This thesis explores the geographic complexity of English identity in the High Middle Ages by examining texts that reflect moments and spaces of cultural contact. While interaction with a cultural Other is often thought to reinforce national identity, I challenge this notion, positing instead that, in the texts analysed here, cultural meetings prompt the formation or consolidation of regional identities. These identities are often simultaneously local and cross-cultural, inclusive but based in community ties and a shared sense of place. Each of the four chapters examines a different kind of regional identity and its relation to Englishness through romances and historiographical texts in Anglo-Latin, Anglo-Norman, and Middle English. Discuss...
This thesis concerns narratives about Anglo-Scandinavian contact and literary traditions of Scandina...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This dissertation examines the function of textual communities in England from the early Middle Ages...
This thesis explores the geographic complexity of English identity in the High Middle Ages by examin...
The period after the Norman Conquest saw a dramatic reassessment of what it meant to be English, owi...
This dissertation seeks to understand the multifaceted nature of the ways in which Welsh identity wa...
This dissertation explores the relationship between the emergence of English romance and rhetoric of...
From Borders to Topographies examines representations of the cultural, social, and economic exchange...
In the century following the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, literary texts operated as a battle...
For some time, scholars who study English identity formation in the literature produced between the ...
This thesis aims to take a bottom-up approach to questions of Anglo-Saxon identity. Whereas recent s...
The Edwardian conquest of Wales in 1282–3 was culturally justified, in part, through the employment ...
This dissertation considers the relationship between images of Italy and the construction of nationa...
This dissertation explores romance as both a historical genre and a framework for the negotiation of...
This thesis explores the afterlife and literary presence of the Anglo-Saxons in three literary works...
This thesis concerns narratives about Anglo-Scandinavian contact and literary traditions of Scandina...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This dissertation examines the function of textual communities in England from the early Middle Ages...
This thesis explores the geographic complexity of English identity in the High Middle Ages by examin...
The period after the Norman Conquest saw a dramatic reassessment of what it meant to be English, owi...
This dissertation seeks to understand the multifaceted nature of the ways in which Welsh identity wa...
This dissertation explores the relationship between the emergence of English romance and rhetoric of...
From Borders to Topographies examines representations of the cultural, social, and economic exchange...
In the century following the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, literary texts operated as a battle...
For some time, scholars who study English identity formation in the literature produced between the ...
This thesis aims to take a bottom-up approach to questions of Anglo-Saxon identity. Whereas recent s...
The Edwardian conquest of Wales in 1282–3 was culturally justified, in part, through the employment ...
This dissertation considers the relationship between images of Italy and the construction of nationa...
This dissertation explores romance as both a historical genre and a framework for the negotiation of...
This thesis explores the afterlife and literary presence of the Anglo-Saxons in three literary works...
This thesis concerns narratives about Anglo-Scandinavian contact and literary traditions of Scandina...
This research investigates the development of early medieval identities in the South West, and how v...
This dissertation examines the function of textual communities in England from the early Middle Ages...