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  • An Annotated Chaucer Bibliography, 2020
  • Stephanie Amsel and Will Rogers

Regular contributors:

Mark Allen, University of Texas at San Antonio

Stephanie Amsel, Southern Methodist University (Texas)

Tim Arner, Grinnell College (Iowa)

Debra Best, California State University at Dominguez Hills

Thomas H. Blake, Austin College (Texas)

Agnès Blandeau, Université de Nantes (France)

Matthew Brumit, University of Mary (North Dakota)

Margaret Connolly, University of St. Andrews (Scotland)

Stefania D'Agata D'Ottavi, Università per Stranieri di Siena (Italy)

Jamie C. Fumo, Florida State University

James B. Harr III, North Carolina State University

Douglas W. Hayes, Lakehead University

Ana Sáez Hidalgo, Universidad de Valladolid (Spain)

Andrew James Johnston, Freie Universität Berlin (Germany)

Yoshinobu Kudo, Ishikawa Prefectural Nursing University (Japan)

Wim Lindeboom, Independent Scholar (Netherlands)

Warren S. Moore III, Newberry College (South Carolina)

Daniel M. Murtaugh, Florida Atlantic University

Thomas J. Napierkowski, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs

Teresa P. Reed, Jacksonville State University (Alabama)

Will Rogers, University of Louisiana at Monroe

Martha Rust, New York University

Thomas R. Schneider, California Baptist University

David Sprunger, Concordia College (Minnesota)

Anne Thornton, Abbot Public Library (Marblehead, Massachusetts)

Susan Yager, Iowa State University

The bibliographer acknowledges with gratitude the invaluable contribution and support from Mark Allen, Professor Emeritus, University of Texas at San Antonio.

This bibliography continues the bibliographies published since 1975 in previous volumes of Studies in the Age of Chaucer. Bibliographic information [End Page 439] up to 1975 can be found in Eleanor P. Hammond, Chaucer: A Bibliographic Manual (1908; reprint, New York: Peter Smith, 1933); D. D. Griffith, Bibliography of Chaucer, 1908–1953 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1955); William R. Crawford, Bibliography of Chaucer, 1954–63 (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1967); and Lorrayne Y. Baird, Bibliography of Chaucer, 1964–1973 (Boston, Mass.: G. K. Hall, 1977). See also Lorrayne Y. Baird-Lange and Hildegard Schnuttgen, Bibliography of Chaucer, 1974–1985 (Hamden, Conn.: Shoe String Press, 1988); Bege K. Bowers and Mark Allen, eds., Annotated Chaucer Bibliography, 1986–1996 (Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 2002); and Mark Allen and Stephanie Amsel, eds., Annotated Chaucer Bibliography, 1997–2010 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2015).

Additions and corrections to this bibliography should be sent to Stephanie Amsel, Department of English, Southern Methodist University, 108C Clements Hall, PO Box 750435, Dallas, Texas 75275-0435. An electronic version of this bibliography (1975–2019) is available via The New Chaucer Society Web page at http://artsci.wustl.edu/∼chaucer/, or directly at http://uchaucer.utsa.edu. Authors are urged to send annotations for articles, reviews, and books that have been or might be overlooked to Stephanie Amsel, AOChaucerBib@mail.smu.edu. [End Page 440]

Classifications

  • Bibliographies, Reports, and Reference 1–3

  • Recordings and Films

  • Chaucer's Life 4–11

  • Facsimiles, Editions, and Translations 12–26

  • Manuscripts and Textual Studies 27–37

  • Sources, Analogues, and Literary Relations 38–60

  • Chaucer's Influence and Later Allusion 61–100

  • Style and Versification 101–7

  • Language and Word Studies 108–16

  • Background and General Criticism 117–63

  • The Canterbury Tales—General 164–91

  • CTThe General Prologue 192–95

  • CT—The Knight and His Tale 196–201

  • CT—The Miller and His Tale 202–7

  • CT—The Reeve and His Tale 208

  • CT—The Cook and His Tale 209–10

  • CT—The Man of Law and His Tale 211–23

  • CT—The Wife of Bath and Her Tale 224–31

  • CT—The Friar and His Tale 232–33

  • CT—The Summoner and His Tale 234–36

  • CT—The Clerk and His Tale 237–43

  • CT—The Merchant and His Tale 244–47

  • CT—The Squire and His Tale 248–52

  • CT—The Franklin and His Tale 253–60

  • CT—The Physician and His Tale 261

  • CT—The Pardoner and His Tale 262–63

  • CT—The Shipman and His Tale 264–65

  • CT—The Prioress and Her Tale 266–71

  • CTThe Tale of Sir Thopas

  • CTThe Tale of Melibee 272–73

  • CT—The Monk and His Tale 274–75

  • CT—The Nun's Priest and His Tale 276–80

  • CT—The Second Nun and Her Tale 281

  • CT—The Canon's Yeoman and His Tale 282–83 [End Page 441]

  • CT—The Manciple and His Tale 284...

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