1. Elizabeth El Itreby, "Ritual and Re-Creation in the N-Town Cycle." 1985.
2. Glory Dharmaraj, "Rewriting the East in Old and Middle English Texts: A Study in Alterity and a Theory for Third-World Feminism." 1991.
3. Timothy Gray, "Romance and Revolution in Nineteenth-Century Historical Fiction and Opera." 1993.
4. Gordon Sellers, "The Rogationtide Homilies in Anglo-Saxon." 1996.
5. Barbara Gusick, Associate
Professor,
Troy State University. "Christ as a Worker in the Towneley Cycle." 1996.
Co-editor,
Fifteenth-Century Studies; co-editor, New Approaches to European Theater of the
Middle Ages (Peter Lang, 2004).
6. Mary Dockray Miller, Associate
Professor, Lesley University. "Mixed Pairs: Gender Relations in Anglo-Saxon
Literature." 1996.
Motherhood and Mothering in Anglo-Saxon Literature (Palgrave,
2000).
7. Michael D.C.
Drout,
Professor, Wheaton College. "Imitating Fathers: Tradition, Inheritance, and the
Reproduction of Culture in Anglo-Saxon England." 1997.
Beowulf and the Critics
(Tempe, 2002). How Tradition Works: A Meme-based Cultural Poetics of the Anglo-Saxon
Tenth Century (Tempe, 2006).
8. Martin Foys, Associate Professor
(TT), Hood College. "The Web of Linen: The Bayeux Tapestry as Text and Hypertext."
1998.
The Bayeux Tapestry: A Digital Edition (Boydell and Brewer, 2002).
Virtually Anglo-Saxon: Old Media, New Media, and Early Medieval Studies in the Late Age
of Print (Gainsville, 2007).
9. Stephen J. Harris, Associate Professor
(TT), University of Massachusetts-Amherst. "Identity and History in Anglo-Saxon England."
1999.
Race and Ethnicity in Anglo-Saxon Literature (Routledge, 2003). Editor,
Pestilence in Medieval and Early Modern Literature (Routledge, 2004). Co-editor,
Misconceptions about the Middle Ages (Routledge, 2008).
10. Bryon Grigsby, Senior Vice-president and Vice-president for Academic Affairs, Shenandoah University; formerly Assistant Professor (TT), Centenary College. "Medicine and Literature in the Middle Ages." 2000. Editor, Pestilence in Medieval and Early Modern Literature (Routledge, 2004). Co-editor, Misconceptions about the Middle Ages (Routledge, 2008).
11. Kimberly Bovee, Assistant Professor, Tidewater Community College. "John Bale and the Medieval Heritage of Reformation Drama." 2001.
12. Christina Heckman, Assistant Professor (TT), Augusta State University. "Crux et Transitus: The Cross in Anglo-Saxon Literature." 2002.
13. Gerald Nachtwey, Assistant Professor (TT), Eastern Kentucky University. "'Swete Harm': Chivalry and Violence in Chaucer and Froissart." 2005.
14. Kimberly Jack, Instructor, Auburn University. "Clothing Rhetoric in the Works of the Pearl-Poet. 2008.
15. Stephanie Lundeen. "Performance in Medieval English Poetry." 2008