This book is a study of cultural memory both in and of the British Middle Ages. Working with materials drawn from across the medieval period, alongside modern translations, reworkings and appropriations, it examines how images of the past have been created, adapted and shared.
The book interrogates how cultural memory both formed and was formed by social identities. It explores the ways in which ideas about the past intersected with ideas about the present and future. At the same time, it looks at how the presence of the Middle Ages has been felt, understood and perpetuated in modernity, and the cultural possibilities and transformations this has generated. The Middle Ages encountered here is a complex assemblage: a period of history, a cultural category, a way of being and doing, but also of forgetting. Above all, it is a site of cultural potential, a means of imagining both the future and the past.
'Visions and ruins' will be of interest to students and teachers in the fields of medieval and medievalism studies, memory studies, historiography and monument studies.
Author(s): Joshua Davies
Series: Manchester Medieval Literature and Culture, 19
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Year: 2018
Language: English
Pages: 234
City: Manchester
List of figures vi
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction 1
1. Ruins and wonders: The poetics of cultural memory in and of early medieval England 18
2. Queen Eleanor and her crosses: Trauma and memory, medieval and modern 65
3. Medievalist double consciousness and the production of difference: Medieval bards, cultural memory and nationalist fantasy 115
4. The language of gesture: Untimely bodies and contemporary performance 160
Afterword: Migrations 199
Select bibliography 209
Index 220