How were romances written and read in the Middle Ages?
Ivana Djordjevic
- Associate Professor
- Liberal Arts College
- literary history5
- Middle Ages9
- romance3
- Chaucer4
- translation studies15
- translation theory6
- Anglo-Norman literature
- critical editing4
- Middle English3
- manuscripts8
- intertextuality
- narrative15
- cultural identity22
- Great Books7
- medieval literature4
- comparative literature10
- literary patronage
- medieval multilingualism2
- epic
-
Stephen Powell
medieval literature, Chaucer, romance
-
Stephen Yeager
medieval literature, literature studies, poetry
-
Manish Sharma
Old English, medieval literature, Middle English
-
Dario Brancato
Renaissance literature, digital humanities, Renaissance Florence
-
Pier-Pascale Boulanger
economic/financial translation, financial news, translating terminology
-
Sophie Marcotte
Gabrielle Roy, littérature québécoise, manuscripts
-
Elena Benelli
migrant literature, immigration to Italy, Italian history and culture
-
Surabhi Ghosh
installation, narrative, site-responsive
-
Lian Duan
Chinese as a second language, classical Chinese literature, visual arts
-
Katharine Streip
posthumanism, Beat literature and culture, ecocriticism
-
René Lemieux
translation studies, translation theory, intercultural communication
-
Stephen Ross
poetry, modernism, American literature
-
Máirtín Coilféir
Irish language, Irish literature, modern Irish literature
-
Kevin Pask
Renaissance literature, making publics, popular culture
-
Ariela Freedman
literary modernism, James Joyce, graphic novels
-
Lorenzo DiTommaso
apocalypticism, cultural history, history of ideas
-
Marcie Frank
British literature, modernity, narrative
-
Mark Russell
cultural history, visual arts, cultural identity
-
Debbie Folaron
translation technologies, localization, translation studies
-
Danièle Marcoux
Spanish to French, literary translation, Hispanic literature and culture