The Chaucer Review Explained

The Chaucer Review
Cover:The Chaucer Review.jpg
Editor:Susanna Fein, David Raybin
Discipline:Literature
Language:English
Abbreviation:Chaucer Rev.
Publisher:Penn State University Press
Country:United States
Frequency:Quarterly
History:1966-present
Website:http://www.psupress.org/journals/jnls_chaucer.html
Link1:http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/chaucer_review/
Link1-Name:Online access
Jstor:00092002
Oclc:43359050
Issn:0009-2002
Eissn:1528-4204

The Chaucer Review: A Journal of Medieval Studies and Literary Criticism is an academic journal published quarterly by the Penn State University Press.[1] Founded in 1966 by Robert W. Frank, Jr. (who continued as editor through 2002) and Edmund Reiss, The Chaucer Review acts as a forum for the presentation and discussion of research and concepts about Chaucer and the literature of the Middle Ages. The journal publishes studies of language, social and political contexts, aesthetics, and associated meanings of Chaucer's poetry, as well as articles on medieval literature, philosophy, theology, and mythography relevant to study of the poet and his contemporaries, predecessors, and audiences.

Susanna Fein (Kent State University) and David Raybin (Eastern Illinois University) have been editors of The Chaucer Review since 2001.

The four annual issues are published in January, April, July, and October and are distributed by the Johns Hopkins University Press.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Chaucer Review: A Journal of Medieval Studies and Literary Criticism . 2024-08-12 . www.psupress.org.