Description

Book Synopsis

Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in the Late Medieval and Early Modern World brings together eight essays that examine medieval and early modern violence and warfare in France, the Hispanic World, and the Dutch Republic through the lens of trauma studies and memory studies. By focusing on warfare, these essays by historians, literary specialists, and historians of visual culture demonstrate how individuals and groups living with the “ungraspable” outcomes of wartime violence grappled with processing and remembering (both culturally and politically) the trauma of war.



Trade Review

Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in the late Medieval and Early Modern World showcases the richness of the archive in premodern Continental and Colonial Europe for contemporary reflection about the forms, strategies, and effects of cultural memory in the wake of traumatic events. Its expertly researched and well-written essays span a range of representational genres and linguistic traditions, offering stimulating close readings that never lose sight of the larger questions that lend the volume both its coherence and its import.

-- Andrea Frisch, University of Maryland

This collection includes an impressive range of studies on the connections between military violence, emotions, memory, and trauma from the Hundred Years’ War to the Thirty Years’ War. The comparative way in which it is arranged allows for fruitful understandings within and between the regions of France, the Hispanic World, and the Dutch Republic, while also providing a wealth of interdisciplinary analysis of their respective literature, visual culture, and history. The greatest strength of this volume is its challenge to the old myth that late medieval and early modern Europe was so violent that warfare had become banal. Instead, they restore the human story to the history of warfare in this period, and they allow us to see how it continued to shape and reshape human communities well off the battlefield. This is a good introduction for those new to the field, while providing a tremendous amount of insight to more advanced scholars. As such, it is an important and significant contribution to current scholarship on late medieval and early modern society.

-- Kate McGrath, Central Connecticut State University

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Acknowledgments

Introduction, Alexandra Onuf and Nicholas Ealy

Section One: France

Chapter One: Memorializing the Battle of Crécy: Colins de Beaumont’s “On the Crécy Dead” as a Textual Monument for Processing Trauma, Kimberly Lifton

Chapter Two: “Je hé guerre, point ne la doit prisier”: Emotions, War, and Trauma in the Poetry of Charles of Orléans, Charles-Louis Morand-Métivier

Chapter Three: Bringing up the Dead: The Grotesque in Literature after the French Wars of Religion, Kathleen Long

Section Two: The Hispanic World

Chapter Four: Desire, Trauma, and Warfare in Fernando de Rojas’s Celestina, Nicholas Ealy

Chapter Five: Violence in the Making: Remembering the Viceroy’s Assassination during the Catalan Revolt of 1640, Ivan Gracia-Arnau

Chapter Six: Trauma and Postmemory in Martín Cortés’s Uprising, Covadonga Lamar Prieto

Section Three: The Dutch Republic

Chapter Seven: Hendrick Goltzius’s Lucretia and the Eighty Years’ War, Rachel Wise

Chapter Eight: Landscape and the Memory of Place in Claes Jansz. Visscher’s Prints of Brabant, Alexandra Onuf

Index

About the Contributors

Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in

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    A Hardback by Alexandra Onuf, Nicholas Ealy, Nicholas Ealy

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      View other formats and editions of Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in by Alexandra Onuf

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 03/10/2022
      ISBN13: 9781666914566, 978-1666914566
      ISBN10: 1666914568

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in the Late Medieval and Early Modern World brings together eight essays that examine medieval and early modern violence and warfare in France, the Hispanic World, and the Dutch Republic through the lens of trauma studies and memory studies. By focusing on warfare, these essays by historians, literary specialists, and historians of visual culture demonstrate how individuals and groups living with the “ungraspable” outcomes of wartime violence grappled with processing and remembering (both culturally and politically) the trauma of war.



      Trade Review

      Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in the late Medieval and Early Modern World showcases the richness of the archive in premodern Continental and Colonial Europe for contemporary reflection about the forms, strategies, and effects of cultural memory in the wake of traumatic events. Its expertly researched and well-written essays span a range of representational genres and linguistic traditions, offering stimulating close readings that never lose sight of the larger questions that lend the volume both its coherence and its import.

      -- Andrea Frisch, University of Maryland

      This collection includes an impressive range of studies on the connections between military violence, emotions, memory, and trauma from the Hundred Years’ War to the Thirty Years’ War. The comparative way in which it is arranged allows for fruitful understandings within and between the regions of France, the Hispanic World, and the Dutch Republic, while also providing a wealth of interdisciplinary analysis of their respective literature, visual culture, and history. The greatest strength of this volume is its challenge to the old myth that late medieval and early modern Europe was so violent that warfare had become banal. Instead, they restore the human story to the history of warfare in this period, and they allow us to see how it continued to shape and reshape human communities well off the battlefield. This is a good introduction for those new to the field, while providing a tremendous amount of insight to more advanced scholars. As such, it is an important and significant contribution to current scholarship on late medieval and early modern society.

      -- Kate McGrath, Central Connecticut State University

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures

      Acknowledgments

      Introduction, Alexandra Onuf and Nicholas Ealy

      Section One: France

      Chapter One: Memorializing the Battle of Crécy: Colins de Beaumont’s “On the Crécy Dead” as a Textual Monument for Processing Trauma, Kimberly Lifton

      Chapter Two: “Je hé guerre, point ne la doit prisier”: Emotions, War, and Trauma in the Poetry of Charles of Orléans, Charles-Louis Morand-Métivier

      Chapter Three: Bringing up the Dead: The Grotesque in Literature after the French Wars of Religion, Kathleen Long

      Section Two: The Hispanic World

      Chapter Four: Desire, Trauma, and Warfare in Fernando de Rojas’s Celestina, Nicholas Ealy

      Chapter Five: Violence in the Making: Remembering the Viceroy’s Assassination during the Catalan Revolt of 1640, Ivan Gracia-Arnau

      Chapter Six: Trauma and Postmemory in Martín Cortés’s Uprising, Covadonga Lamar Prieto

      Section Three: The Dutch Republic

      Chapter Seven: Hendrick Goltzius’s Lucretia and the Eighty Years’ War, Rachel Wise

      Chapter Eight: Landscape and the Memory of Place in Claes Jansz. Visscher’s Prints of Brabant, Alexandra Onuf

      Index

      About the Contributors

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