Robert Lambdin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article may not meet the general notability guideline or one of the following specific guidelines for inclusion on Wikipedia: Biographies, Books, Companies, Fiction, Music, Neologisms, Numbers, Web content, or several proposals for new guidelines. If you are familiar with the subject matter, please expand or rewrite the article to establish its notability. The best way to address this concern is to reference published, third-party sources about the subject. If notability cannot be established, the article is more likely to be considered for redirection, merge or ultimately deletion, per Wikipedia:Guide to deletion. This article has been tagged since December 2007. |
Robert T. Lambdin is an American professor and co-author and -editor of several scholarly books about medieval English literature. He has a PhD in English from the University of South Florida, where he met his wife and co-author, Laura L. Lambdin. He is currently adjunct faculty for the Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, South Carolina, where he teaches courses on business writing and communication.
Lambdin's work includes Camelot in the nineteenth century : Arthurian characters in the poems of Tennyson, Arnold, Morris, and Swinburne (Greenwood Press, 2000), co-authored with his wife. He has also worked with his wife as co-editor of several works: Chaucer's pilgrims : an historical guide to the pilgrims in The Canterbury tales (Greenwood Press, 1996), A Companion to Jane Austen Studies (Greenwood Press, 2000), A companion to Old and Middle English literature (Greenwood Press, 2002), and Encyclopedia of medieval literature (Greenwood Press, 2000). This last, the Encyclopedia of medieval literature, has won praise for being an invaluable reference book. It was mentioned in a Library Journal book review as being "a monumental work of scholarship" and "essential for academic libraries" [1]
[edit] References
- ^ "Encyclopedia of Medieval Literature" (July 2000). Library Journal 125 (12).

