- Index, Volume 47, 2012–2013
Bahr, Arthur, and Alexandra Gillespie, Medieval English Manuscripts: Form, Aesthetics, and the Literary Text ................................. | 346 |
Brantley, Jessica, Reading the Forms of Sir Thopas ................................... | 416 |
Battles, Dominique, Reconquering England for the English in Havelok the Dane ................................................................................................ | 187 |
Boboc, Andreea, Criseyde’s Descriptions and the Ethics of Feminine Experience ........................................................................................... | 63 |
Burrow, J. A., Versions of “Manliness” in the Poetry of Chaucer, Langland, and Hoccleve .................................................................................... | 337 |
Cartlidge, Neil, Wayward Sons and Failing Fathers: Chaucer’s Moralistic Paternalism—And a Possible Source for the Cook’s Tale ............ | 134 |
Farrell, Thomas J., Editors and Scribes in Two Clerk’s Tale Cruxes ............................................................................................. | 300 |
Fein, Susanna, and David Raybin, About This Issue ....................................... | 343 |
Green, Richard Firth, Why Marquis Walter Treats His Wife So Badly ..................................................................................... | 48 |
Harkins, Jessica, Chaucer’s Clerk’s Tale and Boccaccio’s Decameron X.10 .................................................................................................... | 247 |
Horner, Patrick J., FSC, To “speken in amphibologies”: Reading Troilus and Criseyde, Book V, 763 ....................................................... | 84 |
Horobin, Simon, Compiling the Canterbury Tales in Fifteenth-Century Manuscripts ........................................................................ | 372 |
Marelj, Jelena, The Philosophical Entente of Particulars: Criseyde as Nominalist In Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde ........................................... | 206 |
Miller, T. S., Chaucer Abroad, Chaucer at Home: MS Arch. Selden B. 24 as the “Scottish Ellesmere” ............................................................ | 25 |
Nolan, Maura, Medieval Habit, Modern Sensation: Reading Manuscripts in the Digital Age ......................................................................... | 465 |
Otis-Cour, Leah, True Lover/False Lover, franquise/dete: Dichotomies in the Franklin’s Tale and Their Analogue in Richard de Fournival’s Consaus d’amours......................................................... | 161 |
Phillips, Noelle, Seeing Red: Reading Rubrication in Oxford, Corpus Christi College MS 201’s Piers Plowman.......................................... | 439 |
Raby, Michael, The Clerk’s Tale and the Forces of Habit............................. | 223 |
Rust, Martha, Blood and Tears as Ink: Writing the Pictorial Sense of the Text ................................................................................. | 390 |
Schwebel, Leah, Redressing Griselda: Restoration through Translation in the Clerk’s Tale ........................................................................... | 274 |
Smith, D. Vance, The Inhumane Wonder of the Book ......................................... | 361 |
Shuffelton, George G., Chaucerian Obscenity in the Court of Public Opinion ........................................................................................ | 1 |
Turner, Marion, Thomas Usk and John Ardenne ......................................... | 95 |
von Nolcken, Christina, “Penny Poet” Chaucer, or Chaucer and the “Penny Dreadfuls” ................................................................................ | 107 |
Weiskott, Eric, Chaucer the Forester: The Friar’s Tale, Forest History, and Officialdom ....................................................................... | 323 |
[End Page 478]