1.
Agbabi, P., Chaucer, G.: Telling tales. Canongate, Edinburgh (2015).
2.
Chaucer, G., Benson, L.D.: The riverside Chaucer. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008).
3.
Greenlaw, L.: A double sorrow: Troilus and Criseyde. Faber & Faber, London (2015).
4.
Ali, S.: Refugee Tales. Comma Press, [Place of publication not identified] (2016).
5.
Holsinger, B.W.: A burnable book. Harper, London (2014).
6.
Trigg, S.: Medievalism and Theories of Temporality. In: Darcens, L. (ed.) Cambridge Companion to Medievalism. pp. 196–209. Cambridge University Press (2016).
7.
Justice, S.: Insurgency Remembered. In: Writing and rebellion: England in 1381. pp. 193–254. University of California Press, Berkeley (1994).
8.
Patterson, L.: ‘What man artow?’: authorial self-definition in The Tale of Sir Thopas and The Tale of Melibee. In: Temporal Circumstances: Form and History in the Canterbury Tales. pp. 97–128. Palgrave (2006).
9.
Paul Strohm: Chaucer’s Troilus as Temporal Archive. In: Theory and the Premodern Text. pp. 80–96. University of Minnesota Press (2000).
10.
Barrington, Candace; Hsy, Jonathan.: Remediated verse: Chaucer’s Tale of Melibee and Patience Agbabi’s ‘Unfinished Business’. Postmedieval. 6, 136–145 (2015).
11.
Turner, M. ed: A handbook of Middle English studies. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester (2013).
12.
Butterfield, A.: Familiar Enemy: Chaucer, Language, and Nation in the Hundred Years War. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009).
13.
Cooper, H.: The Canterbury tales. Clarendon, Oxford (1989).
14.
D’Arcens, L. ed: The Cambridge companion to medievalism. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2016).
15.
Goldie, M.B.: Middle English literature: an historical sourcebook. Blackwell, Oxford (2003).
16.
Lerer, S.: The Yale companion to Chaucer. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (2008).
17.
Matthews, D.: Medievalism: a critical history. D.S. Brewer, Cambridge (2017).
18.
Miller, R.P.: Chaucer: sources and backgrounds. Oxford University Press, New York (1977).
19.
Minnis, A.J.: Medieval theory of authorship: scholastic literary attitudes in the later Middle Ages. Wildwood House, Aldershot (1988).
20.
Emery, E., Utz, R.J. eds: Medievalism: key critical terms. D.S. Brewer, Cambridge (2017).
21.
Pugh, T., Weisl, A.J.: Medievalisms: making the past in the present. Routledge, London (2013).
22.
Scala, E.: Desire in the Canterbury Tales. Ohio State University Press, Columbus, OH (2016).
23.
Turner, M.: Chaucerian conflict: languages of antagonism in late fourteenth-century London. Clarendon, Oxford (2007).
24.
Windeatt, B.A.: Oxford guides to Chaucer: Troilus and Criseyde. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1992).