Arc Medievalist
This book considers literary and cultural expressions of Canadian medievalism and their contribution to national identity, arguing that Canada has a deep layer of medievalism embedded in its literature, governance, and sociocultural bedrock.
Medievalism in Slavic culture is inherently political. This volume addresses a range of popular medievalisms in Central and Eastern Europe, including the lived medievalism of historical reenactments, the political medievalism of governance and dissent, and the medievalist creativity of texts, music, and film.
Grounded in intersectional feminist interpretive frameworks, Women’s Restorative Medievalisms examines how contemporary women writers engage the premodern past to animate intertwined histories of oppression and resistance in service of visionary futures.
This book examines feminist textual and cinematic engagements with the idea of the Middle Ages in the 19th and 20th centuries, arguing that the idea of the medieval past is central to the work of novelists and directors interested in embodiment and vulnerability.
Interrogates the complexities and possibilities of the historical, linguistic, textual, material and cultural legacies of the Middle Ages through the medievalist poet and artist Caroline Bergvall.
This book explores the ways contemporary authors respond to and transform key aspects of Old Norse history and viking culture for young twenty-first-century audiences.
The first ever volume fully dedicated to Iberoamerican neomedievalisms that examines the meanings and uses of “the Middle Ages” in Iberian America.
This book is Open Access and available from OAPEN. This is a powerful new story of how marginalized groups cooperate and productively reclaim medieval pasts.