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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Degrees of Culpability: Suicide Verdicts, Mercy, and the Jury in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoSunday, January 23, 1390 was a day that Ralph Peioun of Wotton (Lincs.) and his wife most likely never forgot. On this day, their one-year-old son, Richard, presumably curious and headstrong like most young toddlers his age, made an unfortunate choice of playthings when he picked up a pair of shears and wounded himself in the throat, a fatal…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Local Concerns: Suicide and Jury Behavior in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoWhen confronted with cases of self-killing, medieval jurors had to contend with a vast array of often conflicting concerns, from religious and folkloric condemnations of the act of suicide, to fears for the welfare of the family of the dead, and to coping with royal confiscations of a felon’s goods. All of these factors had a profound impact on t…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Runaway Wives: Husband Desertion in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoScholars of the medieval family would generally agree that the lot of the medieval wife was not an easy one. Medieval husbands held the upper hand in the power relationship, both legally and socially. Although Lawrence Stone’s view of niarried life in the Middle Ages as “brutal and often hostile, with little communication, [and] much wife-beating”…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Cultures of Suicide? Regionalism and Suicide Verdicts in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThe use of the term “community” in historical studies continues to present problems for many medievalists. Myriad studies have emphasized the inadequacy of the term when describing medieval society. Microstudies of manors and villages, especially in the English context, by historians Barbara A. Hanawalt, J. Ambrose Raftis, and Sherri Olson (am…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “A Case of Indifference? Child Murder in Later Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoArt historian Barbara Kellum’s 1973 article on child murder in medieval England paints a picture of a world replete with ruthless and murderous single mothers who escaped the legal consequences of their actions due to an indifferent court system that chose to turn a blind eye to the deaths of young children. Despite the overstated tone of her w…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Representing the Middle Ages: The Insanity Defense in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThe history of homicidal insanity in the courts of law of medieval England.
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “Medicine on Trial: Regulating the Health Professions in Later Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoGiven the hurdles one faced in trying to stay healthy in later medieval England, it should come as no surprise that the medieval English placed a premium on competent medicine. As Carole Rawcliffe has argued, “medieval life was beset by constant threats to health arising from poor diet (at both ends of the social spectrum), low levels of h…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited Sacred People, Sacred Spaces: Evidence of Parish Respect and Contempt for the pre-Reformation Clergy.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoConflicts between parish clergy and parishioners in late medieval England have been described as acts of both anticlericalism and proclericalism (that is, an attempt to compel clergy into living up to the parishioners’ increasingly high expectations of them). This paper hopes to expand our knowledge of parish conflict by turning to an o…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited “More than Mothers: Juries of Matrons and Pleas of the Belly in Medieval England.” in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoWith regard to English common law, medieval women were able to participate in the curial process in only a limited way. This is not true of women as defendants: women could be sued for almost any civil or criminal plaint, but their privileges as plaintiffs were broadly curtailed by marital status and cultural expectation. The legal fiction of…[Read more]
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Sara Margaret Butler deposited ABORTION MEDIEVAL STYLE? ASSAULTS ON PREGNANT WOMEN IN LATER MEDIEVAL ENGLAND in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoIn the year 1304, Matilda Bonamy of Guernsey, a young woman from one of the Anglo-Norman island’smost established and affluent families, found herself in a predicament familiar to many of today’s youth. A liaison with Jordan Clouet, also from a family of long provenance in Guernsey if not as comfortable, had left her pregnant. To Matilda the sol…[Read more]
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Matthew K. Gold deposited Knowledge Infrastructures Syllabus in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoInfrastructure is all around us, rarely remarked upon. Indeed, the latent state of
infrastructure is part of what marks it as such; as Susan Leigh Starr has noted,
infrastructure studies involves the examination of “boring things.”This class will explore the emerging nexus of critical infrastructure studies and
critical university stu…[Read more] -
Matthew K. Gold deposited Introduction to Digital Humanities Syllabus in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoIn this introduction to the digital humanities (DH), we will approach the field via a Caribbean Studies lens, exploring how an understanding of the digital based in the growing area of digital Caribbean studies might shape the larger field of DH.
The course aims to provide a landscape view of DH, paying attention to how its various approaches…[Read more]
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Stephen Hewer deposited Review: Seán Duffy (ed.) Medieval Dublin XVI: Proceedings of Clontarf 1014–2014: National Conference Marking the Millennium of the Battle of Clontarf in the group
Late Medieval History on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoReview of Medieval Dublin XVI: Proceedings of Clontarf 1014-2014
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Stephen Hewer deposited Review: Seán Duffy (ed.) Medieval Dublin XVI: Proceedings of Clontarf 1014–2014: National Conference Marking the Millennium of the Battle of Clontarf in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoReview of Medieval Dublin XVI: Proceedings of Clontarf 1014-2014
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Laura Horak deposited Transgender Media Portal Usability Test Report 2020 in the group
Global DH on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThis report is intended as a guide to facilitate the development of the Transgender Media Portal (transgendermediaportal.org). The Transgender Media Portal aims to make audiovisual work by trans, Two Spirit, nonbinary, intersex, and gender-nonconforming people more available to artists, activists, festival programmers, researchers, instructors,…[Read more]
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Laura Horak deposited Transgender Media Portal Usability Test Report 2020 in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThis report is intended as a guide to facilitate the development of the Transgender Media Portal (transgendermediaportal.org). The Transgender Media Portal aims to make audiovisual work by trans, Two Spirit, nonbinary, intersex, and gender-nonconforming people more available to artists, activists, festival programmers, researchers, instructors,…[Read more]
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Birk Weiberg deposited Modeling Performing Arts: On the Representations of Agency in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThe documentation of performing arts by means of databases is a challenging task for several reasons. Primarily, this has to do with the absence of a central, sizeable object that can be described and quantified. Any information collected in a database for performing arts thus seems to be of second order, paraphrasing what cannot be reproduced.…[Read more]
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Juan Antonio Fernandez Rivero deposited El álbum de Adra in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoThe discovery of a photo album of the nineteenth century, the Andalusian village of Adra, Albuñol, Berja, Dalias and Almeria itself, causes a thorough investigation into its origin and its authors link with the history of these towns.
Spanish abstract: El descubrimiento de un álbum con fotografías del siglo XIX, de las localidades almeríenses de…[Read more] -
Juan Antonio Fernandez Rivero deposited La España romántica en versión estereoscópica in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoAfter the discoveries and experiences of Charles Wheatstone and David Brewster, the stereoscopic photography turns into a great industry from the second half of the decade of 1850. The photography in general and the stereoscopic especially had great influence in the iconographic world of his time and therefore also in the image or graphic…[Read more]
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Juan Antonio Fernandez Rivero deposited Laurent y Málaga in the group
Digital Humanists on Humanities Commons 5 years, 7 months agoJean Laurent, of French origin, opened a photography studio in Madrid in the mid-1850s. During the following decades, between 1860 and 1880, he consolidated the most important photographic company in the Spain of the nineteenth century, in the style of the great European photographic houses. His work encompassed a large collection of sights and…[Read more]
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