): 461–63.

    30 Burger, Glenn, and Steven Kruger, eds. Queering the Middle Ages. Medieval Cultures, no. 27. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 2001. xxiii, 318 pp. Ten essays on queer issues, with responses. Includes readings on a selection of medieval texts, including Christine de Pizan and Dante. For an essay that pertains to Chaucer and a response see nos. 1541 and 1588.

    Review: Michael O’Rourke, SoAR 68.2 (2003): 149–52.

    31 Burrow, J. A., and Ian P. Wei, eds. Medieval Futures: Attitudes to the Future in the Middle Ages. Rochester, N.Y.: Boydell, 2000. xiv, 188 pp. Nine essays by various authors on topics related to common attitudes toward the future in the Middle Ages, i.e., theories and practices rather than apocalyptic concerns. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1509 and 3277.

    32 Burton, T. L., and John F. Plummer, eds. Seyd in Forme and Reverence: Essays on Chaucer and Chaucerians in Memory of Emerson Brown, Jr. Provo, Utah: Chaucer Studio P, 2005. xix, 249 pp. Eighteen essays by various authors; a professional biography of Emerson Brown Jr.; and a list of his academic publications. For individual essays, see nos. 1094, 1389, 1803, 2082, 2232, 2452, 2676, 2737, 3083, 3150, 3310, 3359, 3617, 3851, 3870, 4107, 4116, and 4369.

    33 Buschinger, Danielle, and Arlette Sancery, eds. Mélanges de langue, littérature et civilisation offerts à André Crépin à l’occasion de son quatre-vingtième anniversaire. Médiévales, no. 44. Amiens: Presses du Centre d’Études Médiévales, Université de Picardie-Jules Verne, 2008. Includes eight essays that pertain to Chaucer: nos. 1459, 2214, 2582, 3180, 3213, 3313, 3519, and 3707.

    34 Butterfield, Ardis, ed. Chaucer and the City. Chaucer Studies, no. 37. Cambridge: Brewer, 2006. 231 pp. Twelve essays by various authors under the rubrics Locations, Communities, Institutions, and Afterlife. The introduction argues that any consideration of city life is an act of recovering the past. Chaucer allows the audience to hear and see medieval London. See nos. 1019, 1658, 1701, 1792, 1906, 2570, 3159, 3306, 3426, 3552, 3905, and 4105.

    Reviews: Catherine A. M. Clarke, RES 57 (2006): 798–99; Robert Costomiris, TMR 07.07.05, n.p.; Sylvia Federico, SAC 29 (2007): 470–73; Kathy Lavezzo, Speculum 82 (2007): 686–88; David Raybin, EMSt 24 (2007): 21–29; Jay Ruud, SMART 15.2 (2008): 147–51; Míceál F. Vaughan, JEGP 108 (2009): 114–17.

    35 Canitz, A. E. Christa, and Gernot R. Wieland, eds. From Arabye to Engelond: Medieval Studies in Honour of Mahmoud Manzalaoui on His 75th Birthday. Actexpress. Ottawa: U of Ottawa P, 1999. viii, 307 pp. Sixteen essays by various authors on Eastern and Western medieval literature and medievalism, plus a bibliography of Manzalaoui’s publications. Six essays pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 1222, 2335, 3044, 3394, 3477, and 3969.

    36 Carlson, Cindy L., and Angela Jane Weisl, eds. Constructions of Widowhood and Virginity in the Middle Ages. The New Middle Ages. New York: St. Martin’s P, 1999. x, 270 pp. Eleven essays by various authors and an introduction by the editors. Topics include depictions of virginity, widowhood, and their intersections in medieval romance, hagiography, and drama, with recurrent references to other literary genres and historical documents. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 3056, 3205, and 3738.

    Reviews: Katherine Clark, TMR 00.05.16, n.p.; Liesl Smith, WS 31 (2002): 95–97.

    37 Carruthers, Leo, ed. Justice et injustice au Moyen Âge. AMAES, extra ser., no. 5. Paris: Publications de l’Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 1999. 178 pp. Nine essays by various authors exploring the theme of justice and injustice in Medieval English literature and society. One essay (Gloria Cigman on the notion of authority in Chaucer and in Shakespeare) pertains to Chaucer in general; two others also treat fourteenth-century literature.

    38 Carruthers, Leo, ed. Rêves et prophéties au Moyen Âge. AMAES, no. 22. Paris: Publications de l’Association de Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 1998. 150 pp. Eight essays by various authors examining medieval dreams and prophecies in literature and society. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 3391, 3883, and 3959.

    39 Carruthers, Leo, ed. La ronde des saisons: Les saisons dans la littérature et la société anglaises au Moyen Âge. Cultures et civilisations médiévales, no. 16. Paris: Presses Universitaires de Paris-Sorbonne, 1998. 120 pp. Ten essays by various authors exploring the four seasons in medieval English literature and society. Includes an essay by Sandra Gorgiewski about David Fincher’s movie Seven in relation to ParsT and Dante. For an essay that pertains directly to Chaucer, see no. 1688.

    40 Carruthers, Leo, and Adrian Papahagi, eds. Jeunesse et vieillesse: Images médiévales de l’âge en littérature anglaise. Paris: Harmattan, 2005. 199 pp. Eleven articles in French and English by various authors exploring the themes of youth and age in Old and Middle English literature. For two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1110 and 4171.

    41 Carruthers, Leo, and Adrian Papahagi, eds. Paroles et silences dans la littérature anglaise au Moyen Âge. AMAES, no. 10. Paris: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 2003. Includes two essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2168 and 3962.

    42 Carruthers, Leo, and Adrian Papahagi, eds. Prologues et épilogues dans la littérature anglaise du Moyen Âge. AMAES, no. 24. Paris: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 2001. 192 pp. Eleven articles by various authors on the functions of prologues and epilogues. For five articles that pertain to Chaucer studies, see nos. 1639, 1897, 2311, 3350, and 4215.

    43 Cawsey, Kathy, and Jason Harris, eds. Transmission and Transformation in the Middle Ages: Texts and Contexts. Dublin: Four Courts P, 2007. 212 pp. Ten essays by various authors, with an introduction by the editors and a comprehensive index. Topics range from Jerome’s theory of translation to Julian of Norwich to Protestant reception of medieval literature. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 3113, 3397, and 4167.

    44 Classen, Albrecht, ed. Urban Space in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age. New York: De Gruyter, 2009. vii, 757 pp. Twenty-three essays on literary and historical topics ranging from ideas of Rome to medieval European waste, including two essays that pertain to Chaucer. See nos. 2410 and 2580.

    45 Classen, Albrecht, and Marilyn Sandidge, eds. Friendship in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Age: Explorations of a Fundamental Ethical Discourse. New York: De Gruyter, 2010. ix, 802 pp. Nineteen essays by various authors, an introduction by the editors, and a comprehensive index. Topics range from friendship in Augustine’s Confessions to the Whitehall conference of 1655, with two essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2447 and 2977.

    46 Cohen, Jeffrey Jerome, ed. The Postcolonial Middle Ages. The New Middle Ages. New York: St. Martin’s P, 2000. [viii], 286 pp. Fourteen essays by various authors and an introduction by Cohen, using and critiquing postcolonial theory in discussing medieval texts. Topics include the idea of the Orient; notions of time (temporalities) in postcolonial studies; Christian heterogeneity; the othernesses of Islam, Judaism, and Celtic culture; Prester John; Lollard and Lancastrian English; and Lydgate. For three essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 1896, 1961, and 2606.

    Reviews: Michael Calabrese, TMR 01.10.16, n.p.; Richard K. Emmerson, Speculum 76 (2001): 1014–16; Simon Gaunt, CL 61.2 (2009): 160–76; Robert M. Stein, SAC 23 (2001): 538–43.

    47 Cohen, Jeffrey, and Bonnie Wheeler, eds. Becoming Male in the Middle Ages. The New Middle Ages, no. 4. New York and London: Garland, 1997. xx, 387 pp. Eighteen essays by various authors and an introduction on topics ranging from Old English penitentials to Sir David Lindsey. For the two essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 2482 and 3127.

    Reviews: Laurie Finke, TMR 98.02.11, n.p.; Clare A. Lees, SAC 21 (1999): 326–29; Mary Swan, BIMR 8 (2002): 21–35.

    48 Collette, Carolyn P., ed. The Legend of Good Women: Context and Reception. Chaucer Studies, no. 36. Cambridge: Brewer, 2006. xviii, 203 pp. Eight essays by various authors, with an index and an introduction by the editor, who argues that Alceste’s mediation is central to LGW, a poem about the public dimension of ideal female behavior. The poem is best understood in the context of late medieval interest in re-shaping narratives of exemplary women. For individual essays, see nos. 1415, 3972, 3982, 3997, 4000, 4003, 4010, and 4029.

    49 Conde Silvestre, Juan Camilo; and Ma Nila Vázquez González, eds. Medieval English Literary and Cultural Studies. SELIM, no. 15. [Murcia: Universidad de Murcia], 2004. 251 pp. Includes five essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 770, 1003, 1316, 1822, and 2152.

    50 Connolly, Margaret, and Linne R. Mooney, eds. Design and Distribution of Late Medieval Manuscripts in England. Manuscript Culture in the British Isles. York: York Medieval P, 2008. xiii, 336 pp. Thirteen essays by various authors, with a brief introduction by the editors. The collection treats English scribes, manuscripts, and the production and circulation of texts from 1350–1600. Addressing design and CT, the first section contains three essays that focus on early copyists of the poem; see nos. 2004, 2011, and 2049.

    Reviews: Michael Calabrese, TMR 10.03.07, n.p.; Michael P. Kuczynski, JEGP 109 (2010): 546–48; Oliver Pickering, SAC 32 (2010): 402–5.

    51 Cooney, Helen, ed. Nation, Court and Culture: New Essays on Fifteenth-Century English Poetry. Dublin: Four Courts P, 2001. 191 pp. Ten essays by various authors on the role of language and literature in fifteenth-century England, Chaucer’s influence at the time, and the relations of fifteenth-century literature to earlier and later tradition. Mention of Chaucer recurs throughout, usually deemphasizing his influence. For five essays that pertain to him directly, see nos. 851, 856, 1014, 1075, and 4080.

    Review: Leo Carruthers, MÂ 108 (2002): 409–10.

    52 Cooney, Helen, ed. Writings on Love in the English Middle Ages. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. xiii, 204 pp. Eleven essays by various authors, an introduction by the editor, and an index. Topics include the theory of courtly love, love and social class, romance depictions of love, and readings of individual works. For seven essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 841, 1518, 1680, 2696, 2752, 2985, and 3710.

    Review: Kathleen M. Blumreich, Encomia 28 (2006): 35–36.

    53 Cooper, Helen, and Sally Mapstone, eds. The Long Fifteenth Century: Essays for Douglas Gray. Oxford: Clarendon, 1997. xii, 362 pp. Fourteen essays by various authors on topics in English literature of the late fourteenth through the early sixteenth centuries. Includes an introduction and a bibliography of Gray’s publications. For seven essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 868, 925, 988, 1020, 1056, 1740, and 2714.

    Reviews: Karl Reichl, Anglia 118 (2000): 606–11; Robert F. Yeager, SAC 21 (1999): 330–34.

    54 Cooper, Lisa H., and Andrea Denny-Brown, eds. Lydgate Matters: Poetry and Material Culture in the Fifteenth Century. The New Middle Ages. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. 223 pp. Eight essays by various authors, an introduction by the editors, an afterword by D. Vance Smith, and an index. The essays consider Lydgate’s poetry in relation to the role of material goods and the material world in the formation of late-medieval identity. References to Chaucer appear throughout. Two essays include sustained attention to his works: see nos. 2330 and 2860.

    Reviews: Robert J. Meyer-Lee, TMR 08.09.23, n.p.; Scott-Morgan Straker, SAC 31 (2009): 324–27.

    55 Corrie, Marilyn, ed. A Concise Companion to Middle English Literature. Blackwell Concise Companions to Literature and Culture. Oxford: Blackwell: 2007. Reissued as a print-on-demand volume, Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. xii, 268 pp. 3 b&w illus. Eleven essays on topics concerning late medieval English literature and its contexts: Signs and Symbols (Barry Windeatt), Religious Belief (Marilyn Corrie), Women and Literature (Catherine Sanok), The Past (Andrew Galloway), Production and Dissemination (Alexandra Gillespie), The Author (Jane Griffiths), Language (Jeremy J. Smith), Translation and Adaptation (Helen Cooper), Contemporary Events (Helen Barr), Manuscripts and Modern Editions (Daniel Wakelin), and The Afterlife of Middle English Literature (David Matthews). The index lists numerous references to Chaucer.

    56 Crépin, André, ed. Angleterre et Orient au Moyen Âge. AMAES, no. 25. Paris: Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l’Enseignement Supérieur, 2002. 143 pp. Includes three essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2644, 3520, and 3978.

    57 Cummings, Brian, and James Simpson, eds. Cultural Reformations: Medieval and Renaissance in Literary History. Oxford Twenty-First Century Approaches to Literature. New York: Oxford UP, 2010. xii, 689 pp. 5 b&w figs. Thirty-two essays by various individuals and the introduction by the editors exemplify the porous nature of the traditional boundary between medieval and Renaissance in literary history and demonstrate the interpenetration of literature and history. Topics range widely; references to Chaucer and his works occur frequently. Suggestions for further reading accompany each essay, and the volume includes an index. For nine essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 882, 979, 1088, 1188, 1849, 3125, 3241, 3379, and 3512.

    58 D’Arcy, Anne Marie, and Alan J. Fletcher, eds. Studies in Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Texts in Honour of John Scattergood: The key of all good remembrance. Dublin: Four Courts, 2005. 416 pp. Twenty-four essays by various authors and a bibliography of Scattergood’s publications. For eight essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 2350, 2576, 3011, 3829, 4093, 4115, 4192, and 4203.

    Reviews: Jenni Nuttall, RES 57 (2006): 575–78; Nicholas Perkins, TLS, Mar. 24, 2006, p. 33.

    59 Delany, Sheila, ed. Chaucer and the Jews: Sources, Contexts, Meanings. New York: Routledge, 2002. xi, 258 pp. Fourteen essays by various authors who study Jews as an absent presence in medieval England, considering fourteenth- and fifteenth-century texts for their literary, historical, theological, and visual representations of Jews. Some essays reprinted. For eight new essays that pertain to Chaucer directly, see nos. 752, 812, 2073, 3086, 3191, 3263, 4415, and 4435. The volume includes an introduction, select bibliography, and brief index.

    Reviews: Lawrence Besserman, Speculum 79 (2004): 166–67; Catherine Cox, SoAR 69.2 (2004): 128–31; John Micheal Crafton, C&L 52 (2003): 569–72; John C. Hirsh, 74 (2005): 133–34; Steven F. Kruger, SAC 26 (2004): 378–81; Ruth Nisse, N&Q 53 (2006): 98–99; Brenda Schildgen, TMR 04.12.04, n.p.; Lawrence Warner, Parergon 23.1 (2006): 153–55.

    60 Dor, Juliette, and Marie-Élisabeth Henneau, eds. Femmes et pèlerinages/Women and Pilgrimages. The Way to Santiago, no. 2. [Santiago de Compostela]: Compostela Group of Universities, 2007. 235 pp. Collection of essays in French and English that examine factual and fictive female pilgrims, focusing on their representation in spiritual and courtly literature. Two essays pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 2121 and 2124.

    61 Driver, Martha W., and Sid Ray, eds. Shakespeare and the Middle Ages: Essays on the Performance and Adaptation of the Plays with Medieval Sources or Settings. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2009. vii, 276 pp. Thirteen essays, plus several introductory commentaries, gauge Shakespeare’s uses of medieval materials and how those materials are reflected in modern stage and film adaptations. Shakespeare’s medievalism shapes modern notions of the Middle Ages. Three essays pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 852, 866, and 902.

    Reviews: Andrew B. R. Elliott, Arthuriana 20.4 (2010): 103–4; Susan C. Frye, Arthuriana 20.4 (2010): 104–5.

    62 Duncan, Thomas G. A Companion to the Middle English Lyric. Rochester, N.Y.: Brewer, 2005. xxv, 302 pp. An introduction and twelve essays by various authors survey critical issues related to Middle English lyrics—courtly, popular, religious, political, etc. Individual essays consider topics such as manuscripts, meter and editing, carols, lyrics in sermons, gender issues, and Middle Scots lyrics. The book contains recurrent references to Chaucer’s standalone and embedded lyrics, with one essay that pertains directly to his works; see no. 4081.

    Reviews: Klaus Bitterling, ES 89 (2008): 615–19; Kathleen Palti, N&Q 53 (2006): 550–51.

    63 Dutton, Elisabeth, with John Hines and R. F. Yeager, eds. John Gower, Trilingual Poet: Language, Translation, and Tradition. Westfield Medieval Studies, no. 3. Cambridge: Brewer, 2010. xii, 358 pp. Twenty-five essays by various authors and an introduction by Dutton, with a cumulative bibliography and index. The volume was inspired by the first international congress of the John Gower Society (2008). The essays range widely in Gower studies—manuscript study, source study, prosody, etc.—and Chaucer is cited recurrently. For five essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 734, 900, 1187, 1208, and 2710.

    64 Edwards, A. S. G., Vincent Gillespie, and Ralph Hanna, eds. The English Medieval Book: Studies in Memory of Jeremy Griffiths. British Library Studies in the History of the Book. London: British Library, 2000. xii, 264 pp. 22 b&w plates. Thirteen essays on codicology, compilation, and book production in the English late Middle Ages, an introduction, and two memorials honor the work of Jeremy Griffiths. Includes a list of Griffiths’s publications, a general index, and an index of manuscripts. For four essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 366, 400, 472, and 2019.

    Reviews: Susan Powell, JEBS 4 (2001): 288–91; Christine M. Rose, TMR 02.06.05, n.p.; Kari Rand Schmidt, ES 83 (2002): 274–75.

    65 Elliott, Ralph W. V. Chaucer’s Landscapes and Other Essays: A Selection of Essays, Speeches, and Reviews Written Between 1951 and 2008, with a Memoir. Ed. by L. K. Lloyd Jones. North Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2010. xii, 422 pp. An anthology of reprinted publications, addresses, and a memoir by R. W. V. Elliott, with topics including Chaucer, the Gawain-poet, runes, Thomas Hardy, and more. Two of the three pieces that pertain to Chaucer were published previously, and one is printed here for the first time: Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales—Printed by William Caxton, 1477 (pp. 287–92), an address to the National Library of Australia in 2002 which describes CT and Caxton’s decision to print it twice.

    66 Ellis, Roger, ed. The Oxford History of Literary Translation in English. Volume I: To 1550. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2008. x, 485 pp. Anthologizes nineteen essays by various authors, with topics ranging from theory of translation to individual translators. Includes two essays that pertain to Chaucer; see nos. 796 and 824.

    67 Epstein, Robert, and William Robins, eds. Sacred and Profane in Chaucer and Late Medieval Literature: Essays in Honour of John V. Fleming. Buffalo, N.Y.: U of Toronto P, 2010. vi, 238 pp. Nine essays by various authors, an introduction by the editors, a commentary on Fleming’s critical legacy by Steven Justice, and a bibliography of Fleming’s publications. For five essays that pertain to Chaucer, see nos. 2830, 3069, 3553, 3731, and 3995.

    68 Erzgräber, Willi. Mittelalter und Renaissance in England: Von der Altenglischen Elegien bis Shakespeares Tragögien. Rombach Wissenschaften Reihe Litterae, no, 44. Freiburg im Breisgau: Rombach, 1997. 569 pp.; b&w illus. Twenty-two essays by Erzgräber, with one that pertains to Chaucer published here for the first time: Predestination in Langland and Chaucer (pp. 179–201). In it, Erzgräber surveys St. Augustine’s doctrine of predestination and its influence on Langland’s Piers Plowman; he then summarizes Boethius’s philosophical approach to fate and fortune and describes Chaucer’s uses of Boethius in TC. Langland and Chaucer both maintain that human will is free.

    69 Evans, Ruth, Helen Fulton, and David Matthews, eds. Medieval Cultural Studies: Essays in Honour of Stephen Knight. Cardiff: U of Wales P, 2006. xi, 286 pp. Seventeen essays by various authors on

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