文档介绍:Medieval Heroines in
History and Legend
Part I
Professor Bonnie Wheeler
THE PANY ®
Bonnie Wheeler, .
Professor of English and Medieval Studies, Southern Methodist University
Bonnie Wheeler teaches English and Medieval Studies at Southern Methodist University (SMU) where she directs
the Medieval Studies Program. She holds degrees from Stonehill College and Brown University (Phi Beta Kappa)
and taught at Case Western Reserve and Columbia University before moving to SMU. Professor Wheeler writes
about medieval literature and culture and is editor of the scholarly quarterly about King Arthur, Arthuriana, and
editor of the book series The New Middle Ages (Palgrave/St. Martin’s Press, New York). Her recently edited books
include Fresh Verdicts on Joan of Arc (1996), Medieval Mothering (1996), ing Male in the Middle Ages
(1997), Listening to Heloise: The Voice of a Twelfth-Century Woman (2000), The Malory Debate: The Texts of Le
Morte Darthur (2000), On Arthurian Women: Essays in Memory of Maureen Fries,(2001), and the ing
Eleanor of Aquitaine: Lord and Lady (2002). Among her scholarly articles are “Trouthe without Consequences:
Rhetoric and Gender in Chaucer’s Franklin’s Tale,” in Feminea Medievalia I (1994); “Joan of Arc’s Sword in the
Stone,”(1996); “Origenary Fantasies: Abelard’s Castration and Confession,”(1997); “Models of Pilgrimage: From
Communitas to Confluence,” Journal of Ritual Studies (1999); and “The Project of Arthurian Studies:
Quondam et Futurus,” in New Directions in Arthurian Studies (2002).
Professor Wheeler has recently served mentator and the historical consultant for A&E and The History
Channel’s programs on Camelot, The Holy Grail, and Joan of Arc, and she has delivered numerous papers at
national and international conferences.
Professor Wheeler has received SMU’s Outstanding Teacher Award six times and is a recipient of the Phi Beta
Ka