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A New Companion to Critical Thinking on Chaucer
Arc Companions
Edited by Stephanie L. Batkie, Matthew W. Irvin and Lynn Shutters
368 Pages, Trim size: 6 x 9 in
- Hardcover
- 9781641892520
- Published: August 2021
Stephanie L. Batkie is a Teaching Associate Professor and the Director of Writing Across the Curriculum at the University of the South. She works on Middle English and medieval Latin literature.
Matthew Irvin is Associate Professor of English, Chair of Medieval Studies, and Director of the Sewanee Medieval Colloquium at the University of the South. He and Stephanie Batkie are currently co-translating John Gower's Vox Clamantis for the TEAMS Medieval Text Series.
Lynn Shutters is Special Assistant Professor of English at Colorado State University; she teaches medieval literature, medievalism, and emotion and literature.
[A] deeply ethical book whose immediate, constant, and sincere concern is the profound human significance of individual words employed by Chaucer in the creation of his fascinating stories and characters. Each word is chosen for its perennial urgency, immersing readers in a vital literary universe—and inviting them to get personally, civically, socially, philosophically, and bodily engaged with Chaucer’s strikingly modern and relevant poetry. Readers long to engage with issues of sexuality, consent, bodies, race, color, morality, work, creativity, equity, power, agency, and authority—all important discourses in twenty-first-century pedagogy and revealed here as major, trans-temporal themes of Chaucer’s work.[...]A powerful tool for our classrooms, this collection unrelentingly makes Chaucer’s concerns urgent, and it could not have come at a better time in our critical history.
~Michael Calabrese, Speculum 98, no. 1 (January 2023): 218-20