The Middle Ages provided an important, if complex, set of literary and
historiographic models for early modern authors, although the early
modern authors responded to the alien political, religious, and cultural
landscape of medieval England through their more present ideological
concerns. From Shakespeare's manipulation of his medieval source
material to Protestant responses to medieval Catholicism, this
collection of essays explores the ways that early modern English writers
responded to the medieval English literary and historical record,
dealing with topics such as historiographic bias, print history,
intertextuality, and cultural history.