Whereas most critics of Thomas Hoccleve's poetry have focused on elucidating the author's particular mode of self-presentation, this essay sets out to demonstrate that few fifteenth-century readers beyond the poet's initial addressees enjoyed his artful self-portraiture per se. Until now, Hoccleve Studies have been dominated by the texts preserved in the autograph manuscripts produced by the poet towards the end of his life. When we turn to the non-autograph traditions of his works, however, it becomes clear that Hoccleve's poems were preserved in a variety of forms and contexts and that medieval readers' experiences of these texts must have been considerably more varied than has typically been allowed. While Hoccleve's own exemplification ...
Despite knowing the name of the scribe responsible for two of the earliest manuscripts of Chaucer’s ...
As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Respons...
x, 210 p. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. [187]-204) and index.Bureaucratic identity...
Whereas most critics of Thomas Hoccleve's poetry have focused on elucidating the author's particular...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
The poetry of Thomas Hoccleve (1367?-1426) has attracted increased attention in recent years. All th...
Of the minor poets of the 15th century, those who claimed Chaucer as their teacher and their master,...
The scholarship surrounding the life and work of Thomas Hoccleve is relatively young and lean compar...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
The Remonstrance to Sir John Oldcastle by Thomas Hoccleve (c.1367–1426) was written in 1415 and surv...
At some time between 1422 and 1426, Thomas Hoccleve copied nineteen of his poems into a manuscript n...
Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, John Audelay, and Charles d'Orléans present themselves as the makers...
This chapter reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of Thomas Hoccleve, focusing on ba...
International audienceThomas Hoccleve (c. 1367-1426) was at the same time a scribe of the Privy Seal...
This article is concerned with reading in Hoccleve’s ‘Remonstrance to Oldcastle’ (c. 1415), specific...
Despite knowing the name of the scribe responsible for two of the earliest manuscripts of Chaucer’s ...
As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Respons...
x, 210 p. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. [187]-204) and index.Bureaucratic identity...
Whereas most critics of Thomas Hoccleve's poetry have focused on elucidating the author's particular...
Thomas Hoccleve, the early fifteenth-century London poet who first promoted the notion that Chaucer ...
The poetry of Thomas Hoccleve (1367?-1426) has attracted increased attention in recent years. All th...
Of the minor poets of the 15th century, those who claimed Chaucer as their teacher and their master,...
The scholarship surrounding the life and work of Thomas Hoccleve is relatively young and lean compar...
This article reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of the Privy Seal clerk and poet T...
The Remonstrance to Sir John Oldcastle by Thomas Hoccleve (c.1367–1426) was written in 1415 and surv...
At some time between 1422 and 1426, Thomas Hoccleve copied nineteen of his poems into a manuscript n...
Thomas Hoccleve, Margery Kempe, John Audelay, and Charles d'Orléans present themselves as the makers...
This chapter reconsiders the biographical and literary identities of Thomas Hoccleve, focusing on ba...
International audienceThomas Hoccleve (c. 1367-1426) was at the same time a scribe of the Privy Seal...
This article is concerned with reading in Hoccleve’s ‘Remonstrance to Oldcastle’ (c. 1415), specific...
Despite knowing the name of the scribe responsible for two of the earliest manuscripts of Chaucer’s ...
As part of an AHRC-funded interdisciplinary research project, ‘Identification of the Scribes Respons...
x, 210 p. ; 24 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. [187]-204) and index.Bureaucratic identity...