This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during the English Reformation, and the possibility of pilgrimage in the context of dramatic urban change and loss of place memory. Arguing that iconoclasm is not an end-point, we see that the life of the image is not extinguished on the pyre, but is set into motion by conflict surrounding its significance, efficacy, and survival. Indeed, it is not simply the act of iconoclasm that animates the statue; rather, such agonistic animation is an ongoing process which involves both those who reject and those who are devoted to the image. My argument is that the potency of contemporary images of Our Lady of Ipswich relies on an active cultivation of dissonan...
This article explores the multiple and competing afterlives of the Jacobean martyr, Thomas Maxfield,...
The relationship between religious or spiritual artworks and the locality where such objects are mad...
This article argues that Margery Kempe is presented as an exemplary parishioner and a supporter of h...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article examines medieval liturgical artifacts that survived the English Reformation by being c...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
AbstractThis journal article is derived from my doctoral thesis undertaken at UEA Norwich, which pro...
Once one of the most popular Catholic pilgrimage sites in England, The Shrine of Our Lady of Walsing...
The growth in Catholic pilgrimage in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century is widely ackno...
This thesis examines the intersections of the concept of pilgrimage and the visual imagination in Br...
This thesis examines the intersections of the concept of pilgrimage and the visual imagination in Br...
The sacred sites of Glastonbury in Somerset, England have long been places of pilgrimage, connected ...
This article explores uncertain histories of three fourteenth-century Shrine Madonna statues. It foc...
This article explores the multiple and competing afterlives of the Jacobean martyr, Thomas Maxfield,...
The relationship between religious or spiritual artworks and the locality where such objects are mad...
This article argues that Margery Kempe is presented as an exemplary parishioner and a supporter of h...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during th...
This article examines medieval liturgical artifacts that survived the English Reformation by being c...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
AbstractThis journal article is derived from my doctoral thesis undertaken at UEA Norwich, which pro...
Once one of the most popular Catholic pilgrimage sites in England, The Shrine of Our Lady of Walsing...
The growth in Catholic pilgrimage in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century is widely ackno...
This thesis examines the intersections of the concept of pilgrimage and the visual imagination in Br...
This thesis examines the intersections of the concept of pilgrimage and the visual imagination in Br...
The sacred sites of Glastonbury in Somerset, England have long been places of pilgrimage, connected ...
This article explores uncertain histories of three fourteenth-century Shrine Madonna statues. It foc...
This article explores the multiple and competing afterlives of the Jacobean martyr, Thomas Maxfield,...
The relationship between religious or spiritual artworks and the locality where such objects are mad...
This article argues that Margery Kempe is presented as an exemplary parishioner and a supporter of h...