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Oxford Guides To Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales. Oxford, Oxford University ...

Oxford Guides to Chaucer: The Canterbury Tales. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
Dalarun, J. (1992). The Clerical Age. In: C. Klapisch-Zuber (ed.) A History of Women in the West: Silences of the Middle Ages. Vol.2. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press. pp. 15-42.
Elbow, P. (1975). Opposites in Chaucer. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
Fradenburg, L. O. (1986). The Wife of Bath's Passing Fancy. Studies in the Age of Chaucer, 8, 31-58.
Frank, R. W. (1972). Chaucer and the Legend of Good Women. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
Fries, M. (1981). The Characterisation of Women. In: B. S. Levy & P. E. Szarmach (eds.), The Alliterative Tradition in the Fourteenth Century. Kent, OH, Kent State University Press. pp. 25-46.
Helmholz, R. H. (1974). Marriage Litigation in Medieval England. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
Hewlette, D. (1970). A Life of John Keats. London: Penguin.
Jordan, R. M. (1967). Chaucer and the Shape of Creation. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
Kean, P. M. (1972). Chaucer and the Making of English Poetry. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Khan, J. U. (2002). Keats's 'Ode to a Nightingale': An Appreciation in Keatsian Aesthetics with Possible Sources and Analogues. Dogus Universitesi Dergisi, 6, 77-96.

Laskaya, A. (1995). Chaucer's Approach to Gender in the Canterbury Tales. Cambridge, D. S. Brewer.
Leavis, F. R. (1962). Keats. In: D. J. Enright & E. de Chickera (eds.) English Critical Texts. London, Oxford University Press. pp. 310-317.
Leff, G. (1958). Medieval Thought. Harmondsworth, Penguin.
Miller, R. (1970). The Miller's Tale As a Complaint. Chaucer Review, 5, 147-160.
Minnis, A. J. (1982). Chaucer and Pagan Antiquity. Cambridge, Brewer.
Neuse, R. (1969). The Knight: The First Mover in Chaucer's Human Comedy. In: J. A. Burrow (ed.) Chaucer. Harmondsworth, Penguin. pp. 242-263.
Oberempt, K. J. (1976). Chaucer's Anti-Misogynist Wife of Bath. Chaucer Review 10, 287-302.
Owst, G. R. (1961). Literature and Pulpit in Medieval England. Oxford, Blackwell.
Pearsall, D. (1986). The Canterbury Tales II: Comedy. In: P. Boitani & J. Mann (eds.) The Cambridge Chaucer Companion. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press. pp. 125-142.
Prior, S. P. (1986). Parodying Typology and the Mystery Plays in the Miller's Tale. Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 16, 57-73.
Robinson, I. (1972). Chaucer and the English Tradition. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
Salter, E. (1962). Chaucer: The Knight's Tale and the Clerk's Tale. London, Arnold.
Spearing, A.C. (1985). Medieval to Renaissance in English Poetry. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
Stillinger, J. (1999). Reading the Eve of St. Agnes: The Multiples of Complex Literary Transaction. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
Vandler, H. (1983). The Odes of John Keats. Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
Woods, W. F. (1994). Private and Public Space in the Miller's Tale. Chaucer Review 29, 168-175.


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