Dear Colleague,
This special issue of Critical Survey, titled ‘Chaucer: Articles on Practice, Theory, Reading,’ encompasses topics ranging from an exploration of how Chaucer’s use of privatives and negative prefixes work to inflect his larger concerns with Fortune to his exploitation of the gap between the reception of a poem when it is heard socially and its afterlife as a text.
Volume 29, Issue 3: Chaucer: Articles on Practice, Theory, Reading
Introduction
C.W.R.D. Moseley
http://bit.ly/2jwUzbs
Articles
'And gret wel Chaucer whan ye mete': Chaucer's Earliest Readers, Addressees and Audiences
Sebastian Sobecki
http://bit.ly/2By5IB9
Unhap, Misadventure, Infortune: Chaucer's Vocabulary of Mischance
Helen Cooper
http://bit.ly/2j0lDRg
The Pardoner's Passing and How It Matters: Gender, Relics and Speech Acts
Alex da Costa
http://bit.ly/2jt7sU8
String Theory and 'The Man of Law's Tale': Where Is Constancy?
William A. Quinn
http://bit.ly/2n9S6Jc
In Appreciation of Metrical Abnormality: Headless Lines and Initial Inversion in Chaucer
Ad Putter
http://bit.ly/2BkwgFc
'Tu numeris elementa ligas': The Consolation of Nature's Numbers in Parlement of Foulys
C.W.R.D. Moseley
http://bit.ly/2k944So
Poetry
Sarah James and Humphrey John Moore
http://bit.ly/2jvntcd
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