Abstract

Introduction - Receiving Chaucer in Renaissance England, Theresa M. Krier. Part 1 Forming Canons: Wrastling for this World - Wyatt and the Tudor Canonization of Chaucer, John Watkins Authority and the Defence of Fiction - Renaissance Poetics and Chaucer's House of Fame, Carol A.N. Martin Thomas Speght's Renaissance Chaucer and the Solaas of Sentence in Troilus and Criseyde, Clare Kinney. Part 2 Claims for Narrative Poetry - Chaucer and Spenser: Narrative Reflections - Re-Envisaging the Poet in Canterbury Tales and Faerie Queene, Judith H. Anderson Sundrie Doubts - Vulnerable Understanding and Dubious Origins in Spenser's Continuation of the Squire's Tale, Craig A. Berry Idolatrous Idylls - Protestant Iconoclasm, Spenser's Daphnaida and Chaucer's Book of the Duchess, Glenn Stenberg. Part 3 Gender and the Translations of Genre: Room of One's Own for Decisions - Chaucer and Faerie Queene, A. Kent Hieatt The Aim was Song - From Narrative to Lyric in Parlement of Foules and Love's Labours Lost, Theresa M. Krier Jacobean Chaucer - Two Noble Kinsmen and Other Chaucerian Plays, Helen Cooper.

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