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Old English literature in its manuscript context
Joyce Tally Lionarons
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Frontmatter
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Foreword (Paul E. Szarmach & Timothy Graham, page vii)
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Introduction (Joyce Tally Lionarons, page 1)
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Nostalgia and the Rhetoric of Lack: The Missing Exemplar for Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, Manuscript 41 (Sharon M. Rowley, page 11)
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Anglo-Saxon Orthodoxy (Nancy M. Thompson, page 37)
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Textual Appropriation and Scribal (Re)Performance in a Composite Homily: The Case for a New Edition of Wulfstan's De Temporibus Anticristi (Joyce Tally Lionarons, page 67)
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Multilingual Glosses, Bilingual Text: English, French, and Latin in Three Manuscripts of Ælfric's Grammar (Melinda J. Menzer, page 95)
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Three Tables of Contents, One Old English Homiliary in Cambridge, Corpus Christi College MS 178 (Paul Acker, page 121)
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The Boundaries Between Verse and Prose in Old English Literature (Thomas A. Bredehoft, page 139)
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Glastonbury and the Early History of the Exeter Book (Robert M. Butler, page 173)
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Parker's Purposes Behind the Manuscripts: Matthew Parker in the Context of his Early Career and Sixteenth-Century Church Reform (Nancy Basler Bjorklund, page 217)
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Index of Manuscripts (page 242)
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General Index (page 246)
Citable Link
Published: c2004
Publisher: West Virginia University Press
- 9780937058831 (paper)
- 9781935978381 (ebook)