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Professor of English (and Classics) Medieval language and literature |
Education
Teaching Experience
Following two years' teaching at St. Louis University, Brown came
to Stanford in 1971. He was chair of the Medieval Studies Program for
twelve years.
Award and Contributions
Recipient of the Dinkelspiel award for his contribution to education,
he teaches Old and Middle English language and literature, history of
the English language, post-classical Latin, theology and medieval
literature, monasticism, Arthurian literature, humanities, and (in
the library department of Special Collections) paleography.
Professional Work
He gave the Centennial Lectures at the University of New Mexico. He
is a member or officer in local, national, and international
professional organizations, past president of the International
Society of Anglo-Saxonists (ISAS) and of the Medieval Association of
the Pacific (MAP), is a longstanding member of the Stanford Library
Associates. He has been a collaborating editor of the Bulletin
Codicologique of Scriptorium, and is a reviewer for a number of
publications and presses.
Research and Publications
His research has been mainly in Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Latin
literature, history, theology, and paleography, resulting in articles
and essays on Beowulf, Cynewulf's Christ II, Old English verse, Bede
and Alcuin, the tenth-century English Benedictine reform,
Chrétien de Troyes' Yvain, and on medieval manuscripts. He has
written a book on Bede the Venerable and edited the essays of Stanley
Greenfield in Hero and Exile.
Hobbies and Interests
Although he spends most of his days happily teaching classes and
working in the library, he and his family like to travel.