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2009, Studies in Medievalism
An international Conference
The Middle Ages in the Modern World is a biennial conference about the ways in which the Middle Ages have been received, imagined, invoked, relived, used, abused, and refashioned in the modern and contemporary worlds. Hosted by John Cabot University and the École française de Rome, MAMO 2018 will take place for the first time outside of Great Britain, in the historic center of Rome, on 21-24 November 2018 (Wednesday-Saturday). A special, optional day of medieval and medievalizing site visits in and around Rome will follow on Sunday, November 25th. The Middle Ages in the Modern World è un convegno, finora tenutosi a cadenza biennale, sui modi in cui il medioevo è stato percepito, immaginato, evocato, rivissuto, usato, strumentalizzato e riproposto nel mondo moderno e contemporaneo. Nel 2018, MAMO si terrà per la prima volta fuori della Gran Bretagna. Ospitato dalla John Cabot University e dall’École française de Rome, il primo MAMO continentale si celebrerà nel centro storico di Roma, nei giorni 21-24 (mercoledìsabato) novembre, 2018. La successiva domenica 25 novembre sarà un giorno speciale e facoltativo di visite a siti medievali e medievalisti dentro e intorno a Roma. The Middle Ages in the Modern World est un colloque biennal portant sur les manières dont le Moyen Âge a été perçu, imaginé, évoqué, revécu, utilisé, instrumentalisé et réinventé dans le monde moderne et contemporain. En 2018, pour la première fois, MAMO se tiendra hors de Grande-Bretagne. Accueilli par la John Cabot University et l’École française de Rome, le premier MAMO continental se déroulera dans le centre historique de Rome, du mercredi 21 au samedi 24 novembre 2018. Le dimanche 25 sera une journée particulière, facultative, consacrée à la visite de sites médiévaux et médiévalistes dans et autour de Rome.
2018
The Middle Ages in the Modern World is a biennial conference about the ways in which the Middle Ages have been received, imagined, invoked, relived, used, abused, and refashioned in the modern and contemporary worlds. Hosted by John Cabot University and the École française de Rome, MAMO 2018 will take place for the first time outside of Great Britain, in the historic center of Rome, on 21-24 November 2018 (Wednesday-Saturday). A special, optional day of medieval and medievalizing site visits in and around Rome will follow on Sunday, November 25th. The Middle Ages in the Modern World è un convegno, finora tenutosi a cadenza biennale, sui modi in cui il medioevo è stato percepito, immaginato, evocato, rivissuto, usato, strumentalizzato e riproposto nel mondo moderno e contemporaneo. Nel 2018, MAMO si terrà per la prima volta fuori della Gran Bretagna. Ospitato dalla John Cabot University e dall’École française de Rome, il primo MAMO continentale si celebrerà nel centro storico di Roma, nei giorni 21-24 (mercoledì-sabato) novembre, 2018. La successiva domenica 25 novembre sarà un giorno speciale e facoltativo di visite a siti medievali e medievalisti dentro e intorno a Roma. The Middle Ages in the Modern World est un colloque biennal portant sur les manières dont le Moyen Âge a été perçu, imaginé, évoqué, revécu, utilisé, instrumentalisé et réinventé dans le monde moderne et contemporain. En 2018, pour la première fois, MAMO se tiendra hors de Grande-Bretagne. Accueilli par la John Cabot University et l’École française de Rome, le premier MAMO continental se déroulera dans le centre historique de Rome, du mercredi 21 au samedi 24 novembre 2018. Le dimanche 25 sera une journée particulière, facultative, consacrée à la visite de sites médiévaux et médiévalistes dans et autour de Rome.
2018
Il 14 maggio 1805 a Parigi veniva rappresentata la tragedia di François-Juste-Marie Raynouard "Les Templiers", la vetta letteraria più alta e commovente toccata – a quasi cinque secoli dalla morte sul rogo di Jacques de Molay – dagli ‘innocentisti’, promotori di una visione nobilmente eroica e sostanzialmente agiografica della ‘passione’ subita dai templari per volere di Filippo il Bello. Dopodiché, il mito dei cavalieri del Tempio ha assunto nuove declinazioni e, nella seconda metà del Novecento, ha trovato accoglienza in quel potente medium della comunicazione di massa che è la televisione. Ben note sono le due serie francesi (1972, 2005) tratte dalla saga "Les rois maudits" di Maurice Druon, ma la primogenitura della narrazione al grande pubblico del processo contro i templari e della maledizione scagliata sul rogo da Jacques de Molay spetta alla serie televisiva "La caméra explore le temps", che per nove stagioni (1957-1966) dagli Studios des Buttes-Chaumont ha contribuito non poco alla costruzione dell’immaginario medievale dei francesi per il tramite di seguitissime docu-fiction ante litteram. Risale infatti al 22 aprile 1961 la messa in onda della puntata "Les templiers", in cui il regista Stellio Lorenzi e i due sceneggiatori-narratori André Castelot e Alain Decaux, assumendo un punto di vista opposto a quello sposato nel 1805 da Raynouard, raccolgono lo stereotipo dei potenti e ricchissimi templari, che, dopo aver tradito l’originaria missione di protettori della Terrasanta, avrebbero costituito uno Stato nello Stato, rappresentando così una minaccia per la monarchia capetingia.
2018
Abstract: Il periodo compreso tra il X e XIII secolo è stato per la Puglia un momen-to di grande splendore economico che ha coinciso con la formazione e successiva crescita di numerosi centri urbani, i quali sino al XIX secolo hanno mantenuto il loro assetto medievale. Nel XX secolo la riscoperta del valore del patrimonio architettonico della regione, la cui trasformazione maggiore era stata effettuata nel corso del XVIII secolo al fine di renderli più consoni alle esigenze di gusto e di funzionalità dell’epoca, portò a quel fenomeno appellato come de-restauro che ha caratterizzato la maggior parte degli edifici in cui veniva riconosciuta un’origine me-dievale. Negli ultimi cento anni il medioevo perduto è stato riportato alla luce, grazie al restauro di gran parte del patrimonio architettonico, partendo dai monumenti di maggiore importanza, quali cattedrali e castelli. Questi edifici presentano una nuova veste, frutto della fusione di elementi originali e di restauro. La storicizzazione degli elementi di restauro fornisce oggi al fruitore un’immagine romanica della «terra di Bari» in cui, in particolare, il cittadino pugliese si riconosce e ritrova la sua identità, ricordando un passato di splendore ormai perduto. Parten-do dal presupposto che la distinguibilità tra elemento medievale au-tentico e completamenti in stile risulta difficile, l’intervento focalizzerà l’attenzione su alcuni edifici della terra di Bari, di fondazione romanica (XI-XII secolo), di minore e maggiore importanza in modo da dimostrare come sia stata trasformata, nonostante il degrado in cui versano tutt’oggi alcuni borghi, gran parte della facies dei centri urbani della «terra di Bari».
Forty-fifth International Congress on Medieval Studies, The Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, USA
2010, Itineraires Litterature Textes Cultures
2019
Since the 1970s, the craft brewing industry has grown in popularity. However, with the introduction of the Internet and the consequent globalization of cultures and economies, craft beer marketing has increasingly evoked the medieval past in order to appeal to our collective sense of a lost community, and even a lost purity. This book discusses the desire for the local, the non-corporate, and the pre-modern in the discourse of craft brewing, which has become a form of ideological resistance to corporate capitalism, forming a strong counter-cultural narrative. However, such discourses also reinforce colonial histories of purity and conquest while effacing indigenous voices, and there are troubling intersections between the desire for a medieval past and the desire to preserve the imaginary ŸwhitenessŒ of that past. Such considerations are particularly relevant now, during a time in which white nationalist groups (many of which turn to a medieval past for inspiration) are increasing in influence and visibility. Moving from beer in the Middle Ages to beer in 2019, this book deploys analysis of literary and historical texts, advertisements, labels, and interviews with craft brewers and writers to argue that craft beer is much more than a delicious drink and a social connector; its marketing, its appeal, and its ubiquitous presence in middle class North America reveals a powerful cultural desire for the past in a world that privileges the present.
Session 509 : The Schematization of Time, 52nd International Congress on Medieval Studies 2017 University of Western Michigan May 11–14, 2017
2013
A faun carrying an umbrella; a hobbit who lives in a hole; a mysterious name – Lyra; an ill-treated schoolboy with a scar and a secret. Children's fantasy may be said in some sense to begin with resonant images – certainly they often do so in the authors' myths of origins. However, they also begin in an author's reading practices, in his or her experiences, in the influences which, acknowledged or not, shape and articulate their own vision and help define what it is and, sometimes more importantly, what it is not. Medieval culture and literature in one way or another has provided inspiration for all of the writers discussed in this chapter, from Anglo-Saxon warrior heroes and valiant last stands to druids and the Celtic Otherworld, from chivalric knights and more or less distressed damsels to manuscripts and scribes and the Bodleian Library itself. It is almost impossible now to think of fantasy literature without simultaneously thinking of J. R. R. Tolkien, and indeed some of the fantasy literature that followed the publication of The Lord of the Rings is derivative of his created world, rather than taking influence from the medieval sources upon which he drew. However, this chapter shows that medievalist fantasy existed both before and after Tolkien, and that the Middle Ages still provide a rich source for the creative imagination. We may divide medievalist fantasy into a couple of types. Firstly, we have fantasies of an imagined past, which divide in turn into those which seek to recreate the historical Middle Ages but add fantastic ingredients such as dragons and spells, and those which recreate the fantasy worlds of medieval authors themselves. Secondly, we may identify fantasies of an imagined present, where medieval characters and the medieval world invade the contemporary environment of the books' original audience, or where medieval culture shapes the creation of an alternative world. One of the fascinating things about many of the authors discussed below, however, is the extent to which they challenge and ignore generic boundaries, to create something new from something old. In Carolyne Larrington with Diane Purkiss, ed., 'Magical Tales: Myths, Legend & Enchantment in Children's Books' (Bodleian Library, 2013)
An analysis of the phenomenon of medievalism, with a focus on the contemporary "fantasy" current.
Holy Landscapes and Sacred Space Sponsor: Hagiography Society Organizer/ Presider: Monica Antoinette Ehrlich, Emory and Henry College Environmental History and Hagiography Ellen F. Arnold, Ohio Wesleyan Univ. Catherine of Siena’s Holy Landscape as Heterotopia Catherine Annette Grisé, McMaster Univ. Women’s Monasteries, Community Identity, and the Creation of Sacred Topographies ca. 500–1050 Jane Tibbetts Schulenburg, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
The Fatimid Caliphate (909-1171) was the only Shi‘i Muslim Caliphate in Islamic history in which a hereditary Ismaili Imam descended from the ahl al-bayt of the Prophet Muhammad ruled as both spiritual and temporal sovereign. Before and during the tenure of the Fatimid rule, an Isma‘ili da‘wa operated throughout both Fatimid and non-Fatimid lands where numerous Isma‘ili da‘is summoned Muslims to recognize the spiritual authority of the Ismaili Imams. This paper examines the spiritual hermeneutics or ta’wil of the hajj as elucidated in the writings of the Fatimid Isma‘ili da‘is Ja‘far b. Mansur al-Yaman, al-Mu’ayyad al-Din fi’l-Din al-Shirazi and Nasir-i Khusraw and argues that the Isma‘ili ta’wil of the hajj invests the Ismaili Imam with a spiritual status superior to the physical Ka‘ba. This hermeneutic also establishes a distinctively Isma‘ili practice of making pilgrimage to the Fatimid Imam-Caliph in Cairo. This argument is demonstrated through three pieces of evidence: firstly, the ta’wil or esoteric interpretation of the hajj presented by various Fatimid da‘is, including al-Naysaburi, al-Mu’ayyad, and Nasir-i Khusraw, situates the Ka‘ba as the exoteric House of God and the physical qiblah while presenting the Fatimid Imam as the esoteric House of God and the spiritual qiblah. Secondly, the Fatimid poets Ibn al-Hani al-Andalusi and al-Mu’ayyad fi’l-Din al-Shirazi explicitly assert the superiority of the Imam to the physical Ka‘bah and highlight the importance of making hajj to the former over the latter. Thirdly, this spiritual hermeneutic is enacted and embodied in the actual pilgrimage in that numerous Isma‘ili da‘is including al-Mu’ayyad and Nasir-i Khusraw made to see the Fatimid Imam-Caliph in Cairo. As an example of an enduring hermeneutic, the practice of undertaking a journey for an audience (mulaqat) with the Ismaili Imam continued to have a paramount status in Isma‘ili Muslim piety long after the Fatimid period and persists in present times.
2011, 46th International Congress on Medieval Studies The Medieval Institute, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI, USA
Scholars of medieval studies are generally aware of the legacy of Bruges, former stronghold of the Dukes of Burgundy, as a beacon of culture and a town notable not merely in Flanders, but also in late medieval Europe. Then, religion and piety were ubiquitous in public and private life, while devotion and beauty stemming from worldly wealth, were all but contradictory values. One such wealthy family, prominent in Bruges, were the Lords of Gruuthuse, having acquired the monopoly to levy taxes on “gruut” (EN: gruit), an old-fashioned herbal mixture used as a flavouring agent for beer in place of hops. Their wealth allowed them to transform the Gruuthuse storage facility into a luxury city palace, still standing as a museum. In 1472, Lodewijk van Gruuthuse (aka Louis de Bruges), earl of Winchester and knight of the Golden Fleece, a devout catholic, treated himself and his family to a private oratory, with a window into the presbytery of the adjoining Church of Our Lady, home to the mausoleum-like tombs of Duke Charles the Bold and his daughter Mary of Burgundy. With a view to the chapel’s mandatory restoration, the Friends of the Bruges City Museums mounted a crowdfunding project in 2016 involving one of the local craft brewers in producing and marketing a Prestige limited edition, gruit-based beer brand, suitably called “Lodewijk van Gruuthuse”, thus – in a contemporary whim of romantic medievalism – temporarily (?) closing the circle since the medieval symbiosis between the Lords of Gruuthuse and craft beer manufacturing.
2017, Medievalism in Anglo-American Science Fiction Literature of the 1950s and 1960s
Royberghs, Thomas. "Medievalism in Anglo-American Science Fiction Literature of the 1950s and 1960s." Brussels: Université Libre de Bruxelles, 2017 (unpublished thesis). This thesis looks for references to medieval times in Anglo–American science fiction literature from the early 1950s until the late 1960s. In doing so, it defines what is understood by respectively science fiction and medievalism. For the 1950s, Foundation trilogy by Isaac Asimov (1942–1951) and The Wizard of Linn by Alfred Elton Van Vogt (1950) will be analyzed. For the 1960s, the focus lies on Frank Herbert’s Dune (1965) and Keith Roberts’s Pavane (1968).
Snapshot of an ongoing crowdsourced bibliography on race and medieval studies, published open-access at postmedieval. More context for this bibliography with link to the Google doc here: http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/2017/06/morevoices-citation-inclusion-and.html with snapshot publication at postmedieval (dated December 2017) https://link.springer.com/article/10.1057/s41280-017-0072-0
Session: Material Processes and Making in Medieval Art and Architecture II, International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Friday 13th May, 3.30 p.m.
Ao serem realizados estudos de filiação estética das formas e motivos contidos em têxteis litúrgicos da Coleção Histórico-Artística da Venerável Ordem Terceira de São Francisco da Penitência da Cidade de São Paulo, fundada em 1644, inicialmente identificados como do período Barroco, nos deparamos com um resultado inusitado. Parte destes, na verdade, eram motivos medievais catalogados em Contributi allo studio dell'arte tessile, escrita por Giorgi Sangiorgi (1886-1960), colecionador italiano, cuja parte de sua coleção está depositada no The Metropolitan Museum of New York. Esta obra, disponibilizada online, faz parte deste contexto de digitalização de acervos bibliográficos e artísticos, disponibilizados em bancos de dados que propicia maior acesso a pesquisadores de diversas disciplinas. Desta forma, pensamos que tanto a História da Arte quanto as Humanidades Digitais são duas áreas do saber que se entrelaçam, fomentando novas interpretações e questionamentos sobre a presença de objetos medievais, o que pode reconfigurar os estudos de modo interdisciplinar. Neste sentido, pudemos identificar a permanência de determinadas formas e motivos ao verificarmos, preenchendo uma lacuna no que tange a descrição iconográfica. Portanto, pensamos em discutir a importância dos estudos medievais, seu imaginário e suas imagens como fontes de estudos iconográficos em um arco temporal ampliado, a partir de nossas constatações iniciais, com base metodológica para o estudo da imagem e seus usos por Bock (1859), Burckhardt (2011), Focillon (1983), E.H. Gombrich (2012a, 2012b) e Panofsky (1990, 1995), em heráldica por William Berry (1828), na história por Huizinga (2010), Le Goff (2013), entre outros teóricos. *** When studies of aesthetic affiliation were carried out on the forms and motifs contained in liturgical textiles of the Historical and Artistic Collection of the Venerable Third Order of St. Francis of Penance of the City of São Paulo, founded in 1644, initially identified from the Baroque period, we came across an unusual result. Some of these, in fact, were medieval motifs catalogued in Contributi allo studio dell'arte tessile, written by Giorgi Sangiorgi (1886-1960), Italian collector, whose partial collection is deposited in The Metropolitan Museum of New York. This work, available online, is part of this context of digitization of bibliographical and artistic collections, available in databases that provide greater access to researchers from different disciplines. Bearing this in mind, we think that both the History of Art and Digital Humanities are two areas of knowledge that are intertwined, fostering new interpretations and questions about the presence of medieval objects, which can reconfigure studies in an interdisciplinary way. In this sense, we were able to identify the permanence of certain forms and motifs, filling a gap concerning the iconographic description. Therefore, we will be discussing the importance of medieval studies, the imagery and images as sources of iconographic studies in an extended temporal arc, starting from our initial findings, with a methodological basis for the study of the image and its uses by Bock (1859), Burckhardt (2011), Focillon (1983), EH Gombrich (2012a, 2012b) and Panofsky (1990, 1995), in heraldry by William Berry (1828), in History by Huizinga (2010), Le Goff (2013), among other theorists.
2020, The Oxford Handbook of Music and Medievalism (Stephen C. Meyer and Kirsten Yri, eds.)
ABSTRACT: Portrayals of noblewomen and the courtly love ideal are familiar themes in medieval songs and romances. This essay challenges the legitimacy of these themes, tracing an archeology of courtly love as a scholarly and cultural construct: a medievalism in and of itself, with origins in the nineteenth century. Using the Arthurian tradition as a case study, the essay explores reinterpretations of medieval portrayals of love in postmedieval cultures from Restoration Britain to the Swinging Sixties. As women increasingly occupied public and private spaces that were once exclusively men’s domain, male musicians in these settings employed the character of Guinevere and the idea of courtly love to address contemporary cultural anxieties about gender.
Since Roberto Longhi (1934-1935, 1950) modern scholarship has got a critical grasp of the original change Bolognese painting and illumination showed as a result of the epochal turn of the new realism by Giotto in the first half of fourteenth century. Art historians have widely studied the direct expressive force of Bolognese Trecento and the role of Byzantinising and northern-european gothic influences. My paper is intended to focus on one among the protagonists of this turning, working in the 1330s-1340s, the anonymous illuminator nicknamed l’Illustratore by Longhi himself, and suggest a new interpretation of his disruption of giottesque balance on the basis of the didactic function as mnemonic images that miniatures performed in the law manuscripts produced for Bologna University, the main European center for this kind of objects. This approach depends on the observations by Frances Yates (1969) and Jean-Philippe Antoine (1988) about the correspondence between the mental images used in religious meditation shaped as active images set in tridimensional places according to the rules of the classical and medieval artificial memory and the great change of Italian religious painting between the thirteenth and the fourteenth centuries. If one considers miniatures in legal manuscripts as a network of images supporting lawyers’ memory, it appears that the lively narrative and expressive energy of l’Illustratore properly answered the need of something striking and unusual mnemonic images should show to be memorable according to the first-century-BC Rhetorica ad Herennium.
Panel sponsored by the International Hagiography Society, for International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, USA, 12-16 May 2016. Co-organised with Dr Barbara E. Zimbalist (English, University of Texas at El Paso). Scholars have often commented on the link between sanctity and celebrity. Both the saint and the celebrity are elevated above the everyday, with identities carefully crafted by cultural producers to respond to the needs and desires of an audience, region, or temporality. Sacralisation/celebrification entails a series of processes which (re)formulate a subject into a product fit for social, political, and economic consumption. Yet sanctity/celebrity is not simply exploitative, but enjoyable and perhaps even empowering. What does it really mean to be a medieval celebrity? How does celebrity intersect with sanctity? What does such a categorization add to the study of hagiography? Can fame resonate on both a social and spiritual level, and how does the medieval idea of fame generate, overlap with, and inform contemporary discourses of fame, celebrity, and sanctity? Relevant topics for this session include: - Saints as commercial products and/or economic agents - The construction of Sanctity and Communal Identity - Audience reaction(s) to a saint and textual reception - Power dynamics between celebrity/saint and star- maker/confessor or hagiographer/cleric/scribe - The social function of celebrity/sanctity - Film theory’s contribution to the study of sanctity more generally
The knight dominated the medieval world and distinguished it from the classical era. However, in the early Middle Ages the knight was little more than a mounted warrior whose strength and prowess in battle could be procured by the wealthiest lord. In fact, it was only in the 11th century that these men started acquiring a specific status and only later did knighthood and chivalry become tied. Today, the knight remains a leading figure and is at the center of many modern adaptations of the medieval period. The present paper will focus on different portrayals of the knight in English- speaking films. What medieval features are kept? To what extent is accuracy important? How do these films contribute to our own modern day view of the knight and the Middle Ages? These are some of the questions this short paper seeks to answer. Keywords Medieval Film; Knights; Medievalism; Adaptations; Middle Ages
2008, Parergon
The Dalmatian towns’ bishops played an important role in both the secular and ecclesiastical life of their cities from the early Middle Ages. They were members of the city councils and assemblies, and diplomatic leaders. The Dalmatian towns went through a chaotic period at the turn of the eleventh and twelfth centuries. After the extinction of the Croatian royal dynasty in 1091, the Hungarian king, Ladislas I, attempted to acquire the Croatian throne. Although Ladislas succeeded to get hold of some parts of Croatia, it was King Coloman who successfully consolidated the Hungarian rule in the region. He was crowned king of Croatia and Dalmatia in 1102, and three years later he took the towns during a military campaign. Coloman’s expedition was a generally non-violent event, because the diplomatic missions of the bishops and archbishops helped to avoid sieges. In this presentation, I will analyze the role of the bishops during Coloman’s takeover. I will discuss how they eased the tension and mediated between the towns and the king and helped setting the Hungarian rule. In the analysis, I will focus on the Hungarian privileges given to the towns, which were the results of the missions, and the rituals that could be connected to the privileges, to show the role played by the bishop in the transition of power, and how the kings of Hungary adapted their policy to the Dalmatian society.
2019, 54th International Congress on Medieval Studies
In recent years, Valencia’s artistic heritage has undergone successive restoration campaigns aimed at recovering painted ceilings. Their panels, located in churches and noble palaces dating from the Middle Ages, show again their vigorous colors. The changes in the structure of the architectures had relegated them to historical enclosure behind modern vaults, as in Assumpció church in Vallibona, La Pobla de Benifassà parish church and the former Palau Joan Valeriola, today the Chirivella Soriano Foundation. The ceilings have now abandoned the space in the margins and claim the context of their artistic idiosyncrasy, along with others historically more famous such as the conserved in Santa Maria church of Llíria, with which they share figurative richness and hybridizations in the artistic language. This paper seeks to survey the imaginary of Valencian ceilings pointing out certain peculiarities in their style and form in order to reveal the process by which their visual culture was gestated and reflect on its impact as an aesthetic experience. What does the use of clearly Islamic motifs, such as Arabic epigraphy, mean in Christian spaces? Likewise, the role played by material culture in the dissemination of iconographic information among Mediterranean cultures will also be revealed, most notably with emphasis on the points of contact between Al-Andalus and the Christian kingdoms, yet without losing sight of the role played by the elites in these transmissions. In this way, factors which may be crucial, in the interpretation of a set of works with a particular decorative density, will be highlighted.
2013
First presented May 12, 2013 at 48th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, MI; updated & expanded version presented August 1, 2015 at Mythcon 46, Mythopoeic Society, Colorado Springs, CO; also presented at ACMRS Annual Conference, Scottsdale, AZ, Feb. 6, 2016. Examining depictions of race & ethnicity in medieval and contemporary Arthurian literature, television and film. Full paper available for free download. (Revised and expanded version (3.5) available for download, too.)
PDF is entire Kalamazoo program. Please contact me if you would like information on what was presented.
journals.hil.unb.ca
2016, Imago temporis: medium Aevum
Contemporary fantasists are often inspired by the texts from and with medieval context. This paper taps into Horace Walpole’s principles revealed in the preface to The Castle of Otranto to show that the works of medieval fantasy and contemporary fantasy subgenres written in 20th and 21st centuries have a lot in common with Walpole’s recipe for creating ‘a new species of romance’. When considered from the present time, the Medieval period can be seen as being halfway between fantasy and reality, in a blurry area where the two overlap, and contemporary fantasists use this trait to build their fictional worlds as effective reverberators of universal themes that remain interesting, appealing and worth repeating.
Scholars of animals in twelfth-century French literature tend to see speaking animals as anthropomorphized allegorical symbols used to portray the problems of human society. Criticism of the figure of the lion in Le Chevalier au Lion (ca. 1177) likewise treats the character of the grateful lion as a symbol, but rarely discusses what this text tells us about the mechanics of human-animal relations. Considering animals in literature as mere symbols obscures some of the richness in Chrétien’s portrayal of this friendly, helpful, and sentient being. This paper re-examines the role of the lion in Yvain, in order to demonstrate how Chrétien depicts human-animal communication. Though he describes the lion as a “beste mue” (mute beast), he nevertheless shows how Yvain manages to communicate with the lion through embodied emotion. I argue, building upon recent work in animal and affect studies, that Chrétien’s depiction of this human-animal relationship reveals how embodied communication and emotional literacy can indeed function as a sort of lingua franca that allows humans to communicate with other animals while also fostering a better sense of community in human society. Indeed, it is only through his partnership with the lion that Yvain manages to attain the character traits he needs to be a better husband, knight, and king, namely humility, compassion, sympathy, empathy, mercy, and selflessness.
2019, The Lamp-Post: A Review of Lewis Studies
The prepublication issue of the Lamp-Post 36.4/37.1. This is a special double issue featuring the essays presented at the first annual Pacific Inklings Festival presented by the Southern California C.S. Lewis Society. Essays by Sorina Higgins, James Prothero, David Bratman, and Michael J. Paulus, Jr.
As the rebuilding of Berlin’s eighteenth-century Stadtschloss nears completion, German History turns its attention to the phenomenon of historicism: to the recreation of histori- cal artefacts and practices (sometimes at astonishing expense). Historicism reached its high point in the nineteenth century, when individuals and communities turned to the medieval period to address some of the challenges of modernization. But the urge to revive extended back into the medieval period itself and continues into the twenty-first century. What motivated and what continues to motivate such recreations? As a theme, historicism provides an opportunity for fruitful dialogue between premodern and modern scholars. It also challenges us as historians to consider the value of revivals, whether produced by Berlin politicians, by Hollywood filmmakers or by medieval re-enactors. What happens—or what should happen—when academic scholarship encounters pub- lic representations of the past? Preservation and recreation aid historical imagination and empathy: at their best, they can result in the creation of monuments such as the Neues Museum in Berlin, a building restored to its nineteenth-century form in a man- ner that leaves the violence of its twentieth-century history visible. Historicism may sometimes, however, stand in the way of meeting contemporary needs or seek to erase the more recent past, as the Palast der Republik did to the original Stadtschloss and as its recreation has done to the GDR building. Beyond these aesthetic and political battles over whether to preserve the diversity of heritage, there are other ways in which histori- cism is subject to contemporary demands. The complexity of the past may be imagined away, as when ‘medieval’ is invoked in the political discourse of today as the antipode of modernity, suggesting that the whole of the premodern period formed a monolithic unity. The editors invited Bettina Bildhauer (St Andrews), Stefan Goebel (Kent), Stefan Laube (HU, Berlin), Sue Marchand (Louisiana State University) and Astrid Swenson (Brunel) to discuss these and other questions.
Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA (44th Mediaeval Congress)
The Middle Ages in the Modern World is a biennial conference about the ways in which the Middle Ages have been received, imagined, invoked, relived, used, abused, and refashioned in the modern and contemporary worlds. Hosted by John Cabot University and the École française de Rome, MAMO 2018 will take place for the first time outside of Great Britain, in the historic center of Rome, on 21-24 November 2018 (Wednesday-Saturday). A special, optional day of medieval and medievalizing site visits in and around Rome will follow on Sunday, November 25th. The Middle Ages in the Modern World è un convegno, finora tenutosi a cadenza biennale, sui modi in cui il medioevo è stato percepito, immaginato, evocato, rivissuto, usato, strumentalizzato e riproposto nel mondo moderno e contemporaneo. Nel 2018, MAMO si terrà per la prima volta fuori della Gran Bretagna. Ospitato dalla John Cabot University e dall’École française de Rome, il primo MAMO continentale si celebrerà nel centro storico di Roma, nei giorni 21-24 (mercoledì-sabato) novembre, 2018. La successiva domenica 25 novembre sarà un giorno speciale e facoltativo di visite a siti medievali e medievalisti dentro e intorno a Roma. The Middle Ages in the Modern World est un colloque biennal portant sur les manières dont le Moyen Âge a été perçu, imaginé, évoqué, revécu, utilisé, instrumentalisé et réinventé dans le monde moderne et contemporain. En 2018, pour la première fois, MAMO se tiendra hors de Grande-Bretagne. Accueilli par la John Cabot University et l’École française de Rome, le premier MAMO continental se déroulera dans le centre historique de Rome, du mercredi 21 au samedi 24 novembre 2018. Le dimanche 25 sera une journée particulière, facultative, consacrée à la visite de sites médiévaux et médiévalistes dans et autour de Rome.