This dissertation explores the way medieval English devotional writers utilized the hermeneutics of contemporary biblical exegesis, in order to frame their depictions of an erotic and embodied encounter with the divine. The way they manipulate the construction of literal to allegorical realities enables—rather than constrains—the relationship of flesh to spirit, so that the desiring body does not disappear into discourse, but rather, language operates in service of the flesh, articulating a profoundly incarnational devotion, not divested of the body that produced it. My first chapter explores these themes in Aelred of Rievaulx's (died 1167 CE) De institutione inclusarum and De Iesu puero duodennni, where I examine the way Aelred constructs ...
The goal of this project is to suggest a historically informed hermeneutical program for reading cer...
This dissertation explores the different ways medieval authors conceived of anchoritism and solitary...
Andrew Galloway (Chair), Thomas D. Hill, Judith A. Peraino, Masha RaskolnikovThis dissertation explo...
This dissertation explores the way medieval English devotional writers utilized the hermeneutics of ...
Poetry, Desire, and Devotional Performance from Shakespeare to Milton, 1609-1667 documents and analy...
The twelfth and thirteenth centuries, like the nineteenth in Foucault\u27s famous formulation, witne...
This dissertation, “Rhetorics of Pain and Desire: The Writings of the Middle English Mystics,†se...
This dissertation examines the complex interrelations between incarnation theology and notions of t...
Christianity, as a religion centered on the Incarnation of a spiritual being, is always necessarily ...
This dissertation examines the representation of suffering in medieval affective devotional texts. ...
The five texts contained in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 114 (c. 1420-50) are seminal to under...
My dissertation uncovers the ways that medieval literature both shares a physiological vocabulary wi...
The five texts contained in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 114 (c. 1420-50) are seminal to under...
This senior honors thesis focuses on the medieval exegetical treatment of the Song of Songs and the ...
The mutual influences of the medieval discourse of courtly love and the literary visions of divine l...
The goal of this project is to suggest a historically informed hermeneutical program for reading cer...
This dissertation explores the different ways medieval authors conceived of anchoritism and solitary...
Andrew Galloway (Chair), Thomas D. Hill, Judith A. Peraino, Masha RaskolnikovThis dissertation explo...
This dissertation explores the way medieval English devotional writers utilized the hermeneutics of ...
Poetry, Desire, and Devotional Performance from Shakespeare to Milton, 1609-1667 documents and analy...
The twelfth and thirteenth centuries, like the nineteenth in Foucault\u27s famous formulation, witne...
This dissertation, “Rhetorics of Pain and Desire: The Writings of the Middle English Mystics,†se...
This dissertation examines the complex interrelations between incarnation theology and notions of t...
Christianity, as a religion centered on the Incarnation of a spiritual being, is always necessarily ...
This dissertation examines the representation of suffering in medieval affective devotional texts. ...
The five texts contained in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 114 (c. 1420-50) are seminal to under...
My dissertation uncovers the ways that medieval literature both shares a physiological vocabulary wi...
The five texts contained in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Douce 114 (c. 1420-50) are seminal to under...
This senior honors thesis focuses on the medieval exegetical treatment of the Song of Songs and the ...
The mutual influences of the medieval discourse of courtly love and the literary visions of divine l...
The goal of this project is to suggest a historically informed hermeneutical program for reading cer...
This dissertation explores the different ways medieval authors conceived of anchoritism and solitary...
Andrew Galloway (Chair), Thomas D. Hill, Judith A. Peraino, Masha RaskolnikovThis dissertation explo...