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Cover image for Rethinking the New Medievalism
Title:
Rethinking the New Medievalism
Publication Information:
Baltimore, Maryland : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014
Physical Description:
vi, 280 pages ; 23 cm.
ISBN:
9781421412405

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30000010336292 PN671 R48 2014 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Twenty years after Stephen Nichols transformed the study of medieval literature, leaders in the field pay tribute to his work and expand on it.

In the early 1990s, Stephen Nichols introduced the term "new medievalism" to describe an alternative to the traditional philological approach to the study of the romantic texts in the medieval period. While the old approach focused on formal aspects of language, this new approach was historicist and moved beyond a narrow focus on language to examine the broader social and cultural contexts in which literary works were composed and disseminated. Within the field, this transformation of medieval studies was as important as the genetic revolution to the study of biology and has had an enormous influence on the study of medieval literature. Rethinking the New Medievalism offers both a historical account of the movement and its achievements while indicating--in Nichols's innovative spirit--still newer directions for medieval studies.

The essays deal with questions of authorship, theology, and material philology and are written by members of a wide philological and critical circle that Nichols nourished for forty years. Daniel Heller-Roazen's essay, for example, demonstrates the conjunction of the old philology and the new. In a close examination of the history of the words used for maritime raiders from Ancient Greece to the present (pirate, plunderer, bandit), Roazen draws a fine line between lawlessness and lawfulness, between judicial action and war, between war and public policy. Other contributors include Jack Abecassis, Marina Brownlee, Jacqueline Cerquiglini-Toulet, Andreas Kablitz, and Ursula Peters.


Author Notes

R. Howard Bloch is chair of the Department of French and Romance Philology at Columbia University. He is author of several books, including Medievalism and the Modernist Temper , cowritten with Stephen Nichols, and published by Johns Hopkins. Alison Calhoun is a new faculty fellow and visiting assistant professor of French at Indiana University. Jacqueline Cerquiglini-Toulet is a professor of French literature at the Sorbonne. Joachim Küpper is a professor of philology at Freie Universität Berlin. Jeanette Patterson is a new faculty fellow of French and Italian at Princeton University.


Reviews 1

Choice Review

This collection serves as a follow-up, extension, and reassessment of two previous works: the 1990 special issue of Speculum titled "The New Philology," edited by Stephen Nichols, and The New Medievalism, a collection Nichols coedited with Marina Brownlee and Kevin Brownlee (1991). The present volume in many ways celebrates and continues Nichols's ideas and influence in the past 25 years, but it does much more than that. As Bloch (French and Romance philology, Columbia Univ.) puts it in his introduction, the essays "contain many elements belonging to the New Philology-an attention to the material conditions of the medieval work, especially to the givens of manuscripts and manuscript culture, a questioning of authorship and authority, an interrogation of the integrity of medieval texts, recognition of the relation between the verbal and the visual." This is the thread that runs through and connects essays on subjects as varied as Augustinian thought in Rabelais and the dialectic of the medieval course. Nichols's discussion of the challenges and opportunities for new philology in the digital age will be required reading in graduate seminars on digital humanities. --Douglas W. Hayes, Lakehead University


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