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This profile was automatically generated using 46 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 46 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 46 references Web References
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1. Representations
www.representations.org/vision - [Cached]Published on: 8/12/2008 Last Visited: 8/12/2008
R. Howard Bloch is Augustus R. Street Professor of French at Yale University.He is the author of Etymologies and Genealogies, The Scandal of the Fabliaux, Medieval Misogyny and the Invention of Western Romantic Love, and God's Plagiarist: Being an Account of the Fabulous Industry and Irregular Commerce of the Abbé Migne.
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R. Howard Bloch -
2. writersreps.com
writersreps.com/author.cfm?Aut - [Cached]Published on: 10/16/2007 Last Visited: 10/16/2007
R. Howard Bloch
R. Howard Bloch is Sterling Professor of French and Director of the Division of the Humanities at Yale University.He is the author of GOD'S PLAGIARIST: Being an Account of the Fabulous Industry and Irregular Commerce of the Abbé Jacques-Paul Migne; THE ANONYMOUS MARIE DE FRANCE (winner of the MLA's 2005 Scaglione Prize); ETYMOLOGIES AND GENEALOGIES: A Literary Anthropology of the French Middle Ages; and MEDIEVAL FRENCH LITERATURE AND LAW among other works.A recipient of Fulbright and Guggenheim Fellowships, a James Russell Lowell Award, and the Medal of the Collège de France, he is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and an Officier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. -
3. thebark.com
thebark.com/ezine/features_spe - [Cached]Published on: 5/19/2008 Last Visited: 5/19/2008
At many distinguished universities, courses explore the ways dogs have figured in literature and poetry, as well as their lasting historic significance,for example, Howard Bloch, professor of French medieval history at Yale, has found the role of dogs in medieval animal fables to play a key role in understanding the formation of the modern French state.* The discourse between wolf and dog paralleled the relationship between countryside and town, offering insights and expressing anxieties of changing status and of place.
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R. Howard Bloch, "The Wolf in the Dog: Animal Fables and State Formation" in Differences 15

