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Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales
​LINK TO ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY ASSIGNMENT- MAKE A COPY
MLA Works Cited Page: Basic Format from Purdue Owl
Helpful hint:
Use COMMAND + F (CONTROL + F on a PC) to search for specific terms in a document

MeL Databases

JSTOr

HHS Gale database

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​Mel DATABASE Article Links

"Rough girls and squeamish boys: the trouble with Absolon in the Miller's Tale" by Greg Walker
"Chaucer's religious skepticism" by Mahameed Mohammed and Al-Quran Raji
"SPOT ON" by Nicola Jones
"Flat as the earth" by Jeffrey Burton Russell
"An astrolabe for the people" by Phillip Ball
"Medieval monogamy" by Laura Betzig
"The mirror of honour and love: a woman's view of chivalry" by Sophie Masson

"Courtly love and christian marriage: Chretien de Troyes, Chaucer, and Henry VIII" by 
David Lyle Jeffrey


​JSTOR ARTICLES

"My Sweete Foo": Emelye's Role in "The Knight's Tale" by William F. Woods
The Problem of Defining "Sovereynetee" in the "Wife of Bath's Tale" by Susanne Sara Thomas
Extimacy in the "Miller's Tale" by Gila Aloni
Recent Chaucer Criticism: New Historicism, New Discontents? by David Matthews
"Of Goddes pryvetee nor of his wyf": Confusion of Orifices in Chaucer's Miller's Tale​ by Louise M. Bishop


​Article downloads

Besserman, Lawrence. "Girdles, belts, and cords: a leitmotif in Chaucer's General Prologue."
vol. 50, no. 3-4, 2014, p. 241.

Blamires, Alcuin.
 "Philosophical sleaze? The 'strok of thought' in the Miller's Tale and Chaucerian fabliau." The Modern Language Review, vol. 102, no. 3, 2007, pp. 621+. 

Knapp, Peggy A. “Alisoun of Bathe and the Reappropriation of Tradition.” The Chaucer Review, vol. 24, no. 1, 1989, pp. 45–52. 

McKinley, Kathryn L. “The Silenced Knight: Questions of Power and Reciprocity in the ‘Wife of Bath's Tale.’” The Chaucer Review, vol. 30, no. 4, 1996, pp. 359–378. 

Peksenyakar, Azime. "'I shall thee quyte': fabliau women's spatial resistance in the Miller's Tale and the Reeve's Tale." Interactions, vol. 25, no. 1-2, 2016, pp. 149+.

Rieder, Paula M. "The Uses and Misuses of Misogyny: A Critical Historiography of the Language of Medieval Women's Oppression." Historical Reflections, vol. 38, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1-18.

Root, Jerry. “‘Space to Speke’: The Wife of Bath and the Discourse of Confession.”The Chaucer Review, vol. 28, no. 3, 1994, pp. 252–274. 

Wadiak, Walter. "Chaucer's Knight's Tale and the politics of distinction." Philological Quarterly, vol. 89, no.2-3, 2010, pp. 159+.

​Warner, Lionel. "Lifting The Wife of Bath off the page." NATE Classroom, no. 14, 2011, pp. 48+.


​Read The CanteRbury Tales online

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Select the image to read a scanned copy of The Canterbury Tales published by Duffield & Company in 1914

Listen to the Canterbury Tales Online

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Select the image to listen to a Librovox recording of The Canterbury Tales

Chaucer Assignment 
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