- E. L. Risden: Introduction
- Glenn Steinberg: Teaching Shakespeare’s Sources and Contexts
- William Hodapp: Shakespearean Medievalism in Performance: The Second Tetralogy
- Bonnie J. Erwin: “Is This Winning?”: Reflections on Teaching The Two Noble Kinsmen
- Leigh Smith: “The matter that you read”: Saxo Grammaticus as a Source for Shakespeare and a Resource for Teachers of Hamlet
- Brandon Alakas: Shakespeare’s Medievalism and the Life Removed: Depictions of Religious in Measure for Measure
- Karl Fugelso: Cecco Bonanotte’s Moving Illustrations of the Divine Comedy
- Heta Aali: Early Nineteenth-Century French Historiography and the Case of the Merovingian Queens
- Sandra Gorgievski: Secret Gestures and Silent Revelations: The Disclosure of Secrets in Selected Arthurian Illuminated Manuscripts and Arthurian Films
It all began with a Symposium, Tech Gets Medieval, in 2012, during which we gathered to see if medieval culture might have a place at one of the nation's premier tech universities. Then, in 2013, we received funding from the Provost's Office for a GT Fire project, Past Present: Resonances of Medieval and Early Modern Culture in Atlanta. And in 2014, we hosted the 29th International Congress on Medievalism at Georgia Tech. Interested in joining us? Get in touch.
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Richard Utz co-edits The Year's Work in Medievalism 29 (2014)
Volume 29 (2014) of The Year's Work in Medievalism, edited by E. L. Risden, Gale Sigal, and Richard Utz, with the assistance of our associate editors, Shiloh Carroll and Renée Ward, has just been published. Here is the Table of Contents: