Studies in Medieval English Language and Literature No. 21 (2006)

更新日: 2006/12/20

  • Introduction to the 21st Anniversary Special Issue
    Tadao KUBOUCHI, President (pp. 1-2)
  • Papers for the Special Issue
    A: The Study of Medieval English Language and Literature: Its Significance and Current Status
  • The Apologia Philologica Pro Visa Sua
    Yoshio TERASAWA (pp. 3-12)
  • The Status of Medieval English Language and Literature in Japan: Its Significance and Present Status
    Keiko IKEGAMI (pp. 13-20)
  • From Text to Context: Medieval English Studies Today
    Takami MATSUDA (pp. 21-28)
  • Recent Developments in Medieval Manuscript Studies and the Digital Winchester Project
    Takako KATO (pp. 29-38)
  • The Last Words of Professor Judson Boyce Allen
    Masahiko KANNO (pp. 39-44)
  • B: The Study of Medieval English Language and Literature in Japan
  • Beowulfiana in Japan: A Brief Survey of the Past 75 Years: With Special Focus on the Japanese Translations and Interpretive Studies
    Hideki WATANABE (pp. 45-54)
  • The Structure of Chaucer’s Ambiguity with a Focus on Troilus and Criseyde 5.1084
    Yoshiyuki NAKAO (pp. 55-63)
  • Articles
  • Modernity and Archaism in the Ancrene Wisse Revisited
    Tadao KUBOUCHI (pp. 65-82)
  • Compounds in Beowulf: Hordweard and a Theme of the Poem
    Yasuhito MIKI (pp. 83-95)
  • Alfred’s Addition of Modal Verbs in his Prose Translation of the First Fifty Psalms: With Special Reference to Magan
    Makoto ICHIKAWA (pp. 97-120)
  • Book Reviews
  • Richard Marsden, ed., The Cambridge Old English Reader (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004)
    Kinshiro OSHITARI (pp. 121-27)
  • R. M. Liuzza, ed., Old English Literature: Critical Essays (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2002)
    Hiroshi OGAWA (pp. 129-38)
  • Mark C. Amodio and Katherine O’Brian O’Keefe, eds., Unlocking teh Wordhord: Anglo-Saxon Studies in Memory of Edward B. Irving, Jr. (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003)
    Jun TERASAWA (pp. 139-46)
  • Terry Jones, Robert Yeager, Terry Dolan, Alan Fletcher, and Juliette Dor, Who Murdered Chaucer?: A Medieval Mystery (London: Methuen, 2003)
    Isamu SAITO (pp. 147-55)
  • Rosamund Allen, Lucy Perry, and Lane Roberts, eds., La3amon: Contexts, Language, and Interpretation (King’s College London Medieval Studies XIX, , 2002)
    Keiko IKEGAMI (pp. 157-65)
  • Raluca L. Radulescu, The Gentry Context for Malory’s Morte Darthur (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2003)
    Yuri FUWA (pp. 167-75)
  • Synopses of the Papers Read at the General and Divisional Meetings in 2005
    Suggestions for Future Contributions
    Books Received April 2005‐March 2006