IMC 2013: Strands
IMC 2013: Sessions in strand Language and Literature - Middle English
- Books Have Their Histories: Medieval Chronicles and Their Scribes, Manuscripts, and Early Editions, I (527)
- Books Have Their Histories: Medieval Chronicles and Their Scribes, Manuscripts, and Early Editions, II - Prose Brut Manuscripts (627)
- Books Have Their Histories: Medieval Chronicles and Their Scribes, Manuscripts, and Early Editions, IV - Beyond Brut History (827)
- Dangerous Devices?: The Functions of Pleasure in Middle English Literature and Drama (1713)
- (Dis)Pleasures of Staged Music and Dance (1113)
- Eat, Read, and Be Merry?: Social Pleasure and Its Implications in Late Medieval England and France (1323)
- French Connections and Middle English Literature (1527)
- Gentry Entertainments in Middle English and Middle French Literature (1627)
- I-Thou in Middle English Literature: Approaches to Defining Self and Other (127)
- Medieval to Early Modern: Transition of Romance and its Motifs in England and Spain (1127)
- Money, Economy, and Exchange in Middle English Literature (227)
- Moral Behaviour and Literary Pleasure in Chaucer, Gower, and the Catechism (327)
- Performing Robin Hood (1326)
- Pious Passion and Its Ideologies in Middle English Literature (208)
- Pleasurable Peregrinations: Re-Creations of the Holy Land in the Later Middle Ages (613)
- Pleasure, Erotic Violence, and Chivalry in Medieval Romance (1618)
- Pleasure in Medieval Literature (812)
- Popular Medievalism: Buffy, Beowulf, Robin Hood (1733)
- Reading for Pleasure?: Paratext and Literacy in Manuscripts and Early Printed Books (514)
- Reading Practice and Practising Reading in the 15th Century: Pedagogy, Policy, and Play (1027)
- Sentence and Solace in English Biblical Drama, I (1026)
- Sentence and Solace in English Biblical Drama, II (1126)
- Sentence and Solace in English Biblical Drama, III (1226)
- The Idea of Place in Middle English Literature (1727)
- The Pleasure of English Literature after the Middle Ages (1212)
- 'Thy lustie lyre ovirspred with spottis blak': New Approaches to Disease in Vernacular Literature (1308)
- Welcome to Late Medieval England: Drunken Priests, Cunning Cooks, and Communal Vice (1522)