DIANE WATT |
Carolynn Van Dyke, Chaucer’s Agents: Cause and Representation in Chaucerian Narrative |
|
77/1, p. 130 |
Elspeth Kennedy |
Philippe Walter, Le Bel lnconnu de Renaut de Beaujeu: Rite, mythe et roman |
|
67/1, p. 151 |
William Burgwinkle |
Fidel Fajardo-Acosta, Courtly Seductions, Modern Subjectivities: Troubadour Literature and the Medieval Construction of the Modern World |
|
81/2, p. 152 |
Dennis Green |
Cyril Edwards, The Beginnings of German Literature: Comparative and Interdisciplinary Approaches to Old High German |
|
72/1, p. 164 |
John-Paul Holmes |
Dietmar Mieth, Meister Eckhart: Einheit mit Gott. Die bedeutendsten Schriften zur Mystik (John-Paul Holmes) |
|
84/1, p. 168 |
MARY SWAN |
Craig R. Davis, 'Beowulf' and the Demise of Germanic Legend in England, Albert Bates Lord Studies in Oral Tradition 17 |
|
66/2, p. 317 |
JAN ČERMÁK |
Susan E. Deskis, 'Beowulf' and the Medieval Proverb Tradition, Medieval & Renaissance Texts and Studies 155 |
|
67/2, p. 324 |
SIÂN GRØNLIE |
Rory McTurk, Chaucer and the Norse and Celtic Worlds |
|
76/2, p. 325 |
Margaret Connolly |
Peter Brown (ed.), A Companion to Chaucer |
|
71/2, p. 333 |
Anthony P. Bale |
Jonathan Hsy, Trading Tongues, Merchants, Multilingualism, and Medieval Literature (Anthony Bale) |
|
84/2, p. 335 |
Mark Campbell Chambers |
Claire Sponsler, The Queen’s Dumbshows: John Lydgate and the Making of Early Theater (Mark Chambers) |
|
84/2, p. 338 |
Carolyne Larrington |
Jenny Jochens, Old Norse Images of Women |
|
66/2, p. 358 |