The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service > LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)

Wallace, David, 1954-


  • URI(s)

  • Variants

    • Wallace, David (David J.)
  • Additional Information

    • Birth Date

        1954-11-13
    • Has Affiliation

        • Affiliation Start: 1985
        • Organization: University of Texas, Austin
    • Has Affiliation

        • Affiliation End: 1983
        • Organization: St. Edmund's College (Cambridge University)
    • Has Affiliation

        • Organization: University of Minnesota
    • Birth Place

        Newport Pagnell (England)
  • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

  • Earlier Established Forms

    • Wallace, David (David J.)
  • Sources

    • found: Medieval literary theory and criticism ... 1988:CIP t.p. (David Wallace) pref. (Univ. of Texas, Austin)
    • found: LC data base, 6-30-88(hdg.: Wallace, David)
    • found: Nat. fac. dir., 1988(Wallace, David J.; Dept. of Engl., Univ. of Texas, Austin)
    • found: His Giovanni Boccaccio, Decameron, 1991:t.p. (David Wallace; P.W. Frenzel Chair in Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minn.) t.p. verso (b. 1954)
    • found: Chaucerian polity, 1997:CIP t.p. (David Wallace) data sheet (David John Wallace)
    • found: Biog. resource center (Contemp. authors), May 5, 2005(David J. Wallace; b. Nov. 13, 1954, Newport Pagnell, England; St. Edmund's College, Cambridge, Ph. D., 1983; University of Texas at Austin, assistant professor of English, beginning 1985)
    • found: Univ. of Pennsylvania website, viewed Dec. 16, 2016:(David Wallace is Judith Rodin Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania. He was Chair of English 2001-4 and Interim Chair of Romance Languages, 2005-6; he served as President of the New Chaucer Society from 2004-6 and served on the Program Committee for the 2010 (Siena) meeting. In Spring 2007 he was Visiting Professor, University of Melbourne, and in Spring 2008 Bain-Swiggett Professor of Poetry at Princeton; David is a medievalist who looks forward to the early modern period; he works on English and Italian matters (and is a member of the Center for Italian Studies) with additional interests in French, German, women's writing, romance, "discovery" of the Americas and the history of slavery, and Europe)
  • Instance Of

  • Scheme Membership(s)

  • Collection Membership(s)

  • Change Notes

    • 1988-07-08: new
    • 2016-12-16: revised
  • Alternate Formats