Today we largely take it for granted that every text has an author, but what is understood by the term ‘author’ was very different in the Middle Ages. Medieval English ideas of authorship were many and varied, and show some key changes from the twelfth to the fifteenth centuries. In manuscript cultures, like England before the late fifteenth century, the author has little control over the repetition of his text; in many medieval vernacular texts the author is represented as a craftsman and translator rather than a visionary or virtuoso. Texts in manuscript were inherently open to rewriting and were often anonymous. The role and status of the author was interrogated by poets and scholars, often revealing a remarkably open sense of who, or wh...
Medieval English writing is haunted by a legacy of multiple origins and of multilingualism. A divide...
Cynthia J. Brown explains why the advent of print in the late medieval period brought about changes ...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
Literary individualism manifested itself in the twelfth century both trivially and profoundly. Word ...
Unveiling the \u27I\u27 traces the impact of the innovative form of the Roman de la Rose in French ...
Tracing the emergence of the author function in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, d...
This article examines the role and function of author attributions in multi-text manuscripts contain...
Medieval literary theory, generated in the educational system and commentary tradition, consisted of...
The 13th and the 14th century are the pioneering ages of Dutch literature and translators played a v...
Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, John Audelay, and Charles d'Orléans present themselves as the makers...
This study considers the nature of medieval literary authority, and the ways in which it has been co...
The term "authorship" usually conjures up the following: an autonomous and biographical individual i...
The article explores the relationship of Chaucer's 'Lollius' to a broader medieval tradition of fict...
This project explores how Protestant theology shaped early modern authors who made the surprising an...
When Geoffrey Chaucer depicts characters debating the flaws of his works in The Legend of Good Women...
Medieval English writing is haunted by a legacy of multiple origins and of multilingualism. A divide...
Cynthia J. Brown explains why the advent of print in the late medieval period brought about changes ...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...
Literary individualism manifested itself in the twelfth century both trivially and profoundly. Word ...
Unveiling the \u27I\u27 traces the impact of the innovative form of the Roman de la Rose in French ...
Tracing the emergence of the author function in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries, d...
This article examines the role and function of author attributions in multi-text manuscripts contain...
Medieval literary theory, generated in the educational system and commentary tradition, consisted of...
The 13th and the 14th century are the pioneering ages of Dutch literature and translators played a v...
Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, John Audelay, and Charles d'Orléans present themselves as the makers...
This study considers the nature of medieval literary authority, and the ways in which it has been co...
The term "authorship" usually conjures up the following: an autonomous and biographical individual i...
The article explores the relationship of Chaucer's 'Lollius' to a broader medieval tradition of fict...
This project explores how Protestant theology shaped early modern authors who made the surprising an...
When Geoffrey Chaucer depicts characters debating the flaws of his works in The Legend of Good Women...
Medieval English writing is haunted by a legacy of multiple origins and of multilingualism. A divide...
Cynthia J. Brown explains why the advent of print in the late medieval period brought about changes ...
The clerical exegesis within Chaucer's Canterbury Tales has frequently been connected to medieval et...