Supplementary Read<strong>in</strong>gs:Carole Hillenbr<strong>and</strong>, The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives, Chapters 4 or 6 (R)M. Mar. 12 K<strong>in</strong>g of Tars (Electronic R)Chaucer’s Man of Law’s Tale (<strong>in</strong> whatever edition you have)Supplementary Read<strong>in</strong>gs:Jane Gilbert, “Putt<strong>in</strong>g the Pulp <strong>in</strong>to Fiction: The Lump-Child <strong>and</strong> its Parents <strong>in</strong>The K<strong>in</strong>g of Tars,” <strong>in</strong> Pulp Fictions of <strong>Medieval</strong> Engl<strong>and</strong>, pp. 102-23 (R)Lisa Lampert, “Race, Periodicity, <strong>and</strong> the neo-Middle Ages,” ModernLanguage Quarterly 65.3 (2004): 391-421 (R)Siobha<strong>in</strong> Bly Calk<strong>in</strong>, “Monstrous Interm<strong>in</strong>gl<strong>in</strong>g <strong>and</strong> Miraculous Conversion:Negotiat<strong>in</strong>g Cultural Borders <strong>in</strong> The K<strong>in</strong>g of Tars,” <strong>in</strong> Saracens <strong>and</strong> theMak<strong>in</strong>g of English Identity (R)Gerald<strong>in</strong>e Heng, “Beauty <strong>and</strong> the East,” <strong>in</strong> Empire of Magic (R)*Kathryn L. Lynch, “Storytell<strong>in</strong>g, Exchange <strong>and</strong> Constancy: East <strong>and</strong> West <strong>in</strong>Chaucer’s Man of Law’s Tale,” Chaucer Review 33 (1999): 409-22 (R)*Kathy Lavezzo, “Beyond Rome: Mapp<strong>in</strong>g Gender <strong>and</strong> Justice <strong>in</strong> The Man ofLaw’s Tale,” Studies <strong>in</strong> the Age of Chaucer 24 (2001): 149-80 (R)Carolyn D<strong>in</strong>shaw, “Pale Faces: Race, Religion <strong>and</strong> Affect <strong>in</strong> Chaucer’s Texts<strong>and</strong> Their Readers,” Studies <strong>in</strong> the Age of Chaucer 24 (2001): 19-41. (R)Susan Schibanoff, “Worlds Apart: Orientalism, Antifem<strong>in</strong>ism <strong>and</strong> Heresy <strong>in</strong>Chaucer’s Man of Law’s Tale,” Exemplaria 8 (1996): 59-96 (R)M. Mar. 19 F<strong>in</strong>ish Man of Law’s Tale (if necessary)Bevis of Hampton (<strong>in</strong> Four Romances of Engl<strong>and</strong>)Supplementary Read<strong>in</strong>gs:*Sir Bevis of Hampton <strong>in</strong> Literary Tradition, ed. Fellows <strong>and</strong> Djordjevic(Cambridge, 2008), any of Chapters 7-11 (R)M. Mar. 26 NO CLASS––PROF AT CONFERENCEDue Date: Paper Proposal Posted to WebCT for commentsM. Apr. 2 F<strong>in</strong>ish Bevis of Hampton (if necessary)Alliterative Morte Arthure (<strong>in</strong> K<strong>in</strong>g Arthur’s Death)8
Supplementary Read<strong>in</strong>gs:*Christ<strong>in</strong>e Chism, “K<strong>in</strong>g Takes Knight,” <strong>in</strong> Alliterative Revivals (Philadelphia,2002) (R)Mary Hamel, “The ‘Christen<strong>in</strong>g’ of Sir Priamus <strong>in</strong> the Alliterative MorteArthure” Viator 13 (1982): 295-307 (R)Gerald<strong>in</strong>e Heng, “Warr<strong>in</strong>g Aga<strong>in</strong>st Modernity” <strong>in</strong> Empire of Magic ((R)Arlyn Diamond, “Heroic Subjects: Women <strong>and</strong> the Alliterative MorteArthure,” <strong>in</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> Women: Texts <strong>and</strong> Contexts, pp. 293-308 (R)Mutually agreed date/time:F<strong>in</strong>ish Alliterative Morte Arthure if necessaryClos<strong>in</strong>g Discussion? <strong>Medieval</strong> Potluck?T. Apr. 10 NO CLASSDue Date: Term Paper9