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Volume
XIV (2005), Correspondences: Medievalism in Scholarship
and the Arts
Edited by Tom Shippey and Martin Arnold
The 19th century was a time of fierce national
competition for the "ownership" of medieval documents
and the legitimation of national histories. This volume contains
papers dealing with the attempts of French scholars to claim
English documents (and vice versa), as also of disputes between
Scandinavian and British scholars, and Dutch, German and Italian
scholars. Regionalism is also a repeated topic, with claims
made for the autonomy of Frisia within the Netherlands, and
Languedoc within France. Other papers deal with the rediscovery
of medieval music, with early American attempts to redirect
the course of 20th century poetry by appeal to medieval precedent,
and with the continuing vitality of Dante's Divina Commedia
(especially the Inferno) in the light of 20th century experience.
The volume as a whole sheds new light on the whole process
of appropriating history, which remains a vital and contentious
topic, both inside and outside the academic world.
CONTRIBUTORS: MARK BURDE, MAGNUS FJALLDAL, ALPITA DE JONG,
ANNETTE KREUZIGER-HERR, NILS HOLGER PETERSEN, RACHEL DRESSLER,
KARL FUGELS, WILLIAM QUINN, PETER CHRISTENSEN
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