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by Megan Arnott
In this paper I propose to look at children’s programs produced in North America in the eighties, nineties, and the turn of the millenium for medievalisms. In my methodology I propose to look just at the ten top-rated North American produced children’s programs for each decade, as well as some perhaps less popular but more obvious examples, and with the help of episode guides, pilots and finales to pinpoint examples, I will evaluate the picture of the Middle Ages propagated in the last three decades. The medievalisms will be divisible into categories that include the medieval-esque setting (where the show is set in a medieval-esque universe), the use of medieval tropes (the use of castles for bad guys as an example of borrowing from the medieval), and the time-travel/fantasy sequence (where a show for one episode embraces a medieval theme, like a Robin Hood or a King Arthur episode). The result I expect to find is an image that is part Tolkien and part Robin Hood, but one that is surprisingly homogenous throughout the three decades in its use of knights, armour, castles and weaponry to represent the Middle Ages. I will then pose and evaluate the open ended question of what the result of that image has been for the public understanding of the Middle Ages in North America.
A look at comic books and strips that depict the middle ages.
Beginning in April 2016 I was lucky enough to be asked to contribute a series of articles on medieval warfare on film to the pages of Medieval Warfare Magazine. This quickly became a regular column in the bimonthly magazine. Being incredibly enthused by this fascinating subject, I consistently soared over the word limit assigned to these pieces (which, due to space constraints could only ever run to two pages) and found I had written articles thousands of words more than was required. Many of these additional words necessarily found their way into the editing bin. Nonetheless, in their original state I consider they have interesting things to say so I have collected them here (up to Issue 7.2 – the first six articles). I have continued to write articles for the series but I have (I think) become better at staying closer to the word limit. These articles were writing for an informed general audience and so do not include references although each article has a further reading segment. In all cases the first step in researching them was to view the film itself. After the first two articles (on Arthur – although here I have returned them to their long, single article version), each would be written, as much as was possible, to conform to the theme of each issue of the magazine. Thus the issue on the Norman conquest of Wales had an article about the Normans and medieval Irish on film, the Vikings article concentrated on Ragnar Lothbrok (since he was the focus of that issue) and the Robin Hood article looked at that hero from the perspective of the First Baron's War. These constraints may give some of the articles an unexpected twist or an incomplete feel in some cases but I certainly intend to return to some of the subjects in more detail. At the same time, other themes such as that on the 1525 peasants revolt meant I could explore an interesting (and often ignored) subject such as peasants on film. I have kept my original titles here even though in some cases they were changed in the final edit of the magazine. These articles, written as they were for a magazine which focuses on military history, have a similar military focus. That is not to say that there is not material which is not related to military history but those aspects, equally fascinating, were not able to be emphasised. Likewise, there are several films which focus on medieval subjects which might not make an appearance simply because they do not focus on warfare. With that said, however, warfare is never far away in the medieval film and I have attempted to be as inclusive as possible. Enjoy.
2014, The Social History of the American Family
2010, Itineraires Litterature Textes Cultures
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)
The study examined the effects of cartoons on the behaviour of children in Sunyani Municipality in the Brong Ahafo region of Ghana. It further determined the cartoons that children watch the most, whether they watch these cartoons under the guidance of parents and the negative and positive effects of cartoons on them. The study population was children aged 6-15 in the municipality, and the simple random sampling technique was employed to sample 400 of these children for interview. Interestingly, it was found among other things that 100 percent of the respondents being the majority said that their parents do not monitor the kind of cartoons they watch. Moreover, it was recommended among other things that animation companies such as Disney, Pixar and DreamWorks should be provided tax exemptions in order to encourage them produce more cartoons that will influence children positively.
Marie-Françoise Alamichel (éd.), The Middle Ages after the Middle Ages in the English-speaking World. Rochester, Boydell & Brewer, 1997, p. 153-166.
In Knights of the Round Table (R. Thorpe, 1953) and Excalibur (J. Boorman, 1981), historical and sociological perspectives about the codes of representation of the Middle Ages show a new mythology in R. Barthes' words, from Hollywood clichés to Heroic Fantasy.
This chapter shows how from the 1960s to the 1980s children’s television made by or acquired for British channels integrated national, European and transatlantic programme forms, personnel and business relationships. American television’s production methods, personnel, and attitudes to the audience have been both adopted and resisted in British television culture. In Gerry Anderson’s science fiction series, US television was a model for British production practices, and programmes worked on a new sense of transnational community in futuristic settings. These strategies led to relatively successful attempts to sell British programming to US broadcasters in the 1960s. The boundaries between Britishness and Americanness shifted in dynamic ways, in relation to production, representation and reception. Imported US children’s programmes in Britain have often been criticized on the grounds of quality, but Anderson’s series were praised for their ability to reconfigure conventional action-adventure programme formats associated with the USA and sell those narrative forms back across the Atlantic. In another example discussed here, children’s programmes from continental Europe were comparatively cheap to acquire, professionally produced, and re-voicing in English enabled them to be assimilated into British television schedules. The strength of the US domestic television industry has been the foundation of its success in exporting children’s television as well as programmes for adult audiences, but the tendency to conflate American cultural exports with changes in popular culture in other nations is misleading. British and other European producers of children’s television, and their programmes, played a considerable part in the processes of modernization and transnationalization that can also been seen in other cultural sectors such as the arts, fashion or architecture.
2015, Obesity reviews : an official journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity
Reducing the extent and persuasive power of marketing unhealthy foods to children worldwide are important obesity prevention goals. Research is limited to understand how brand mascots and cartoon media characters influence children's diet. We conducted a systematic review of five electronic databases (2000-2014) to identify experimental studies that measured how food companies' mascots and entertainment companies' media characters influence up to 12 diet-related cognitive, behavioural and health outcomes for children under 12 years. Eleven studies met the inclusion criteria. Studies used 21 unique popular media characters, but no brand mascots. Results suggest that cartoon media character branding can positively increase children's fruit or vegetable intake compared with no character branding. However, familiar media character branding is a more powerful influence on children's food preferences, choices and intake, especially for energy-dense and nutrient-poor fo...
2019, Clotho
The motif of ancient beliefs about the afterlife and their present-day understanding appears increasingly in contemporary works directed to young audiences. The combination of mythology and history from ancient sources and popular culture works is fundamental for reception studies. The paper presents three cases of transformation of characters connected with ancient beliefs about the afterlife as protagonists in works directed to the youth: Hades as a villain from Disney’s works, especially Hercules; Persephone and Hades’s love story in three webcomics: Underworld Love Story and Hades & Persephone Shorts by Gau Meo and Hades’ Holiday by Elvishness; and the way Cleopatra VII Philopator’s image in Scooby-Doo! in Where’s My Mummy? differs from the usual representations of the queen.
2017, Práticas da Historia, n. 5 (2017), pp. 43-73
This article aims to analyse several ideas of the Middle Ages that inspired HBO’s TV show Game of Thrones (HBO 2011-), based on George R. R. Martin’s ongoing series of novels A Song of Ice and Fire (1996-). The phenomenon will be read through the concept of “medievalism”, i.e. «the representation, the reception and the post-medieval use of the Middle Ages» (di Carpegna Falconieri 2011). After a short introduction concerning the Middle Ages and cinema, I will analyse the new way in which Martin represents and perceives medieval times. This different approach places in the medieval era the disillusionment and the alleged absence of values typical of postmodern times, often hidden behind the notion of historical “realism”. The result is a rejection of the neo-medieval romantic idealization of the Middle Ages that characterized most twentieth-century productions.
2019
These texts reflect some very interesting approaches, in order to observe the fantastic genre and its subgenres from different perspectives. Therefore, we invite readers to discover in these cultural studies a content in which the nuances between fantasy, science–fiction and horror can be appreciated. However, we also invite the readers to cross that frontiers to discover another field. A stranger field.
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
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».
This paper provides a comparative study of children’s television programmes broadcast in Hungary and Turkey. We recorded and analysed Saturday morning TV programmes, with a special emphasis on various factors that may affect children’s socialisation (behavioural patterns, attitudes, conflicts, tolerance etc. seen in programmes). We compared those TV programmes with cultural similarities and differences. We make suggestions about how such television programmes might or hinder developing social skills. Children spend many hours watching television. Advertisements suggest desirable patterns of behaviour for them, and introduce them to the consumer society.
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.