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Medieval Mobilities Gendered Bodies, Spaces, and Movements

Title
Medieval Mobilities [electronic resource] : Gendered Bodies, Spaces, and Movements / edited by Basil Arnould Price, Jane Elizabeth Bonsall, Meagan Khoury.
ISBN
9783031126475
Edition
1st ed. 2023.
Publication
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023.
Physical Description
1 online resource (XIII, 256 p.) 6 illus.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
This collection explores the intersection of gender and mobility across the Global Middle Ages. Medieval Mobilities questions how medieval people, texts, images, and ideas move across physiological, geographical, literary, and spiritual boundaries. In what ways do these movements afford new configurations of gender, sexuality, and being? Enacting a dialogue between medieval studies, feminist thought, and queer theory, Medieval Mobilities proposes that attending to the undulations of premodern gender and sexuality may help destabilize unstated assumptions about ways of being and loving in the Middle Ages. This volume also brings together emergent and established scholars to challenge an increasingly static academy and instead envision a scholarly practice focused on intergenerational, international, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Drawing upon wide range of primary sources and theoretical frameworks, the resultant essays unsettle the imagined fixity of gender and propose alternative conceptualizations of embodiment, identity, and difference in the medieval world. Basil Arnould Price is Wolfson Scholar at the University of York, UK. His research focuses on later medieval Iceland and in particular, the queer politics of fourteenth- and fifteenth-century Old Norse-Icelandic sagas. He has previously published articles on colony, race, and queerness in Old Norse-Icelandic and Old English literature. Jane Bonsall is Teaching Fellow at the University of Birmingham, UK. Her research focuses on gender in late medieval English romance, with a focus on intertextuality and popular reception theories. Her recent publications concern gendered materiality, consent and coercion, and the role of the supernatural in Middle English romance. Meagan Khoury is a Ph.D. candidate at Stanford University, USA, in Art History with a minor in Feminism, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. Her dissertation centers questions of women's communal living and cultural production in early modern Italy.
Variant and related titles
Springer ENIN.
Other formats
Printed edition:
Printed edition:
Printed edition:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 22, 2023
Series
The New Middle Ages,
The New Middle Ages,
Contents
Introduction
Part I Bodies
Introducing Bodies
Where Do We Go from Here: Transitivity and Journey Narratives in Eleanor Rykener
Reorienting Disorientation: Hildegard von Bingen's Depiction of the Female Body as Erotic, Fertile, and Holy
Seeing Mobility in Static Images: Tools for Non-Binary Identification in Late Medieval Sources
Part II Spaces
Troubling Spaces: Taking up Space and Being Taken by Generative Scholarship
"Here I Am, In This Far-Off Land Where We Are Now": Encountering and Observing Rūs Women in Ibn Faḍlān's Risala
Disorienting Masculinity: Movement, Emotion and Chivalric Identity in Partonope of Blois
Part III Transcendence
Troubling Mobilities: Transcendence
Inspiring Anchoritic Mobility: Orientation, Transgression and Agency in the Katherine Group's Seinte Margarete
Trans Animacies and Premodern Alchemies
Greenland as a Horizon: Approaching Queer Utopianism in Flóamanna Saga
Afterword; Afterwards.
Citation

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