"To be at once well-bred and sincere, is no less than a Contradiction": Mandeville as Fabulist in The Fable of the Bees.Published in:2025By:Loveridge, MarkPublication type:Literary Criticism
"Black Lord Herbert" and the Construction of Race.Published in:2025By:Graham, Jean E.Publication type:Poetry Review
The Body and Soul of the Queen: Neoplatonic Rhetoric in Elizabeth I's Marriage Speeches.Published in:Studies in Philology, 2025, v. 122, n. 1, p. 54, doi. 10.1353/sip.2025.a951886By:Shachar, YafitPublication type:Article
"As freshe as any rose newe": Imperfection, Fetishization, and the Symbolic Significance of Hector in Lydgate's Troy Book.Published in:2025By:Heor, WooreePublication type:Literary Criticism
The Romance Hero in Translation: Beauty, Reputation, and Identity in Partonopeu de Blois and Partonope of Blois.Published in:2025By:Kaempfer, LuciePublication type:Poetry Review