Western European society in the middle ages is generally perceived as lying, in its modes of thought and action, far remote from those acts of mass ethnic destruction which have been a recurrent element in world history since the early twentieth century. Yet medieval Europeans too were capable of envisaging the violent obliteration of peoples. Indeed, the view that such acts had occurred in times past and were liable to occur again was deeply embedded in medieval thought and assumption. For some commentators, the destruction of certain peoples was inseparable from the making of others, an essential motor of historical change, underpinned by biblical narratives of divine election and condemnation. Such notions constituted a matrix within whi...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...
The Consumption of Unclean Foods and Cannibalism for Survival in the West in the Early Middle Ages. ...
The Kindly Ones (2006), a French novel written by the American author Jonathan Littell, explores the...
For some, genocide is Europe’s peculiar gift to the world. Others insist that, far from being atavis...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website. "This book deals with the rise and fall o...
Giorgio Agamben is accused of political passivity, but this article argues that he sees the potentia...
Drawing on a wide variety of published and unpublished sources, this article reconstructs a crucial ...
Cannibalism is one of our darkest secrets and taboos. It is the ultimate measure of the resilience o...
Abstract: How persistent are cultural traits? This paper uses data on anti-Semitism in Germany and f...
It is hard to dispute that the religious movement (or process of religious change) known as the Euro...
Recently, a ‘call to arms’ has been issued to historians, emphasising the contribution their discipl...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
The period in European history frequently dubbed the long twelfth century saw increased social perse...
Writing towards the close of the thirteenth century, the German polemicist Alexander von Roes return...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...
The Consumption of Unclean Foods and Cannibalism for Survival in the West in the Early Middle Ages. ...
The Kindly Ones (2006), a French novel written by the American author Jonathan Littell, explores the...
For some, genocide is Europe’s peculiar gift to the world. Others insist that, far from being atavis...
Early agriculture in north-west Europe was highly diverse. Sometimes it spread rapidly, at other tim...
The following text is taken from the publisher's website. "This book deals with the rise and fall o...
Giorgio Agamben is accused of political passivity, but this article argues that he sees the potentia...
Drawing on a wide variety of published and unpublished sources, this article reconstructs a crucial ...
Cannibalism is one of our darkest secrets and taboos. It is the ultimate measure of the resilience o...
Abstract: How persistent are cultural traits? This paper uses data on anti-Semitism in Germany and f...
It is hard to dispute that the religious movement (or process of religious change) known as the Euro...
Recently, a ‘call to arms’ has been issued to historians, emphasising the contribution their discipl...
This volume forms a powerful antidote to the view that human life is determined by apparently impers...
The period in European history frequently dubbed the long twelfth century saw increased social perse...
Writing towards the close of the thirteenth century, the German polemicist Alexander von Roes return...
From the beginning of the seventeenth century, Englishmen professed as Benedictine monks in mainland...
The Consumption of Unclean Foods and Cannibalism for Survival in the West in the Early Middle Ages. ...
The Kindly Ones (2006), a French novel written by the American author Jonathan Littell, explores the...