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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David O. Matthews (Lecturer in Medieval English Literature)Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press Imprint: Pennsylvania State University Press Edition: Annotated edition Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.481kg ISBN: 9780271020822ISBN 10: 0271020822 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 15 October 2000 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviewsThis volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. --Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts--certainly well into the twentieth century--the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, 'Middle English, ' was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. --Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. --Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts certainly well into the twentieth century the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, Middle English, was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts--certainly well into the twentieth century--the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, 'Middle English, ' was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. --Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. --Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts certainly well into the twentieth century the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, Middle English, was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts certainly well into the twentieth century the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, Middle English, was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts--certainly well into the twentieth century--the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, 'Middle English, ' was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. --Introduction This volume fills an obvious gap in the discipline of medieval studies generally and has no rival. Up till now it has been very difficult for both students and scholars to gain access to the primary material that relates to the subject of the development of the field of Middle English studies. --Margaret Clunies Ross, University of Sydney, Australia Anyone studying Middle English in the past fifty years has inherited a broad consensus about what the subject is. But this consensus and relative certainty are actually of very recent origin. For much of the history of the study of Middle English texts certainly well into the twentieth century the field was a very poorly mapped one indeed, to the point that the use of the unifying term, Middle English, was in fact extremely rare until the 1870s, and not uniform after then. </p> Introduction</p> Author InformationDavid Matthews is lecturer in English at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He is the author of The Making of Middle English, 1765-1910 (1999). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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