This collected volume represents an homage to a toweringly great poet, as well as an acknowledgement of the intellectual excitement, challenges, and pleasure that readers owe to him as even today, his poems have the capacity to change the way we engage with fundamental questions of knowledge, understanding, and beauty.
This collected volume represents an homage to a toweringly great poet, as well as an acknowledgement of the intellectual excitement, challenges, and pleasure that readers owe to him as even today, his poems have the capacity to change the way we engage with fundamental questions of knowledge, understanding, and beauty.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
C.W.R.D. Moseley teaches in the Faculty of English at the University of Cambridge, and has been Director of Studies in English for several colleges of the university as well as Program Director of the university's International Summer Schools in English Literature and Shakespeare.
Inhaltsangabe
Download Table of Contents Introduction: 'The craft so long to lerne...' C.W.R.D. Moseley Chapter 1. 'And gret wel Chaucer whan ye mete': Chaucer's Earliest Readers, Addresses and Audiences Sebastian Sobecki Chapter 2. Unhap, Misadventures, Infortune: Chaucer's Vocabulary of Mischance Helen Cooper Chapter 3. Chaucer's Tears Barry Windeatt Chapter 4. In Appreciation of Metrical Abnormality: Headless Lines and Initial Inversion in Chaucer Ad Putter Chapter 5. Blanche, Two Chaucers and the Stanley Family: Rethinking the Reception of The Book of the Duchess Simon Meecham-Jones Chapter 6. 'Tu Numeris Elementa Ligas': The Consolation of Nature's Numbers in Parlement of Foulys C.W.R.D. Moseley Chapter 7. Troilus and Criseyde and the 'Parfit Blisse of Love' Simone Fryer-Bovair Chapter 8. Hateful Contraries in 'The Merchant's Tale' John M. Fyler Chapter 9. String Theory and 'The Man of Law's Tale': Where is Constancy? William A. Quinn Chapter 10. The Pardoner's Passing and How It Matters: Gender, Relics and Speech Acts Alex da Costa Chapter 11. 'Double Sorrow': The Complexity of Compaint in Chaucer's Anelida and Arcite and Henryson's Testament of Cresseid Jackie Tasioulas Index
Download Table of Contents Introduction: 'The craft so long to lerne...' C.W.R.D. Moseley Chapter 1. 'And gret wel Chaucer whan ye mete': Chaucer's Earliest Readers, Addresses and Audiences Sebastian Sobecki Chapter 2. Unhap, Misadventures, Infortune: Chaucer's Vocabulary of Mischance Helen Cooper Chapter 3. Chaucer's Tears Barry Windeatt Chapter 4. In Appreciation of Metrical Abnormality: Headless Lines and Initial Inversion in Chaucer Ad Putter Chapter 5. Blanche, Two Chaucers and the Stanley Family: Rethinking the Reception of The Book of the Duchess Simon Meecham-Jones Chapter 6. 'Tu Numeris Elementa Ligas': The Consolation of Nature's Numbers in Parlement of Foulys C.W.R.D. Moseley Chapter 7. Troilus and Criseyde and the 'Parfit Blisse of Love' Simone Fryer-Bovair Chapter 8. Hateful Contraries in 'The Merchant's Tale' John M. Fyler Chapter 9. String Theory and 'The Man of Law's Tale': Where is Constancy? William A. Quinn Chapter 10. The Pardoner's Passing and How It Matters: Gender, Relics and Speech Acts Alex da Costa Chapter 11. 'Double Sorrow': The Complexity of Compaint in Chaucer's Anelida and Arcite and Henryson's Testament of Cresseid Jackie Tasioulas Index
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