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153Medieval Grammatical Theory and Chaucer's House of FameSpeculum 60 (4): 850-876. 1985.In the House of Fame, Chaucer takes up the problem of the nature of traditional texts and suggests, with humor and skepticism, that literary discourse is reducible to a form of speech, spoken sounds inscribed in texts as a form of written memory perpetuated by the arbitrary institution of tradition. Lady Fame personifies this institution. Although many critics have considered the House of Fame to be a poem about poetry and the burden of the past, the key assumptions of medieval literary theory u…Read more
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25Medieval Literary Theory and Criticism, c. 1100–c. 1375: The Commentary-Tradition (review)Speculum 66 (2): 451-453. 1991.
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50Interpretation and the semiotics of allegory in Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and AugustineSemiotica 63 (1-2): 33-72. 1987.
Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Philosophy of Language |
| Philosophy of Mind |