<p>This dissertation explores the complex vocabularies of service and servitude in the Age of Chaucer. Working with three major Middle English texts--William Langland's <i>Piers Plowman</i> (chaps. 1 and 3), Julian of Norwich's <i>Revelation of Love</i> (chap. 2), and Geoffrey Chaucer's <i>Troilus and Criseyde</i> (chap. 4)--my thesis argues that the languages of service available to these writers provided them with a rich set of metaphorical tools for expressing the relation between metaphysics and social practice. For late medieval English culture, the word "service" was an all-encompassing marker used to describe relations between individuals and their loved ones, their neighbors, their church, their God, and their institutions of govern...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 133-154)The scholarship of the last century has not exam...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...
My dissertation uncovers the ways that medieval literature both shares a physiological vocabulary wi...
This dissertation examines how the concept of service shapes representations of community in texts d...
This dissertation examines how the concept of service shapes representations of community in texts d...
This dissertation examines the pervasive presence of Latin in later medieval English literature: the...
This dissertation explores the use of romance across religious poetry in late medieval England. Medi...
This dissertation argues for a new reading of the relationship that texts have to performance, bodie...
This dissertation explores Middle English literary texts that consistently portray ethics as a paten...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
This dissertation explores the significance of medieval courtesy literature in its larger literary c...
In addition to co-editing, Robert Epstein and Will Robins are contributing authors, “Introduction: T...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
The paper researches how medieval English reality of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” is broug...
This thesis questions the validity of the traditional approach to religious devotion in late- . i me...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 133-154)The scholarship of the last century has not exam...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...
My dissertation uncovers the ways that medieval literature both shares a physiological vocabulary wi...
This dissertation examines how the concept of service shapes representations of community in texts d...
This dissertation examines how the concept of service shapes representations of community in texts d...
This dissertation examines the pervasive presence of Latin in later medieval English literature: the...
This dissertation explores the use of romance across religious poetry in late medieval England. Medi...
This dissertation argues for a new reading of the relationship that texts have to performance, bodie...
This dissertation explores Middle English literary texts that consistently portray ethics as a paten...
This dissertation examines three crucial texts written and translated from Latin into Old English be...
This dissertation explores the significance of medieval courtesy literature in its larger literary c...
In addition to co-editing, Robert Epstein and Will Robins are contributing authors, “Introduction: T...
This study examines Chaucer\u27s manipulations of medieval rhetorical theory in the chivalric narrat...
The paper researches how medieval English reality of Geoffrey Chaucer’s “The Miller’s Tale” is broug...
This thesis questions the validity of the traditional approach to religious devotion in late- . i me...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 133-154)The scholarship of the last century has not exam...
Devotional texts in late medieval England were notable for their flamboyant piety and their preoccup...
My dissertation uncovers the ways that medieval literature both shares a physiological vocabulary wi...