Bibliography
This bibliography lists
recent or significant work on some
of the texts studied in this course.
It is not a complete list and contains
only those works which can be found
in the CSUN library or accessed
through its catalogue or over the
internet.
Historical Background
- Nigel Saul, The
Oxford Illustrated History of Medieval
England (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1997). [Covers
the Anglo-Saxon period to the fifteenth
century.]
- Christopher Daniell, From Norman
Conquest to Magna Carta: England
1066-1215 (London and New York:
Routledge, 2003).
- Danny Danziger and John Gillingham, 1215:
The Year of Magna Carta (London:
Hodder & Stoghton, 2003, repr.
Touchstone 2005). [Actually covers
the period from 1066-1215 in a
very readable form.]
- Lillian M. Bisson, Chaucer
and the Late Medieval World (Basingstoke:
Macmillan, 1998).
Language
- A Middle English Dictionary
Note: The online version used to be available only on a trial basis, which involved going to another web page to get the password. For the moment, this no longer appears to be required, but this may change. Please let me know if the link above does not work.
General Discussion
of English Romances (in order of
publication)
- Rosalind Field, 'Romance in England.'
In The Cambridge History of
Medieval English Literature.
Ed David Wallace (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1999), 152-176.
- Piero Boitani, English Medieval
Narrative in the 13th and 14th Centuries,
trans. Joan Krakover Hall (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1982).
- Lee C. Ramsey, Chivalric
Romances: Popular Literature
in Medieval England (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1983).
- Dieter Mehl, The
Middle English Romances of the
Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries (London: Routledge
& Kegan Paul, 1968).
- Derek Pearsall, 'The Development
of Middle English Romance.' Medieval
Studies 27 (1965): 91-116.
Lay Le Freine
- Nicolas Jacob, 'Sir
Degare, Lay le Freine, Beves
of Hamtoun and the "Auchinleck
Bookshop.'" Notes
and Queries 29:4
(1982): 294-301.'
Athelston
- Nancy Mason Bradbury, 'The Erosion
of Oath-Based Relationships: A
Cultural Context for Athelston', Medium Ævum 73:
2 (2004): 189-200.
- John C. Ford, ' Merry Married
Brothers: Wedded Friendhip, Lovers'
Language and Male Matrimonials
in Two Middle English Romances',
Medieval
Forum 3 (2003).
- Elaine M. Treharne, 'Romanticizing
the Past in the Middle English Athelston', Review
of English Studies 50:197
(1999): 1-21.
- Daniel
F. Pigg, 'The Implications of Realist
Poetics in the Middle English Athelston',
English Language Notes 32:2 (1994):
1-8.
Octavian
- Glenn Wright, 'The Fabliau
Ethos in the French and English
Octavian Romances', Modern
Philology: 102:4 (2005): 478-500.
- Nola Jean Bamberry, ' Evolution
of the Popular Hero in the English
Octavian Romances', Modern
Language Quarterly 51:3 (1990): 363-88.
Sir Isumbras
- Stephen D. Powell, 'Models of
Religious Peace in the Middle English
Romance Sir Isumbras', Neophilologus 85:1
(2001): 121-36.
- Mary E. Shaner, 'Instruction
and Delight: Medieval Romances
as Children's Literature', Poetics
Today 13:1 (1992): 5-15.
Sir Eglamour of Artois
- Wim, Tigges, 'Sir Eglamour: The Knight Who Could Not Say No', Neophilologus 72:1 (1988): 107-115.
Sir Tryamour
- There does not appear to be anything published recently on this poem.
Troilus and Criseyde
- See my online Chaucer Bibliography.
The Auchinleck Manuscript
- Fred Porcheddu, 'Edited Text and Medieval Artifact: The Auchinleck Bookshop and 'Charlemagne and Roland' Theories, Fifty Years Later', Philological Quarterly 80:4 (2001): 463-500.
- T.A. Shonk, 'A Study of the Auchinleck Manuscript: Bookmen and Bookmaking in the Early Fourteenth Century', Speculum, 60 (1985): 71-91.
- For further references, see the bibliography for the online edition, which is organised by text and topic.
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