-
Nicola Griffith replied to the topic Welcome! in the discussion
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoMary, I’m delighted you liked Hild! Yes, I’m working on the sequel, working title Menewood. It’s a bit delayed because I took an unexpected detour to get a PhD š And then I wrote a (non-7th C) novella. But, yep, sequel in the works, and one more after that.
Also, I love the stuff you’ve been uploading here…
-
Mary Dockray-Miller replied to the topic Welcome! in the discussion
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoHi Nicola and Colin — just wanted to say that I loved Hild and eagerly await the sequel. (Am I right that there will be a sequel?) All of my work focuses on women’s connections with literary production in pre-1100 England, so I’m a huge Hild fan.
Cheers, Mary -
Nicola Griffith replied to the topic Welcome! in the discussion
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoColin, I missed this. Apologies! My expertise is creative writing rather than early medieval history (I have a PhD from Anglia Ruskin University). But my most recent novel is Hild, set in 7th-C Britain. It won some awards and is taught in several universities (with both a Literature and Early Medieval focus). I’m still researching the…[Read more]
-
James Harland deposited Rethinking Ethnicity and “Otherness” in Early Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoThis article considers a recent critical problematisation of the discussion of āŗOthernessā¹ in Merovingian archaeology (Halsall 2017), and extends this problematisation to the early mortuary archae- ology of post-Roman/early Anglo-Saxon England. The article first examines the literary goals of Gildasā De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, and espec…[Read more]
-
James Harland deposited Rethinking Ethnicity and “Otherness” in Early Anglo-Saxon England in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoThis article considers a recent critical problematisation of the discussion of āŗOthernessā¹ in Merovingian archaeology (Halsall 2017), and extends this problematisation to the early mortuary archae- ology of post-Roman/early Anglo-Saxon England. The article first examines the literary goals of Gildasā De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae, and espec…[Read more]
-
Hugo Lundhaug deposited Hugo Lundhaug and Lance Jenott, The Monastic Origins of the Nag Hammadi Codices (STAC 97; Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2015) – Table of Contents in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 7 months agoHugo Lundhaug and Lance Jenott offer a sustained argument for the monastic provenance of the Nag Hammadi Codices. They examine the arguments for and against a monastic Sitz im Leben and defend the view that the Codices were produced and read by Christian monks, most likely Pachomians, in the fourth- and fifth-century monasteries of Upper Egypt.…[Read more]
-
Meredith Warren deposited A Robe Like Lightning: Clothing Changes and Identification in Joseph and Aseneth in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoJoseph and Aseneth is a pseudepigraphic hellenistic romance novel that elaborates on the biblical character of Joseph and his wife aseneth. an expansion of genesis 41: 45, the text describes how aseneth is transformed into a radiant bride t for Joseph, and is thereby associated with his god.1 previous studies may have overstepped the limits of…[Read more]
-
Meredith Warren deposited Teaching with Technology: Using Digital Humanities to Engage Student Learning in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoIn this article, I address the challenge of fostering better student engagement with ancient material, and discuss my experience with designing a course around creative use of technology. In my recent course, āThe Ancient Christian Church: 54ā604 CE,ā I employed several tactics to encourage student engagement with ancient and modern sources, which…[Read more]
-
Meredith Warren deposited āMy heart poured forth understandingā in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThis paper argues that 4 Ezra 14 represents the climax of the sensory revelations experienced by Ezra, and as such, that this is the episode which finally facilitates Ezraās understanding of divine wisdom. In each of episodes one through six Ezra is incapable of making sense of what has been revealed to him, even though Ezraās sensory rev…[Read more]
-
Fiona Mitchell started the topic Welcome! in the discussion
Monsters and Monstrosity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoHi everyone,
It’s looking a bit bare around here, but hopefully we can do something about that!
I wanted to start this group so that there was anotherĀ place that people working on monstrosity in different disciplines could talk to one another.
So, if you have seen/organised a relevant event, have read somethingĀ interesting on the topic, have p…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The eadgiþ Erasure: A Gloss on the Old English Andreas in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoA half-erased woman’s name is partially legible at the bottom of folio 41 verso of the Anglo-Saxon manuscript we now call the Vercelli Book. Edith – eadgiþ – provides mystery as highly unusual marginalia, an individual name added to and then erased from the manuscript. I argue here that the erased name eadgiþ is direct reference to St. Edith o…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Beowulf’s Tears of Fatherhood in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThe figure of Hrothgar, aging king of the Danes, forces an analysis of the relationships among age, maleness, and masculinity in Beowulf. Masculine characters, while enacting the poem’s complex reciprocities and social transactions in the hall and on the battlefield, accrue status and power through assertions of control and dominance, through…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Feminized Cross of the Dream of the Rood in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThe performances of Christ in the text of The Dream of the Rood construct a masculinity for Christ that is majestic, martial, and specifically heterosexual and that relies on a fragile opposition with a femininity defined as dominated Other in the figure of the Cross. His particularly constructed masculinity, explored rather than merely assumed or…[Read more]
-
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Masculine Queen of Beowulf in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoTraditional equation of women with the feminine and men with the masculine is disrupted when Beowulf is read within the rubric of gender performance as determined by Judith Butler in Gender Trouble and Bodies that Matter. Performativity enables a new way of interpreting the characters of Beowulf; specifically, in the world of the poem masculinity…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited The Maternal Performance of the Virgin Mary in the Old English Advent in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoThroughout the Christian era, literary and artistic representations of the Virgin Mary have been manipulated by a variety of ideologies, religious or political, to define the appropriate positioning and agency of the feminine in a culture. The culture of Anglo-Saxon England, like most others, almost always presented Mary in positive terms,…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Female Community in the Old English Judith in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoLike most female characters in Old English poetry, Judith from the Old English poem of the same name has been subject to much scrutiny in recent years. She has been read as a figure of Mother Church, or as a Germanic warrior, or as a warning against rape. Yet Judith’s relationship with her maid, the focus of my analysis of Judith, has been elided;…[Read more]
-
Mary Dockray-Miller deposited Old English Literature and Feminist Theory: A State of the Field in the group
Early Medieval on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months agoFeminist and gender scholars working in Anglo-Saxon studies in the past ten years have been asking new and important questions of a variety of Old English and Anglo-Latin texts. Most crucially, this interdisciplinary new work redefines the historiographical paradigms of Anglo-Saxon cultural production and reception so that women must now be…[Read more]
-
Fiona Mitchell created the group
Monsters and Monstrosity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 8 months ago -
Sean Burrus deposited Remembering the Righteous: Sarcophagus Sculpture and Jewish Patrons in the Roman World (Full Text) in the group
Late Antiquity on Humanities Commons 8 years, 9 months agoA Ph.D. dissertation considering nearly 200 sarcophagi from the late ancient necropoleis of Jewish communities at Beth She’arim and Rome. This corpus captures a wide range of the possibilities open to Jewish patrons as they went about acquiring or commissioning a sarcophagus and sculptural program. The variety reflects not only the different…[Read more]
- Load More