In this Issue
- Volume 6, Number 1-2, 2024
- Issue
- NORSE-DERIVED TERMS IN THE ORMULUM: A REAPPRAISAL
- by Sara M. Pons-Sanz
Early Middle English is devoted to English literature, its production, and its contexts ca. 1100–1350. The journal takes a wide view of this lively period of literary experimentation, linguistic change, and multilingual interaction in England. It promotes scholarship in Early Middle English language and literature; the multicultural, international, and multilingual contexts of Early Middle English (including studies that make explicit how such research affects modern understanding of global politics and cultures); British manuscript studies ca. 1100–1350; the backgrounds, scholarly history, and afterlives of Early Middle English; theoretical interventions in areas such as gender, sexuality, race, disability, new materialism, ecocriticism, and interdisciplinary analysis; and the creation or assessment of new resources.
published by
Arc Humanities Pressviewing issue
Volume 6, Number 1-2, 2024Table of Contents
- Abbreviations
- pp. ix-x
- Acknowledgements
- pp. xi-xii
- Introduction
- pp. 1-10
- Conclusion
- pp. 239-243
- Bibliography
- pp. 259-270