Journal The Mediaeval Journal, vol. 11.1

The Mediaeval Journal 11:1 (2021)

  • Pages: 192 p.
  • Size:156 x 234 mm
  • Illustrations:5 b/w, 7 col.
  • Language(s):English
  • Publication Year:2023

  • € 45,00 EXCL. VAT RETAIL PRICE
  • ISBN: 978-2-503-59242-8
  • Paperback
  • Available

Forthcoming
    • E-journal
    • Forthcoming
    • Contains contributions in Open Access


    Summary

    The Mediaeval Journal is a distinctively European-based cross-disciplinary and multinational journal of Mediaeval Studies published in English in both print and online formats. Featuring the work of specialists in all areas of Mediaeval Studies, it offers wide disciplinary coverage in every issue and welcomes submissions from the worldwide community of mediaevalists in traditional disciplines such as Art History, History, Archaeology, Theology, European Languages/Literatures (including English), as well as burgeoning areas such as Islamic Studies, Jewish Studies, Manuscript Studies, Mediaevalisms, Material Culture, History of Medicine and Science, History of Ideas, Queer Studies, Postcolonial Studies, and Musicology, to name a few. Each issue of The Mediaeval Journal also contains timely and expert reviews responding to the variety and energy of scholarship across the world of Mediaeval Studies. The General Editors are pleased to receive submissions in any of the above areas, and to respond to queries from potential contributors.

    Please select 'Author information' below for detailed submission guidelines and author information. This information is also available from the journal's website: http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/saims/tmj.htm

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    The Thirteenth-Century Life of Saint Martial of Limoges: A Translation of Wauchier de Denain’s Vie seint Marcel de Lymoges
    MOLLY LYNDE-RECCHIA

    Proto-surgery, Resurrection, and Race: Interpreting ‘The Ethiopian’s leg transplant’ Miracle

    ALASTAIR MINNIS

    Otherworldly Interventions and Unstable Identities: An Intersectional Reading of Marie de France’s Lanval
    JENNIFER FARRELL

    Caput et domina: Abbesses and Women’s Literary Leadership at Syon Abbey, 1415-1539
    JULIA KING

    The Blooming of the Lancastrian Red Rose: The Red Rose as a Nascent Paraheraldic Device in Pembroke College MS 243
    KIM LIFTON