View All Book Series

BOOK SERIES


Studies in Medieval History and Culture


About the Series

For information about contributing to the series please contact Michael Greenwood ([email protected])

 

91 Series Titles

Per Page
Sort

Display
The Contested Theological Authority of Thomas Aquinas The Controversies Between Hervaeus Natalis and Durandus of St. Pourcain, 1307-1323

The Contested Theological Authority of Thomas Aquinas: The Controversies Between Hervaeus Natalis and Durandus of St. Pourcain, 1307-1323

1st Edition

By Elizabeth Lowe
January 30, 2014

This book explains how the authority Thomas Aquinas's theological teachings grew out of the doctrinal controversies surrounding it within the Dominican Order. The adoption and eventual promotion of the teachings of Aquinas by the Order of Preachers ran counter to every other current running through...

Bodies of Pain Suffering in the Works of Hartmann von Aue

Bodies of Pain: Suffering in the Works of Hartmann von Aue

1st Edition

By Scott E. Pincikowski
January 14, 2014

This study provides a much needed re-evaluation of the role of pain and suffering in Hartmann von Aue. By critically and carefully combining traditional philology with modern theoretical analysis, drawing on theorists such as Mary Douglas, Michele Foucault, Norbert Elias and Elaine Scarry, the ...

Aspects of Love in John Gower's Confessio Amantis

Aspects of Love in John Gower's Confessio Amantis

1st Edition

By Ellen S. Bakalian
December 11, 2013

Throughout the tales in the Confessio Amantis, John Gower proposes that reciprocal love is the remedy to what ails man and society. This book explores how Gower uses the aspects of love in the Confessio-the notions of kinde, or passionate love, and reason in the sphere of love; honeste love in the ...

Worlds Made Flesh Chronicle Histories and Medieval Manuscript Culture

Worlds Made Flesh: Chronicle Histories and Medieval Manuscript Culture

1st Edition

By Lauryn Mayer
December 11, 2013

This book focuses on the use of the past in two senses. First, it looks at the way in which medieval texts from the eighth to the fifteenth centuries discussed the past: how they presented history, what kinds of historical narratives they employed, and what anxieties gathered around the practice of...

Feminine Figurae Representations of Gender in Religious Texts by Medieval German Women Writers, 1100-1475

Feminine Figurae: Representations of Gender in Religious Texts by Medieval German Women Writers, 1100-1475

1st Edition

By Rebecca L.R. Garber
August 21, 2013

This work offers an examination of religious texts written by twelve women over three centuries in two languages and three genres, showing the variety and complexity of gendered images available to medieval women. Moving beyond the categories of virgin, wife and widow, these religious texts created...

Saracens and the Making of English Identity The Auchinleck Manuscript

Saracens and the Making of English Identity: The Auchinleck Manuscript

1st Edition

By Siobhain Bly Calkin
June 16, 2009

This book explores the ways in which discourses of religious, racial, and national identity blur and engage each other in the medieval West. Specifically, the book studies depictions of Muslims in England during the 1330s and argues that these depictions, although historically inaccurate, served to...

She, this in Blak Vision, Truth, and Will in Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Ciseyde

She, this in Blak: Vision, Truth, and Will in Geoffrey Chaucer's Troilus and Ciseyde

1st Edition

By Thomas Hill
May 25, 2008

"She, This in Blak" takes a fresh look at Chaucer's great Trojan romance, Troilus and Criseyde, in light of recent scholarship on late scholastic discourses on representation and causality as they pertain to human perception and judgment. This study also contributes to a growing literature on the ...

Illuminating the Border of French and Flemish Manuscripts, 1270–1310

Illuminating the Border of French and Flemish Manuscripts, 1270–1310

1st Edition

By Lisa Moore Hunt
June 04, 2010

This study first examines the marginal repertoire in two well-known manuscripts, the Psalter of Guy de Dampierre and an Arthurian Romance, within their material and codicological contexts. This repertoire then provides a template for an extended study of the marginal motifs that appear in eighteen ...

Through the Daemon's Gate Kepler's Somnium, Medieval Dream Narratives, and the Polysemy of Allegorical Motifs

Through the Daemon's Gate: Kepler's Somnium, Medieval Dream Narratives, and the Polysemy of Allegorical Motifs

1st Edition

By Dean Swinford
October 28, 2010

This book tells the story of the early modern astronomer Johannes Kepler’s Somnium, which has been regarded by science historians and literary critics alike as the first true example of science fiction. Kepler began writing his complex and heavily-footnoted tale of a fictional Icelandic astronomer ...

Maps and Monsters in Medieval England

Maps and Monsters in Medieval England

1st Edition

By Asa Simon Mittman
April 30, 2008

This study centers on issues of marginality and monstrosity in medieval England. In the middle ages, geography was viewed as divinely ordered, so Britain's location at the periphery of the inhabitable world caused anxiety among its inhabitants. Far from the world's holy center, the geographic ...

Literary Hybrids Indeterminacy in Medieval & Modern French Narrative

Literary Hybrids: Indeterminacy in Medieval & Modern French Narrative

1st Edition

By Erika E. Hess
September 03, 2013

Much like the fantastic marginalia of medieval illuminated manuscripts, medieval and modern hybrid characters-including werewolves, serpent women, and wild men-function as a frame, critiquing the discourses that run through their texts. In Literary Hybrids, Erika Hess provides a close reading of ...

Race and Ethnicity in Anglo-Saxon Literature

Race and Ethnicity in Anglo-Saxon Literature

1st Edition

By Stephen Harris
September 03, 2013

What makes English literature English ? This question inspires Stephen Harris's wide-ranging study of Old English literature. From Bede in the eighth century to Geoffrey of Monmouth in the twelfth, Harris explores the intersections of race and literature before the rise of imagined communities. ...

73-84 of 91
AJAX loader