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James Smith deposited Brendan meets Columbus: A more commodious islescape on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
This paper proposes that we can reimagine insular literatures and medieval islescapes as commodious seas of cultural and intellectual loci that span time, culture, and text alike. By moving beyond the rhetoric of insular separation or connectivity, we can see that islands connect even when medieval minds saw separation. The essay focuses on the…[Read more]
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James Smith deposited Medievalisms of Moral Panic: Borrowing the Past to Frame Fear in the Present on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
This essay argues that understanding both the process by which medievalism tropes feature in the formation of moral panics and the manner in which medievalists are drawn into the debate reveals much about the imagination of the medieval in the shaping of the modern, and also some salient points relating to role of scholars in public discourse.
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James Smith deposited I, River?: New materialism, riparian non-human agency and the scale of democratic reform on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
This article is a discussion of the “discourse on the unthinkable” surrounding potential future democratic engagements with rivers as non-human persons or natural objects. In the context of the Asia–Pacific region, this article suggests that the developments in material philosophy entitled “new materialism” are essential tools in the reconcept…[Read more]
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James Smith deposited Philosophia Divitur: The Ecodiagrammatic Patterns of the Pierpont Morgan, M. 982 Leaf on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
This article explores the diagram found on the recto side of Pierpont Morgan, M. 982, a single leaf from a twelfth-century manuscript held by the Morgan Library and Museum in New York, and believed to originate in the scriptorium of Saint Peter’s Abbey in Salzburg, Austria. The diagram represents knowledge as an ‘ecodiagrammatic’ pattern, depic…[Read more]
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Gathering into lively conversation scholars in medieval, early modern and object studies, Inhuman Nature explores the activity of the things, forces, and relations that enable, sustain and operate indifferently to us. Enamored by fictions of environmental sovereignty, we too often imagine “human” to be a solitary category of being. This col…[Read more]
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James Smith deposited “So the satiated man hungers, the drunken thirsts” The Medieval Rhetorical Topos of Spiritual Nutrition on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
This article explores the representation of hunger and thirst as faculties within medieval spiritual allegory that existed at two forms. In their bodily form, hunger and thirst represented a feeling of lack indicating the need for sustenance. In their figurative moralised form these needs came to represent a longing for that which was missing…[Read more]
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James Smith deposited Europe’s confused transmutation: the realignment of moral cartography in Juan de la Cosa’s Mappa Mundi (1500) on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
Following the voyages of Christopher Columbus, John Cabot, Alonso de Ojeda and Amerigo Vespucci in the last decade of the fifteenth century, the New World of the Americas entered the cartographic and moral consciousness of Europe. In the 1500 mappa mundi of Juan de la Cosa, navigator and map-maker, we see Europe as a hybrid moral entity, a…[Read more]
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James Smith deposited Premodern Streams of Thought in Twenty-First-Century Water Management on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
In the context of the global water crisis, we seek an understanding of the histories of water management, their fashioning, and their legacy today. We juxtapose temporally diverse narratives to explore the premodern imaginings that have shaped our inheritance of hydrological thought. Rather than conceptualize their historical influence as a linear…[Read more]
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James Louis Smith changed their profile picture on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
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James Louis Smith's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
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James Smith deposited New Bachelards?: Reveries, Elements and Twenty-First Century Materialisms on Humanities Commons 8 years, 6 months ago
Recent years have seen an infusion of new ideas into material philosophy through the work of the so-called ‘new materialists’. Poignant examples appear within two recent books: the first, Vibrant Matter by Jane Bennett (2010), sets out to “enhance receptivity to the impersonal life that surrounds and infuses us” (2010: 4). The second, Element…[Read more]
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Alyce von Rothkirch deposited The “Caradoc Affair”: An Argument for an Ethics of Place on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
This article develops an ethical reading of the work of Caradoc Evans focusing on My People and
Taffy. My aim is to show that an ethical reading which assumes a microcosmopolitan perspective
can show that the ‘Caradoc Affair’, the outrage with which Evans’s early work was received in
Wales, arose from a misreading of My People. The ‘Cara…[Read more] -
Alyce von Rothkirch's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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Alyce von Rothkirch's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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Alyce von Rothkirch changed their profile picture on Humanities Commons 8 years, 11 months ago
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Veronica Popp's profile was updated on MLA Commons 9 years, 1 month ago
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Veronica Popp's profile was updated on MLA Commons 9 years, 5 months ago
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Veronica Popp's profile was updated on MLA Commons 9 years, 6 months ago
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