"Speaking Two Languages offers a provocative collection of new work on the relationship of traditional medieval studies and contemporary critical practice. The goal of the collection is not simply to look at texts through theory but to refract mutually the one through the other. The simultaneity of the historical and the theoretical, the philological and the interpretive, presents a set of essays widely divergent in method and tone, and part of the experience of reading the collection is to be, by turns, seduced, cajoled, annoyed, and stimulated into a healthy conversation with them all." — Seth Lerer, Princeton University"It's not only in what they say but in how they have said it that these eight authors have helped Anglo-Saxon and medieval studies join the dialogues of late twentieth-century literary theory." — R.A. Shoaf, University of Florida