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:''For the director, see [[Pete Travis]]''
:''For the director, see [[Pete Travis]]''
'''Peter W. Travis''' is Chair of the Department of English and Henry Winkley Professor of Anglo-Saxon and English Language and Literature at [[Dartmouth College]]. Travis received his Ph.D. from the [[University of Chicago]] and is now a medieval scholar specializing in the works of [[Chaucer]], most notably [[The Nun's Priest's Tale]]. He lives in [[Hanover, New Hampshire]].
'''Peter W. Travis''' is Chair of the Department of English and Henry Winkley Professor of Anglo-Saxon and English Language and Literature at [[Dartmouth College]]. Travis received a BA from [[Bates College]], an MA from [[Trinity College]], and a Ph.D. from the [[University of Chicago]]. He is a medieval scholar specializing in the works of [[Chaucer]], most notably [[The Nun's Priest's Tale]]. He lives in [[Hanover, New Hampshire]].


Travis has published a book titled ''Dramatic Design in the Chester Cycle'' (University of Chicago Press, 1982) and has published widely in scholarly Journals including recent publication in [[Studies in the Age of Chaucer]]. Travis has designed a course on contemporary Masculinities.
Travis published ''Dramatic Design in the Chester Cycle'' (University of Chicago Press, 1982) and ''Disseminal Chaucer, Rereading the Nun’s Priest’s Tale'' (Notre Dame, 2010), which won the Warren-Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism. He has published widely in scholarly Journals including [[Studies in the Age of Chaucer]]. Travis has designed a course on contemporary Masculinities.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 04:02, 15 July 2014

For the director, see Pete Travis

Peter W. Travis is Chair of the Department of English and Henry Winkley Professor of Anglo-Saxon and English Language and Literature at Dartmouth College. Travis received a BA from Bates College, an MA from Trinity College, and a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He is a medieval scholar specializing in the works of Chaucer, most notably The Nun's Priest's Tale. He lives in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Travis published Dramatic Design in the Chester Cycle (University of Chicago Press, 1982) and Disseminal Chaucer, Rereading the Nun’s Priest’s Tale (Notre Dame, 2010), which won the Warren-Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism. He has published widely in scholarly Journals including Studies in the Age of Chaucer. Travis has designed a course on contemporary Masculinities.

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