Published Books
Isidro J. Rivera and Kimberly Nance. Aprendizaje: Técnicas
de composición. Lexington, MA: DC Heath, 2003.
Historia de la Doncella Teodor: Edition and Study. Edited
in collaboration with Donna Rogers. Binghamton: Center for Medieval
and Early Renaissance Studies, 2000.
Published Articles
"Reflections on 50 years of La corónica," La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, 50.1-2 (Fall 2021-Spring 2022): 4-9.
"Devotional Reading and the Visual Dynamics of La passion del eterno principe (Burgos, 1493?)," Hispanic Review, 88.4 (2020): 471-94.
"'En palonbar criadas': Monastic environment and religious identity in the Poema de Santa Oria." Essays in Medieval Studies 33 (2017): 35-49.
"Visualizing the Passion in Andrés de Li's Summa de paciencia." Revista Hispánica Moderna 67 (2014): 55-75.
"Performance and Prelection in the Early Printed Editions of Celestina." Celestinesca 22
(1998[1999]): 3-20.
"Negotiation of Scientific Discourse in the First Printed Edition of the Historia
de la donzella Teodor (Toledo: Pedro Hagenbach, ca. 1500)." Hispanic Review,
66 (1998): 415-32.
"The Historia de la linda Melosina and the Construction of Romance in
Late Medieval Castile." MLN 112 (1997): 131-46.
"Visual Structures and Verbal Representation in the Comedia de
Calisto y Melibea (Burgos, 1499?)." Celestinesca 19 (1995):
3-30.
"Marriage and the Exchange of Power in the Poema de Mio Cid." Journal
of Hispanic Philology 17 (1993[1996]): 129-53.
"Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar, 'El Cid'." In Historic World Leaders, eds. Anne
Commire and Deborah Klezmer, 5 vols (Detroit: Gale Research, 1994) 2:332-35.
"Duplicity and the Mediation of Desire in Petrus Alfonsi's 'De canicula
lacrimante'." In Estudios alfonsinos y otros escritos. En homenaje
a John Esten Keller y a Aníbal Biglieri (New York: National Hispanic
Foundation for the Humanities, 1991), 189-95.
Contributions to The New Arthurian Encyclopedia (New York: Garland
Press, 1991). Articles on Strengleikar (pages 433-34); Brother
Robert (page 56); Queen Eufemia (page 147); and King Hákon Hákonarson
(219-20).