Description
Book SynopsisEssays on the post-modern reception and interpretation of the Middle Ages, To attract followers many professional politicians, as well as other political actors, ground their biases in (supposedly) medieval beliefs, align themselves with medieval heroes, or condemn their enemies as medieval barbarians. The essays in the first part of this volume directly examine some of the many forms such medievalism can take, including the invocation of "blood libels" in American politics; Vladimir Putin's self-comparisons to "Saint Equal-of-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir"; alt-right references to medieval Christian battles with Moslems; nativist Brexit allusions to the Middle Ages; and, in the 2019 film The Kid Who Would be King, director Joe Cornish's call for Arthurian leadership through Brexit. These essays thus inform, even as they are tested by, the subsequent papers, which touch on politics in the course of discussing the director Guy Ritchie's erasure of Wales in the 2017 film King Arthur: Legend of the Sword; medievalist alt-right attempts to turn one disenfranchised group against another; Jean-Paul Laurens's 1880 condemnation of Napoleon III via a portrait of Honorius; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's extraordinarily wide range of medievalisms; the archaeology of Julian of Norwich's anchorite cell; the influence of Julian on pity in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter book series; the origins of introductory maps for medievalist narratives; self-reflexive medievalism in a television episode of Doctor Who; and sonic medievalism in fantasy video games.
Trade ReviewPolitics and Medievalism offers a great deal of thoughtful discussion, not all of which readers may agree with, but one of the purposes of such a volume is to encourage further discussion of issues that have proven fairly combative in other venues. -- Parergon
Table of ContentsPreface - Karl Fugelso I: Essays on Politics and Medievalism (Studies) Historical Malapropism and the Medieval Blood Libel in American Politics - Esther Cuenca Putin's Medieval Weapons in the War against Ukraine - Sean Griffin The Battle of Tours and the US Southern Border - Daniel Wollenberg Medievalism, Brexit, and the Myth of Nations - Andrew B.R. Elliott An Arthur for the Brexit Era: Joe Cornish's The Kid Who Would be King - Christopher Jensen II: Other Responses to Medievalism Angle-ing for Arthur: Erasing the Welsh in Guy Ritchie's King Arthur: Legend of the Sword - Mary Behrman Chasing Freyja: Rape, Immigration, and the Medieval in Alt-Right Discourse - Ali Frauman "Things painted on the coarse canvas": Political Polemic in Jean-Paul Laurens's Portrait of the Child Emperor Honorius - Laura E. Cochrane Longfellow and Old English - Jane Toswell Archaeology and Medievalism at Julian of Norwich's Anchorite Cell - Victoria Yuskaitis A Revelation of Love: Christianity, Julian of Norwich, and Medieval Pity in the Harry Potter Series - Laura Varnam In the Beginning Was the Word: How Medieval Text Became Fantasy Maps - Anna Fore Waymack and John Wyatt Greenlee Objectivity, Impossibility, and Laughter in Doctor Who's "Robot of Sherwood" - Usha Vishnuvajjala Sonic Medievalism, World Building, and Cultural Identity in Fantasy Video Games - James Cook