World Medievalism: The Middle Ages in Modern Textual Culture explores the ways in which a range of modern textual cultures have continued to engage creatively with the medieval past in order to come to terms with the global present. Building its argument through four case studies―from the Middle East, France, Southeast Asia, and Indigenous Australia―it shows that to understand medievalism as a cultural idiom with global reach, we need to develop a more nuanced grasp of the different ways 'the Middle Ages' have come to signify beyond Europe as well as within a Europe that has been transformed by multiculturalism and the global economy. The book's case studies are explored within a conceptual framework in which medievalism itself is formulated as 'world-disclosing' a transhistorical encounter that enables the modern subject to apprehend the past 'world' opened up in medieval and medievalist texts and objects. The book analyses the cultural and material conditions under which its texts are produced, disseminated, and received, and examines literature alongside films, television programs, newspapers and journals, political tracts, as well as such material and artefactual texts as photographs, paintings, statues, buildings, rock art, and fossils. While the case studies feature distinctive localised forms of medievalism, taken together they reveal how imperial and global legacies have ensured that the medieval period continues to be perceived as a commonly held past that can be retrieved, reclaimed, or revived in response to the accelerated changes and uncertainties of global modernity.
Author(s): Louise D'Arcens
Series: Oxford Textual Perspectives
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 224
City: Oxford
Cover
World Medievalism: The Middle Ages in Modern Textual Culture
Copyright
Series Editor's Preface
Dedication
Preface and Acknowledgements
Contents
List of Figures
Introduction: Medievalism and the Missing Globe
The global Middle Ages
Globalism and medievalism
Globe and world
World Medievalism: the arrangementof this book
1: Medievalism Disoriented: The French Novel and Neo-reactionary Politics
Nation and ‘globophobia’
Populism and the loss of ‘deep France’
Jérôme Ferrari’s Sermon on the Fall of Rome:colonial trauma
Michel Houellebecq’s Submission: melancholic medievalism
Mathias Enard’s Compass: medievalism and dis-orientalism
2: Medievalism Re-oriented: Tariq Ali’s Islam Quintet and the ‘Arab’ Historical Novel
The Islam Quintet as diasporic fiction
Predecessors: pan-Arabism and the historical novel
Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree
The Book of Saladin
A Sultan in Palermo
3: The Name of the Hobbit: Halflings, Hominins, and Deep Time
The Flores Hobbit and the story of world humanity
Medievalizing the prehistoric
Medievalism and containment of the deep global past
4: Ten Canoes and 1066: Aboriginal Time and the Limits of Medievalism
The medieval and the coeval
World and Country
Ten Canoes
Ten Canoes and Arnhem Land’s ‘medieval’ time
Ten Canoes and Australian colonial medievalism
Medievalism, temporality, and dreamtime
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX