"Literary Research and the Anglo-Saxon and Medieval Eras: Strategies and Sources is a guide to scholarly research in the field of medieval English literature covering the period 450 CE to 1500 CE. The volume presents the best practices for building a foundation of sound scholarship practices in the field of medieval English literature"--
Jauss, H. R. “Literary History as a Challenge to Literary Theory”. New Directions in Literary History ... The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism, Volume 9: Twentieth Century Historical, Philosophical and Psychological Perspectives.
This book offers an extensive and vibrant account of the medieval literatures so drastically reconfigured in Tudor England.
The largest island still had its well-made Roman roads, cites and boundaries, which reached as far north as the Solway Firth and Tyne; but the island fell from a barely governed Roman 16 MEDIEWAL LITERATURE AND CULTURE.
Geoffrey Chaucer's elegiac Book of the Duchess was written in or just after 1369, for Henry III's son, John of Gaunt. It commemorates John's young wife, Blanche, who had died of the plague, though the cause is not mentioned in this ...
These essays offer a fresh perspective on the interrelationships between sense perception and secular and Christian cultures in England from the Middle Ages into the Early Modern period.
Volumes published Anglo-Saxon Crucifixion Iconography and the Art of the Monastic Revival by barbara c. raw The Cult ... cross The Composition of Old English Poetry by h. momma Trinity and Incarnation in Anglo-Saxon Art and Thought by ...
... literary phenomenon from its Anglo-Saxon beginnings to the end of the Middle Ages and covers the first two periods and experiences of English literary history, which are the Old English (Anglo- Saxon) and medieval ones. The second book ...
... literary phenomenon from its Anglo-Saxon beginnings to the end of the Middle Ages and covers the first two periods and experiences of English literary history, which are the Old English (Anglo- Saxon) and medieval ones. The second book ...
Daniel Donoghue shows how the earliest readers of Old English poems deployed a unique set of skills that enabled them to navigate a daunting task with apparent ease.
Conclusion. THE. INVENTION. OF. ANGLO-SAXON. ENGLAND. 'It was invisible, buried in the mud. I only saw it because I was looking for it.' 'What! You expected to find it?' 'I thought it not unlikely.' A. Conan Doyle, 'Silver Blaze'1 ...