Sharon M. Rowley is Professor of English at Christopher Newport University, USA. Her publications include The Old English Version of Bede's Historia Ecclesiastica (2011), "Bede and the Northern Kingdoms" (2013) and "Textual Studies, Gender and Performance in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight" (2003). She is currently editing the Old English Bede with Greg Waite.
1. Introduction
Part I Middle English Clerks, Texts and Readers
2. Reading Dreams, Casting the Future and Other Learned Mirths: The Harley Scribe as Proto-Chaucerian Clerk
3. Griselda as Mary: Chaucer's Clerk's Taleand Alanus de Rupe's Marian Exemplum
4. On Chaucer's Clerk, His Books and the Value of Education
5. Freedom and Choice: Postnuptial Negotiation, the Flitch of Bacon Custom, and the Woe of Marriage in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale and The Book of Margery Kempe
Part II The Lollards, Their Saints and Their Texts
6. The Making of a Monumental Edition: The Holy Bible ... The Earliest English Versions Made from the Latin Vulgate by John Wyclif and His Followers
7. Paratextual Frames for the Middle English Reader: The Additional Pauline Prologues in Cambridge, Emmanuel College MS 108, a Wycliffite New Testament
8. Lollard Book Production and Richard Rolle's English Psalter and Canticles
9. Blessed Hildegard: Another Kind of Lollard Saint
Part III Old English and Its Afterlife
10. "In his heart he believed in God, but he could not speak like a man": Martyrdom, Monstrosity, Speech, and the Dog-headed Saint Christopher
11. Hengist's Tongue: Remembering (Old) English in John Gower's Confessio Amantis
12. The Failed Masculinities of Tostig Godwinson
13. Elizabeth Elstob, Old English Law, and the Origin of Anglo-Saxon Studies: A Critical Edition of Samuel Pegge's "An Historical Account of ... the Textus Roffensis" (1767)