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Böcker i Oxford Studies in Medieval Literature and Culture-serien

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  • - How Printers Changed Reading
    av Alexandra (Senior Lecturer da Costa
    1 646,-

    Explores how the earliest printers moulded demand and created new markets and argues that marketing changed what was read and the place of reading in sixteenth-century readers' lives, shaping their expectations, tastes, and their practices and beliefs.

  • av Jane (Senior Lecturer in French Gilbert
    1 255,-

    Studies manuscript sources, often of under-studied works and writers, to reassess the use of French as a literary language outside France in the medieval period.

  • av Jennifer (Assistant Professor of English Jahner
    1 756,-

    This study of poetry and political thought in late twelfth- and thirteenth-century England explores how Latin, French, and Middle English political poetry and Latin grammar and rhetoric shaped ideas about constitutional governance, the common good, and just rule.

  • av Joshua S. (Assistant Professor Easterling
    1 090,-

    Examines the rise of popular religious currents in the later Middle Ages, and studies a range of texts, composed largely between 1100 and 1400, to illustrate how the emergence of charismatic public 'prophets' unsettled the established church and presented a contest over rival images of public spirituality.

  • - Agency in the Decameron and the Canterbury Tales
    av Robert W. (Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature Hanning
    1 616,-

    A comparative study of Boccaccio's Decameron and Chaucer's Canterbury Tales that explores the differences and similarities between the worlds that are portrayed by each text, with a focus on the strategies and limits of personal agency, and the significance and social dynamics of story-telling.

  • - Knowledge and the Pursuit of Literature, c. 1400
    av Emily (Professor Steiner
    1 176,-

    Explores reference books in the medieval period including informational texts, encyclopedias, histories, and manuals, with particular attention to John Trevisa's translations and how these influenced the form and development of vernacular English literature.

  • av Philip (University Lecturer in Medieval English Knox
    1 250,-

    Provides a new account of the literary history of fourteenth-century England, arguing that many of this period's most distinctive literary experiments emerge through a productive dialogue with the Romance of the Rose, a jointly-authored medieval French poem.

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