Mickey Sweeney
Rosary College of Arts, Education, and Sciences
Bauer-Gatsos, Sheila, and Mickey Sweeney. "Charlotte Mary Yonge's Heartsease, or The Brother's Wife (1855): Rewriting Arthurian Romance to Reclaim Role for Women." Enarratio: Publications of the Medieval Association of the Midwest, Volume 24 (2023). Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.18061/1811/105367.
“The Failure of Perfection” Becoming the Pearl Poet, Edited by Jane Beal, Rowman & Littlefield / Lexington Books, 2022. * Invited co-editor of this collection for Rowman & Littlefield / Lexington Books. Retrieved from https://medievalpearl.wordpress.com/.
Sweeney, M. (2009). Breaking the Romance: Identifying Sin, Earning Redemption, and the Gift of Mercy in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Enarratio: Publications of the Medieval Association of the Midwest (16), 124-139. Retrieved from OneTouch 4.6 Scanned Documents.
Sweeney, M. (2008). Generating Enthusiasm: Performing Chaucer in the Small Liberal Arts College Classroom. Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Teaching: SMART, 15(1), 47-54.
Sweeney, M. (2007). Medieval Solomon and the Construction of Interpretation in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Enarratio: Publications of the Medieval Association of the Midwest (14), 101-117. Retrieved from OneTouch 4.6 Scanned Documents.
Sweeney, M. (2006). Divine Love or Loving Divinely?: The Ending of Malory’s “Morte Darthur.” Arthuriana, 16(2), 73–77. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/27870762.
(2005). Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. McFarland & Company.
Sweeney, M. (2004). Gawain's tempting Helen: prophesying the fall of Camelot. In Risden, E., Moranski, K., & Yandell, S. (eds.). Prophet margins: the Medieval vatic impulse and social stability. Peter Lang. Retrieved from Prophet margins : the Medieval vatic impulse and social stability | The University of Adelaide.
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