Jane Chance | |
---|---|
Born | 1945 (age 78–79) |
Years active | 1973–2011 |
Known for | Tolkien studies |
Notable work | Tolkien's Art: A 'Mythology for England' |
Jane Chance (born 1945), also known as Jane Chance Nitzsche, is an American scholar specializing in medieval English literature, gender studies, and J. R. R. Tolkien. She spent most of her career at Rice University, where since her retirement she has been the Andrew W. Mellon Distinguished Professor Emerita in English.
Chance earned her BA from Purdue University in 1967 with Highest Distinction and an Honors in English and her MA in English (1968) and PhD in Medieval English Literature (1971) from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. [1]
She taught at the University of Saskatchewan and then moved to Rice University in 1973 to teach Old English literature; she was the first woman appointed to a tenure-track position in the English department there. [2] [3] She was appointed to the Andrew W. Mellon Professorship in 2008 and became emerita upon her retirement in 2011. [1] [2] She is founder president of the Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages. [3]
At Rice, Chance established what became the Medieval Studies Program; she headed the first Women's Studies program within the English department, which was nationally noted. [3] In 1982 she was the first ever woman on the faculty at Rice University to gain maternity leave. [3] In the late 1980s she was the first president of the Rice Commission on Women. [2] [3] [4] She unsuccessfully sued the university for gender discrimination in 1988. [5] [6] [7] She attempted to appeal the case in the early 1990s but was unsuccessful. [8] In 1995 she established and funded the Julia Mile Chance Prize for Excellence in Teaching, named for her mother, to honor women faculty members. [3]
As Jane Chance Nitzsche, Chance published a revised version of her dissertation as The Genius Figure in Antiquity and the Middle Ages in 1975. [9] Beginning in 1994, she published a three-volume history of medieval mythography. Volume I, From Roman North Africa to the School of Chartres, A.D. 433–1177, was termed "monumental" and "highly detailed" by Sarah Stanbury in Arthuriana who nonetheless found the focus on gender poorly supported; [10] although the reviewer in Speculum called it "disappointing"; [3] [11] Volume 2, From the School of Chartres to the Court at Avignon, 1177–1350, was called "immensely learned and ambitious" in the same journal in 2002. [12] The final volume, The Emergence of Italian Humanism, 1321–1475, appeared in 2015, and was judged by one reviewer to be less comprehensive than claimed. [13] In 1995 she also published Mythographic Chaucer: the Fabulation of Sexual Politics. [2] [14]
Other works in which Chance focuses on medieval women and gender studies include Woman as Hero in Old English Literature (1986), [15] which investigated, among other things, the concept of women as peace-weavers [16] and their frequent failure, [17] and The Literary Subversions of Medieval Women (2007); [18] she edited Gender and Text in the Later Middle Ages (1996) [19] and Women Medievalists and the Academy (2005), which Helen Damico, writing in JEGP , called "massive in size and major in significance". [20]
Chance is a leading Tolkien scholar. [21] Her books in this field include Tolkien's Art: A 'Mythology for England' (1979; revised edition 2001), [22] The Lord of the Rings: The Mythology of Power (1992; revised edition 2001), in which she uses the theoretical framework of Michel Foucault, [23] [24] Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: A Reader (2004), [25] and Tolkien, Self and Other: "This Queer Creature" (2016), a biography with literary analysis. [26] Her book, Tolkien's Art: A 'Mythology for England' (1979; revised edition 2001) is considered to be one of the first scholarly studies of Tolkien's works. Through looking at Middle Earth in a new way with a Medieval lens, she adds a whole new world to the study of the works of Tolkien. [27] She appeared in a 2001 episode of National Geographic, "Beyond the Movie:The Lord of the Rings" and another interview she did with National Geographic ended up in the Collector's DVD Edition of Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. [27]
Chance was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1980 [28] and has also received membership in the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. [14] In 1998 she won the IMAPCT Award for Outstanding Rice Faculty Women from Rice University. [29]
She received numerous fellowships throughout the years for her research on Medieval Mythography. A few of the fellowships she received were the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) in the late 1970s, a Residency at the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio in Lake Como, Italy in 1988, a Visiting Research Fellowship at the University of Edinburgh in the late 1980s, and a Eccles Research Fellow position at the University of Utah in the mid 1990s. [27]
She won SCMLA Best Book awards for both the Medieval Mythography series and The Literary Subversions of Medieval Women. [2]
In 2013 she was awarded an honorary doctorate of letters from Purdue University [1] [2] [14] and honored in a symposium at the International Congress on Medieval Studies organized by the Medieval Foremothers' Society. [14]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2002 | National Geographic: Beyond the Movie, "The Lord of the Rings" | Herself | National Geographic TV DVD Directed by Lisa Kors |
2005 | Ringers: Lord of the Fans | Herself | SONY Pictures DVD Directed by Carlene Cordova |
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is a late 14th-century chivalric romance in Middle English alliterative verse. The author is unknown; the title was given centuries later. It is one of the best-known Arthurian stories, with its plot combining two types of folk motifs: the beheading game and the exchange of winnings. Written in stanzas of alliterative verse, each of which ends in a rhyming bob and wheel, it draws on Welsh, Irish, and English stories, as well as the French chivalric tradition. It is an important example of a chivalric romance, which typically involves a hero who goes on a quest which tests his prowess. It remains popular in modern English renderings from J. R. R. Tolkien, Simon Armitage, and others, as well as through film and stage adaptations.
Shelob is a fictional monster in the form of a giant spider from J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. Her lair lies in Cirith Ungol leading into Mordor. The creature Gollum deliberately leads the Hobbit protagonist Frodo there in hopes of recovering the One Ring by letting Shelob attack Frodo. The plan is foiled when Samwise Gamgee temporarily blinds Shelob with the Phial of Galadriel, and then severely wounds her with Frodo's Elvish sword, Sting.
E. Ann Matter is former Associate Dean for Arts & Letters and Professor of Religious Studies Emerita at the University of Pennsylvania. She specializes in Medieval Christianity, including mysticism, women and religion, sexuality and religion, manuscript and textual studies, biblical interpretation and sacred music.
Ruth Vanita is an Indian academic, activist and author who specialises in British and Indian literary history with a focus on gender and sexuality studies. She also teaches and writes on Hindu philosophy.
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Gabrielle Michele Spiegel is an American historian of medieval France, and the former Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of History at Johns Hopkins University where she served as chair for the history department for six years, and acting and interim dean of faculty. She also served as dean of humanities at the University of California, Los Angeles in 2004–2005, and, from 2008 to 2009, she was the president of the American Historical Association. In 2011, she was elected as a fellow to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Lizbeth Goodman FRSA is Professor of Inclusive Design for Education at University College Dublin, and a professor in the university's School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering.
Susan Louise Smith was an associate professor emeritus in the Department of Visual Arts at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD). She was noted for her 1995 book The Power of Women: A Topos in Medieval Art and Literature, an expansion of her 1978 doctoral dissertation on the Power of Women topos.
Allen J. Frantzen is an American medievalist with a specialization in Old English literature. Since retiring from Loyola University Chicago, he has been an emeritus professor.
Elizabeth Solopova is a Russian-British philologist and medievalist undertaking research at New College, Oxford. She is known outside academic circles for her work on J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth writings.
Marijane Osborn is an American academic. Her research spans literary disciplines; she is a specialist in Old English and Norse literature and is known as an early pioneer of ecocriticism. Osborn has published on runes, Middle English, Victorian and contemporary poets and writers, and film, and is a translator and fiction writer. She is Professor Emerita at UC Davis.
Carol Braun Pasternack was a professor of medieval English literature and language at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB) from 1988 to 2013. She chaired the Medieval Studies department, and was also Dean of Summer Sessions at UCSB in 2011–2013.
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Jane Sherron De Hart is an American feminist historian and women's studies academic. She is a professor emerita at University of California, Santa Barbara. De Hart has authored and edited several works on the history of women in the United States, the Federal Theatre Project, the Equal Rights Amendment, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. During the 1970s, she founded the women's studies program at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.
Joan Marguerite Aida Ferrante is an American scholar of medieval literature.
Tolkien's Art: 'A Mythology for England' is a 1979 book of Tolkien scholarship by Jane Chance, writing then as Jane Chance Nitzsche. The book looks in turn at Tolkien's essays "On Fairy-Stories" and "Beowulf: The Monsters and the Critics"; The Hobbit; the fairy-stories "Leaf by Niggle" and "Smith of Wootton Major"; the minor works "Lay of Autrou and Itroun", "The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth", "Imram", and Farmer Giles of Ham; The Lord of the Rings; and very briefly in the concluding section, The Silmarillion. In 2001, a second edition extended all the chapters but still treated The Silmarillion, that Tolkien worked on throughout his life, as a sort of coda.
Laura Alandis Hibbard Loomis was an American literary scholar and college professor who specialized in medieval English literature.
Katherine Fischer Drew was an American historian who was Lynette S. Autrey Professor of History at Rice University. A scholar of medieval European law, she also published translations of several medieval European law codes: the Lex Burgundionum, the Salic law, and the Edictum Rothari.
Dyan Elliott is a medievalist historian and scholar, whose focus of academic research is "gender, sexuality, spirituality, and the ongoing tensions between orthodoxy and religious dissent". Elliott works as a professor of history at Northwestern University, where she teaches the Medieval period.