I'm reading Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" for the first time since high school when we were forced to read "Wife of Bath" and the crude "Miller", but now I'm reading for myself. I looked up articles on Chaucer, because I think they enrich my experience and increase my understanding of the Tales. I hope you feel the same way after you read these great articles.
Authorizing the Reader in Chaucer's House of Fame by Laurel Amtower
No Joke: Transcendent Laughter in the Teseida and the Miller's Tale by Timothy D. Arner
"Wel bet is roten appul out of hoord": Chaucer's Cook, Commerce, and Civic Order by Craig E. Bertolet
"Of Goddes pryvetee nor of his wyf": Confusion of Orifices in Chaucer's Miller Tale by Louise M. Bishop
The Pardoner's Hyprocrisy of his Subjectivity by Robert Boenig
Alma Redemptoris Mater, Gaude Maria, and the Prioress's Tale by Robert Boenig
'Shot Wyndowe; (Miller's tale, I.3358 and 3695): An open and shut case? by Peter Brown
Chaucer's The Cook's Tale by Olga Burakov
Performing the Prioress: "Conscience" and responsibility in studies of Chaucer's Prioress's tale by Michael Calabrese
The Desolate Palace and the Solitary City: Chaucer, Boccaccio, and Dante by
by Robert R. Edwards
The Ending of Chaucer's Nun's Priest's Tale by P. J. C. Field
Petrach, Boccaccio, and Chaucer's Clerk's Tale by John Finlayson
"Little Troilus": Heroides 5 and its Ovidian contexts in Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde by Jamie C. Fumo
Faux Semblants: Antifraternalism Reconsidered in Jean de Meun and Chaucer by G. Geltner
The Summoner's Jankyn as an Artifical Fool
by Stephen Harper
The Name of Chaucer's Miller by Carole Hough
Pastoral Histories: Utopia, Conquest, and the Wife of Bath's Tale by Patricia Clare Ingham
'Loo, lordes myne, heere is a fit!': The Structure of Chaucer's Sir Thopas by E. A. Jones
What Ails Chaucers' Cook? Spiritual Alchemy and the Ending of The Canterbury Tales by Michael Kensak
Apollo exterminans: The God of Poetry in Chaucer's Manciple's Tale by Michael Kensak
"Myne by right": Oath Making and Intent in The Friar's Tale by Daniel T. Kline
"And riden in Belmarye": Chaucer's General Prologue, Line 57 by Jeanne Krochalis
The Mercantile (Mis)reader in the Canterbury Tales by Roger A. Ladd
The Laws of Community, Margery Kempe, and the "Canon's Yeoman's Tale" by James H. Landman
Romancing Ethics in Boethius, Chaucer, and Levinas: Fortune, Moral Luck, and Erotic Adventure by J. Allan Mitchell
Chaucer's Clerk's Tale and the Question of Ethical Monstrosity by J. Allan Mitchell
Experience and the Judgement of Poetry: A Reconsideration of The Franklin's Tale by Gerald Morgan
Hard Lords and Bad Food-service in the Monk's Tale by Scott Norsworthy
Interpreting Female Agency and Responsibility in the Miller's Tale and the Merchant's Tale by Joseph D. Parry
Chaucer's Rape, Southern Racism, and the Pedagogical Ethics of Authorial Malfeasance by Tison Pugh
Queer Pandarus? Silence and Sexual Ambiguity in Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde by Tison Pugh
"The Summoner's Tale" and Proverbs 21.14 by Thomas Rand
May in the Marketplace: Commodification and Textuality in the Merchant's Tale by Christian Sheridan
Speech, Circumspection, and Orthodontics in the Manciple's Prologue and Tale and The Wife of Bath's Portrait by Mel Storm
Public Fantasy and the Logic of Sacrifice in The Physician's Tale by Michael Uebel
A Woman in the Mind's Eye (and not): Narrators and Gazes in Chaucer's Clerks's Tale by Robin Waugh
Lumiansky's Paradox: Ethics, Aesthetics and Chaucer's "Prioress's Tale" by Greg Wilsbacher