Fresh new studies in medieval literature and culture.
Contents of this issue comprise the following articles:
Susan Crane, 'A Taxonomy of Creatures in the Second-Family
Bestiary';
Isabel Davis, 'Piers Plowman and the Querelle of the
Rose: Marriage, Caritas, and the Peacock’s "Pennes"';
Shirin Khanmohamadi, 'The Look of Medieval Ethnography: William
of Rubruck’s Mission to Mongolia';
Mike Rodman Jones, '"Of depe ymaginaciouns and strange
interpretaciouns": Sorcery and Politics in Gower’s
Confessio Amantis';
Jill Mann, 'Messianic Chivalry in Amis and
Amiloun';
Shannon Gayk, '"Among psalms to fynde a cleer sentence’:
John Lydgate, Eleanor Hull, and the Art of Vernacular
Exegesis';
Juanita Feros Ruys, 'Mater Litterata: Considerations of
Maternity and Latinity in the Post-Medieval Reception of
Dhuoda’s Liber manualis';
Analytical Survey
David Matthews, 'The Medieval Invasion of Early-Modern
England'.