-
Sonia Silva deposited Art and Fetish in the Anthropolgy Museum in the group
Postcolonial Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 8 months agoSónia Silva is an Associate Professor of anthropology at Skidmore College. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork in Zambia, as well as museum work in Europe and the USA, Silva’s research deals with materiality, material religion, the notion of the fetish, ritual and religion, divination, witchcraft, violence, and museums. Silva is the author of Alon…[Read more]
-
James Smith deposited Disturbing the Ant-Hill: Misanthropy and Cosmic Indifference in Clark Ashton Smith’s Medieval Averoigne in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 9 months agoClark Ashton Smith—unlike the more famous H.P. Lovecraft—engaged with the medieval as a setting for his fiction. Lovecraft admired classical Roman civilization and the eighteenth century, but had little time for medieval themes. As Brantley Bryant has related, Lovecraft wrote contemptuously that the Middle Ages was a period that “snivel[ed] along…[Read more]
-
Marie-Thérèse Labossière Thomas deposited A Haitian Tale of Diasporas and Revolutions in the group
Postcolonial Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 9 months agoA family tale inspired the author to explore seemingly minor, but related details of the Saint-Domingue, French, and American Revolutions, including the population movements to and from the United States. “A Haitian Tale of Diasporas and Revolutions” is a documented historical and personal narrative through cultures and continents, as…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited “The Much-Maligned Panegyric: Toward a Political Poetics of Premodern Literary Form,” Comparative Literature Studies 52(2): 254-288. in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 9 months agoThis article examines the panegyric across the literary traditions of West, South, and East Asia, concentrating on Arabo-Persian qaṣīda, the Sanskrit praśasti, and the Chinese fu. In radically different albeit analogous ways, each genre elaborated a political aesthetics of literary form. The West, South, and East Asian genres each cultivated a met…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited “Ijtihād against Madhhab: Legal Hybridity and the Meanings of Modernity in Early Modern Daghestan,” Comparative Studies in Society and History (2015) in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoThis article explores the interface of multiple legal systems in early modern Daghestan. By comparing colonial engagements with legal plurality with indigenous genres of Daghestani legal discourse, I aim to shed light on the plurality of legal systems that preceded as well as informed legal discourse under colonialism. The Daghestani turn to…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited “Telling the Story of Literature from Inside Out: The Methods and Tools of Non-European Poetics,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 38(1): 170-180. in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoThis discussion of Innovations and Turning Points: Toward a History of Kāvya Literature (2014), a magisterial contribution to South Asian literature edited by Yigal Bronner, David Shulman, and Gary Tubb, situates this work within broader trends within the discipline of comparative literature and cross-cultural poetics. I consider how this volume…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited Persian Autobiography Syllabus in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoThis course covers autobiographical writings in Persian from premodern times to contemporary Iran. It reflects the emergence of autobiographical writing in the first days of Islam and an evolving sense of self, identity, and cultural cohesion, and then records transitions within the political/economic power structures in the geographical region.…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited “Memorializing Akhundzadeh: Contradictory Cosmopolitanism and Post-Soviet Narcissism in Old Tbilisi” (Interventions International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, 2018) in the group
Postcolonial Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoWhile the cosmopolitan turn in political and literary theory encourages us to move beyond national frameworks, the Caucasus remains mired in ethno-national categories from the Soviet past. This essay examines how these categories are being mobilized in the service of a nominally cosmopolitan agenda in the contemporary memorialization of the writer…[Read more]
-
Rebecca Ruth Gould deposited Theorising Violence: Colonial Encounters and Anticolonial Reactions (MA level) in the group
Postcolonial Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoHow does colonial violence generate anticolonial resistance? Is violence ever justified, whether as an end or as a means? What aesthetic strategies do writers deploy to legitimate the exercise of violence? What is the relationship between militant insurgency and literary form? Posing these and other questions, this course offers an introduction to…[Read more]
-
Marco Heiles deposited Die Handschrift MS Broxbourne 84.3 der Bodleian Library in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 10 months agoMarco HEILES, Die Handschrift MS Broxbourne 84.3 der Bodleian Library, Manuskript, Oxford 2010.
Manuscript description of Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Broxbourne 84.3, German manuscript, 15th century (a. 1469).
-
Sérgio Dias Branco deposited “Sembène, Ousmane (1923-2007)” in the group
Postcolonial Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoEntry on Senagelese filmmaker and writer Ousmane Sembène.
-
Evina Steinova deposited A Fragment of a Ninth-Century Liturgical Book in the Holdings of Utrecht University Library in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThe subject of this paper is a fragment of a liturgical book that is a part of the manuscript fragment collection in the holdings of the Utrecht University Library Special Collections. The fragment was brought to light in the 1960s, after it was rebound into a manuscript belonging to the St. Paul’s Abbey, Utrecht, where it was inserted during t…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Jews and Christ Interchanged: Discursive Strategies in the Passio Iudeorum Pragensium in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months ago‘Passio Iudeorum Pragensium’, a late fourteenth–century pogrom narrative from Bohemia, provides many unique insights into the medieval tradition of pogrom narratives. It is preserved in the form of a number of related but distinct textual units that allow us to examine the discursive nature of texts such as these. This discursiveness is illus…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Jews and Christ Interchanged: Discursive Strategies in the Passio Iudeorum Pragensium in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months ago‘Passio Iudeorum Pragensium’, a late fourteenth–century pogrom narrative from Bohemia, provides many unique insights into the medieval tradition of pogrom narratives. It is preserved in the form of a number of related but distinct textual units that allow us to examine the discursive nature of texts such as these. This discursiveness is illus…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Passio Iudeorum Pragensium: Tatsachen und Fiktionen über das Pogrom im Jahr 1389 in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoIn reconstructing the events leading to the Prague Easter massacre of 1389, perhaps the deadliest anti-Jewish pogrom in the Bohemian lands prior to WWII, modern historian relied for the most part on literary sources. Yet, these sources composed in Latin, Czech, German and Hebrew pose many problems. Not only are there few historians who can…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Passio Iudeorum Pragensium: Tatsachen und Fiktionen über das Pogrom im Jahr 1389 in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoIn reconstructing the events leading to the Prague Easter massacre of 1389, perhaps the deadliest anti-Jewish pogrom in the Bohemian lands prior to WWII, modern historian relied for the most part on literary sources. Yet, these sources composed in Latin, Czech, German and Hebrew pose many problems. Not only are there few historians who can…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 6298: a new witness of the biblical commentaries from the Canterbury School in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoManuscript Munich, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 6298 contains an as yet unexamined fragment of the second batch of the gospel glosses (EvII) from the biblical commentaries of the Canterbury School inserted as an addition in 3r of the manuscript. In this article, I describe this fragment, and I attempt to contextualize its insertion into the…[Read more]
-
Evina Steinova deposited Fragments of a twelfth-century breviary in the holdings of University library in Utrecht (Utrecht, University Library, Fragm. 4.5-7) in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThis document provides the description and transcript of a set of liturgical fragments from the holdings of University Library in Utrecht. The fragments belong to a twelfth-century breviary, probably from St. Paul’s Abbey in Utrecht.
-
Evina Steinova deposited Fragments of a twelfth-century breviary in the holdings of University library in Utrecht (Utrecht, University Library, Fragm. 4.5-7) in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThis document provides the description and transcript of a set of liturgical fragments from the holdings of University Library in Utrecht. The fragments belong to a twelfth-century breviary, probably from St. Paul’s Abbey in Utrecht.
-
Rutger Kramer deposited …ut normam salutiferam cunctis ostenderet : représentations de l’autorité impériale dans la Vita Benedicti Anianensis et la Vita Adalhardi in the group
Medieval Studies on Humanities Commons 7 years, 12 months agoThe reign of Louis the Pious was marked by a series of ecclesiastical and monastic reforms, directed by the Imperial Court. Given that the initiative for these reforms came from the court and not necessarily from the very communities involved, the debate about them also touched upon the question of who would have the right to intervene in monastic…[Read more]
- Load More