Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This study examines medieval and early modern English instances and representations of dismemberment in terms of their varying symbolic meanings and their related categories of identity-formation. It examines contexts within which making meaning and marking humanness through bodily fragmentation are realized, including gender categories, human versus animal nature, and questions of religious and ethnic identity and social status. The study spans the period between the late eleventh and the late seventeenth century and encompasses a considerable generic range, including hagiography, chronicles and other histories, polemics and sermons, travel narratives, medical and...
This dissertation examines representations of male physicality and its relation to violent subjectiv...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...
This thesis examines the concept of “speaking bodies” in the early modern European world, primarily ...
The medieval and early modern English imaginary encompasses a broad range of negative and positive d...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
This thesis examines the use and function of the human body as a surface that is inscribed with a n...
Extant in seven 14th- and 15th-century Middle English manuscripts, the apocryphal Life of Adam and E...
This dissertation explores moments in poetry of the English Renaissance where figurative language it...
My dissertation examines the embodied nature of identity circulations in three late fourteenth-centu...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
In this dissertation I examine how skin, both human and non-human, was defined and represented on st...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
This dissertation examines the representation of ascetic renunciation in early modern drama, focusin...
The PhD thesis underlying this monograph discusses how bodies in medieval literature partake and per...
The thesis explores the role of violence and wounding in English satire before the Refonnation. From...
This dissertation examines representations of male physicality and its relation to violent subjectiv...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...
This thesis examines the concept of “speaking bodies” in the early modern European world, primarily ...
The medieval and early modern English imaginary encompasses a broad range of negative and positive d...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
This thesis examines the use and function of the human body as a surface that is inscribed with a n...
Extant in seven 14th- and 15th-century Middle English manuscripts, the apocryphal Life of Adam and E...
This dissertation explores moments in poetry of the English Renaissance where figurative language it...
My dissertation examines the embodied nature of identity circulations in three late fourteenth-centu...
This dissertation, “The Wound that Makes Whole: Bleeding and Intersubjectivity in Middle English Rom...
In this dissertation I examine how skin, both human and non-human, was defined and represented on st...
Reformation theology induced a profound thanatological crisis in the semiotics of the human being an...
This dissertation examines the representation of ascetic renunciation in early modern drama, focusin...
The PhD thesis underlying this monograph discusses how bodies in medieval literature partake and per...
The thesis explores the role of violence and wounding in English satire before the Refonnation. From...
This dissertation examines representations of male physicality and its relation to violent subjectiv...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...
This thesis examines the concept of “speaking bodies” in the early modern European world, primarily ...