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The "lessons of history" cannot be reduced to some specious argument that knowledge of the past provides a privileged insight into the present. Nevertheless these essays show that a deep understanding of the otherness of the medieval past and of the myriad possibilities of belief, thought, and behavior of this distant and yet creative period, can help us to understand both how the medieval past has shaped our present as well as how this same past offers models for thinking and acting differently. One need not agree with all of the authors represented in this volume either in their reading of the Middle Ages or in their recommendations for the present in order to applaud them for being what everyone should be: a thoughtful, engaged and critical participant in the great adventure of life. These learned and committed essays challenge the notion that the deep past is somehow irrelevant to the present and compel contemporary society to recognize that the human condition is essentially historical and that dialogue with the past is a necessity to build a different and better future. Patrick J. Geary Distinguished Professor of History UCLA

"Recommended. All levels/libraries." - CHOICE, K. F. Drew, Rice University, USA

"…Why the Middle Ages…show[s] how even the distant medieval past can be made relevant to the present through a sensitive integration of modern concerns with considered historical analysis. It offers a provocative starting point for those medieval historians who wish to engage in self-reflection or who are considering begging an ethical turn of their own." –Yvonne Seale, Hortulus Journal



Table of Contents

Introduction. 1. Crime and Punishment: Penalizing Without Prisons Celia Chazelle 2. Social Deviancy: a Medieval Approach Guy Geltner 3. End of Life: Listening to the Monks of Cluny Fred Paxton 4. Marriage: Medieval Couples and the Uses of Tradition Ruth Mazo Karras 5. Women: The Da Vinci Code and the Fabrication of Tradition Felice Lifshitz 6. Homosexuality: Augustine and the Christian Closet Mathew Kuefler 7. Sexual Scandal and the Clergy: a Medieval Blueprint for Disaster Dyan Elliott 8. Labor: Insights from a Medieval Monastery Martha Newman 9. Disability?: Perspectives on Bodily Difference from the Middle East Kristina Richardson 10. Race: What the Bookstore Hid Maghan Keita 11. Refugees: Views from Thirteenth-Century France Megan Cassidy-Welch 12. Torture and Truth: Torquemada’s Ghost Amy Remensnyder 13. Class Justice: Why we need a Wat Tyler Day Peter Linebaugh 14. Leadership: Why we have Mirrors for Princes but none for Presidents Geoff Koziol

Why the Middle Ages Matter Medieval Light on

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    A Paperback by Celia Chazelle, Simon Doubleday, Felice Lifshitz

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      View other formats and editions of Why the Middle Ages Matter Medieval Light on by Celia Chazelle

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
      Publication Date: 9/14/2011 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780415780650, 978-0415780650
      ISBN10: 0415780659

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      The "lessons of history" cannot be reduced to some specious argument that knowledge of the past provides a privileged insight into the present. Nevertheless these essays show that a deep understanding of the otherness of the medieval past and of the myriad possibilities of belief, thought, and behavior of this distant and yet creative period, can help us to understand both how the medieval past has shaped our present as well as how this same past offers models for thinking and acting differently. One need not agree with all of the authors represented in this volume either in their reading of the Middle Ages or in their recommendations for the present in order to applaud them for being what everyone should be: a thoughtful, engaged and critical participant in the great adventure of life. These learned and committed essays challenge the notion that the deep past is somehow irrelevant to the present and compel contemporary society to recognize that the human condition is essentially historical and that dialogue with the past is a necessity to build a different and better future. Patrick J. Geary Distinguished Professor of History UCLA

      "Recommended. All levels/libraries." - CHOICE, K. F. Drew, Rice University, USA

      "…Why the Middle Ages…show[s] how even the distant medieval past can be made relevant to the present through a sensitive integration of modern concerns with considered historical analysis. It offers a provocative starting point for those medieval historians who wish to engage in self-reflection or who are considering begging an ethical turn of their own." –Yvonne Seale, Hortulus Journal



      Table of Contents

      Introduction. 1. Crime and Punishment: Penalizing Without Prisons Celia Chazelle 2. Social Deviancy: a Medieval Approach Guy Geltner 3. End of Life: Listening to the Monks of Cluny Fred Paxton 4. Marriage: Medieval Couples and the Uses of Tradition Ruth Mazo Karras 5. Women: The Da Vinci Code and the Fabrication of Tradition Felice Lifshitz 6. Homosexuality: Augustine and the Christian Closet Mathew Kuefler 7. Sexual Scandal and the Clergy: a Medieval Blueprint for Disaster Dyan Elliott 8. Labor: Insights from a Medieval Monastery Martha Newman 9. Disability?: Perspectives on Bodily Difference from the Middle East Kristina Richardson 10. Race: What the Bookstore Hid Maghan Keita 11. Refugees: Views from Thirteenth-Century France Megan Cassidy-Welch 12. Torture and Truth: Torquemada’s Ghost Amy Remensnyder 13. Class Justice: Why we need a Wat Tyler Day Peter Linebaugh 14. Leadership: Why we have Mirrors for Princes but none for Presidents Geoff Koziol

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