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Medievalism

Medievalism is a system of belief and practice inspired by the Middle Ages of Europe, or by devotion to elements of that period, which have been expressed in areas such as architecture, literature, music, art, philosophy, scholarship, and various vehicles of popular culture.[1][2] Since the 17th century, a variety of movements have used the medieval period as a model or inspiration for creative activity, including Romanticism, the Gothic revival, the pre-Raphaelite and arts and crafts movements, and neo-medievalism (a term often used interchangeably with medievalism). Historians have attempted to conceptualize the history of non-European countries in terms of medievalisms, but the approach has been controversial among scholars of Latin America, Africa, and Asia.[3]

The Middle Ages in art: a Pre-Raphaelite painting of a knight and a mythical seductress, the lamia (Lamia by John William Waterhouse, 1905)

Renaissance to Enlightenment edit

 
Voltaire, one of the key Enlightenment critics of the medieval era

In the 1330s, Petrarch expressed the view that European culture had stagnated and drifted into what he called the "Dark Ages", since the fall of Rome in the fifth century, owing to among other things, the loss of many classical Latin texts and to the corruption of the language in contemporary discourse.[4] Scholars of the Renaissance believed that they lived in a new age that broke free of the decline described by Petrarch. Historians Leonardo Bruni and Flavio Biondo developed a three tier outline of history composed of Ancient, Medieval, and Modern.[5] The Latin term media tempestas (middle time) first appears in 1469.[6] The term medium aevum (Middle Ages) is first recorded in 1604.[6] "Medieval" first appears in the nineteenth century and is an Anglicised form of medium aevum.[7]

During the Reformations of the 16th and 17th centuries, Protestants generally followed the critical views expressed by Renaissance Humanists, but for additional reasons. They saw classical antiquity as a golden time, not only because of Latin literature, but because it was the early beginnings of Christianity. The intervening 1000 year Middle Age was a time of darkness, not only because of lack of secular Latin literature, but because of corruption within the Church such as Popes who ruled as kings, pagan superstitions with saints' relics, celibate priesthood, and institutionalized moral hypocrisy.[8] Most Protestant historians did not date the beginnings of the modern era from the Renaissance, but later, from the beginnings of the Reformation.[9]

In the Age of Enlightenment of the 17th and 18th centuries, the Middle Ages was seen as an "Age of Faith" when religion reigned, and thus as a period contrary to reason and contrary to the spirit of the Enlightenment.[10] For them the Middle Ages was barbaric and priest-ridden. They referred to "these dark times", "the centuries of ignorance", and "the uncouth centuries".[11] The Protestant critique of the Medieval Church was taken into Enlightenment thinking by works including Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776–89).[12] Voltaire was particularly energetic in attacking the religiously dominated Middle Ages as a period of social stagnation and decline, condemning Feudalism, Scholasticism, The Crusades, The Inquisition and the Catholic Church in general.[11]

Gothic revival edit

 
Notable Neo-Gothic edifices: top – Palace of Westminster, London; left – Cathedral of Learning, Pittsburgh; right – Sint-Petrus-en-Pauluskerk, Ostend

The Gothic Revival was an architectural movement which began in the 1740s in England.[13] Its popularity grew rapidly in the early nineteenth century, when increasingly serious and learned admirers of neo-Gothic styles sought to revive medieval forms in contrast to the classical styles prevalent at the time.[14] In England, the epicentre of this revival, it was intertwined with deeply philosophical movements associated with a re-awakening of "High Church" or Anglo-Catholic self-belief (and by the Catholic convert Augustus Welby Pugin) concerned by the growth of religious nonconformism.[13] He went on to produce important Gothic buildings such as Cathedrals at Birmingham and Southwark and the British Houses of Parliament in the 1840s.[15] Large numbers of existing English churches had features such as crosses, screens and stained glass (removed at the Reformation), restored or added, and most new Anglican and Catholic churches were built in the Gothic style.[16] Viollet-le-Duc was a leading figure in the movement in France, restoring the entire walled city of Carcassonne as well as Notre-Dame and Sainte Chapelle in Paris.[15] In America Ralph Adams Cram was a leading force in American Gothic, with his most ambitious project the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York (one of the largest cathedrals in the world), as well as Collegiate Gothic buildings at Princeton Graduate College.[15] On a wider level the wooden Carpenter Gothic churches and houses were built in large numbers across North America in this period.[17]

In English literature, the architectural Gothic Revival and classical Romanticism gave rise to the Gothic novel, often dealing with dark themes in human nature against medieval backdrops and with elements of the supernatural.[18] Beginning with The Castle of Otranto (1764) by Horace Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford, it also included Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1818) and John Polidori's The Vampyre (1819), which helped found the modern horror genre.[19] This helped create the dark romanticism or American Gothic of authors like Edgar Allan Poe in works including "The Fall of the House of Usher" (1839) and "The Pit and the Pendulum" (1842) and Nathanial Hawthorne in "The Minister's Black Veil" (1836) and "The Birth-Mark" (1843).[20] This in turn influenced American novelists like Herman Melville in works such as Moby-Dick (1851).[21] Early Victorian Gothic novels included Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847) and Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre (1847).[22] The genre was revived and modernised toward the end of the century with works like Robert Louis Stevenson's Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) and Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897).[23]

Romanticism edit

 
William Blake's The Lovers' Whirlwind illustrates Hell in Canto V of Dante's Inferno.

Romanticism was a complex artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated in the second half of the eighteenth century in Western Europe, and gained strength during and after the Industrial and French Revolutions.[24] It was partly a revolt against the political norms of the Age of Enlightenment which rationalised nature, and was embodied most strongly in the visual arts, music, and literature.[24] Romanticism has been seen as "the revival of the life and thought of the Middle Ages",[25] reaching beyond rational and Classicist models to elevate medievalism and elements of art and narrative perceived to be authentically medieval, in an attempt to escape the confines of population growth, urban sprawl and industrialism, embracing the exotic, unfamiliar and distant.[25][26]

The name "Romanticism" itself was derived from the medieval genre chivalric romance. This movement contributed to the strong influence of such romances, disproportionate to their actual showing among medieval literature, on the image of Middle Ages, such that a knight, a distressed damsel, and a dragon is used to conjure up the time pictorially.[27] The Romantic interest in the medieval can particularly be seen in the illustrations of English poet William Blake and the Ossian cycle published by Scottish poet James Macpherson in 1762, which inspired both Goethe's Götz von Berlichingen (1773), and the young Walter Scott. The latter's Waverley Novels, including Ivanhoe (1819) and Quentin Durward (1823) helped popularise, and shape views of, the medieval era.[28] The same impulse manifested itself in the translation of medieval national epics into modern vernacular languages, including Nibelungenlied (1782) in Germany,[29] The Lay of the Cid (1799) in Spain,[30] Beowulf (1833) in England,[31] The Song of Roland (1837) in France,[32] which were widely read and highly influential on subsequent literary and artistic work.[33]

The Nazarenes edit

 
Jacob encountering Rachel with her father's herd by Joseph von Führich 1836

The name Nazarene was adopted by a group of early nineteenth-century German Romantic painters who reacted against Neoclassicism and hoped to return to art which embodied spiritual values. They sought inspiration in artists of the Late Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, rejecting what they saw as the superficial virtuosity of later art.[34] The name Nazarene came from a term of derision used against them for their affectation of a biblical manner of clothing and hair style.[34] The movement was originally formed in 1809 by six students at the Vienna Academy and called the Brotherhood of St. Luke or Lukasbund, after the patron saint of medieval artists.[35] In 1810 four of them, Johann Friedrich Overbeck, Franz Pforr, Ludwig Vogel and Johann Konrad Hottinger moved to Rome, where they occupied the abandoned monastery of San Isidoro and were joined by Philipp Veit, Peter von Cornelius, Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld, Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow and a loose grouping of other German artists.[34] They met up with Austrian romantic landscape artist Joseph Anton Koch (1768–1839) who became an unofficial tutor to the group and in 1827 they were joined by Joseph von Führich (1800–76).[34] In Rome the group lived a semi-monastic existence, as a way of re-creating the nature of the medieval artist's workshop. Religious subjects dominated their output and two major commissions for the Casa Bartholdy (1816–17) (later moved to the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin) and the Casino Massimo (1817–29), allowed them to attempt a revival of the medieval art of fresco painting and gained then international attention.[36] However, by 1830 all except Overbeck had returned to Germany and the group had disbanded. Many Nazareners became influential teachers in German art academies and were a major influence on the later English Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.[34]

Social commentary edit

 
Thomas Carlyle by John Everett Millais (1877)

Eventually, medievalism moved from the confines of fiction into the immediate realm of social commentary as a means of critiquing life in the Industrial Era. An early work of this kind is William Cobbett's History of the Protestant Reformation (1824–6), which was influenced by his reading of John Lingard's History of England (1819–30), among other sources. Cobbett attacked the Reformation as having divided a once-unified and wealthy England into "masters and slaves, a very few enjoying the extreme of luxury, and millions doomed to the extreme of misery", while decrying how "this land of meat and beef was changed, all of a sudden into a land of dry bread and oatmeal porridge".[37] In the Victorian era, the principal representatives of this school were Thomas Carlyle and his disciple John Ruskin.[38]

In Carlyle's Past and Present (1843), which Oliver Elton called the "most remarkable fruit in English literature of the medieval revival",[39] the modern workhouse is contrasted with the medieval monastery. He draws on Jocelyn de Brakelond's twelfth-century account of Samson of Tottington's abbotcy of Bury St Edmunds Abbey to answer the "Condition-of-England Question", calling for a "Chivalry of Labour" based on cooperation and fraternity rather than competition and "Cash-payment for the sole nexus", and for the leadership of paternalistic "Captains of Industry".[40]

Along with medievalist writers Walter Scott, Robert Southey, and Kenelm Henry Digby, Carlyle was among the "important literary influences" on Young England, a "parliamentary experiment in romanticism which created considerable stir during the eighteen-forties," led by Lord John Manners and Benjamin Disraeli.[41] Young England developed contemporaneously with the Oxford Movement, which has been defined as "medievalism in religion."[42]

Ruskin connected the quality of a nation's architecture with its spiritual health, comparing the originality and freedom of medieval art with the mechanistic sterility of modernism in such works as Modern Painters, Volume II (1846), The Seven Lamps of Architecture (1849) and The Stones of Venice (1851–3).[43] At the urging of Carlyle,[44] Ruskin, who identified as both a "violent Tory of the old school"[45] and a "Communist of the old school",[46] adapted this thesis to his theory of political economy in Unto This Last (1860), and to his "Ideal Commonwealth" in Time and Tide (1867), the characteristics of which were derived from the Middle Ages: the guild system, the feudal system, chivalry, and the church.[47]

The Pre-Raphaelites edit

 
John Ruskin by John Everett Millais (1854)

The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood was a group of English painters, poets, and critics, founded in 1848 by William Holman Hunt, John Everett Millais and Dante Gabriel Rossetti.[48] The three founders were soon joined by William Michael Rossetti, James Collinson, Frederic George Stephens and Thomas Woolner to form a seven-member "brotherhood".[49] The group's intention was to reform art by rejecting what they considered to be the mechanistic approach first adopted by the Mannerist artists who succeeded Raphael and Michelangelo.[48] They believed that the Classical poses and elegant compositions of Raphael in particular had been a corrupting influence on the academic teaching of art. Hence the name "Pre-Raphaelite". In particular, they objected to the influence of Sir Joshua Reynolds, the founder of the English Royal Academy of Arts, believing that his broad technique was a sloppy and formulaic form of academic Mannerism. In contrast, they wanted to return to the abundant detail, intense colours, and complex compositions of Quattrocento Italian and Flemish art.[50]

The arts and crafts movement edit

 
"Artichoke" wallpaper, by John Henry Dearle for Morris & Co., circa 1897 (Victoria and Albert Museum)

The arts and crafts movement was an aesthetic movement, directly influenced by the Gothic revival and the Pre-Raphaelites, but moving away from aristocratic, nationalist and high Gothic influences to an emphasis on the idealised peasantry and medieval community, particularly of the fourteenth century, often with socialist political tendencies and reaching its height between about 1880 and 1910. The movement was inspired by the writings of Carlyle and Ruskin and was spearheaded by the work of William Morris, a friend of the Pre-Raphaelites and a former apprentice to Gothic-revival architect G. E. Street. He focused on the fine arts of textiles, wood and metal work and interior design.[51] Morris also produced medieval and ancient themed poetry, beside socialist tracts and the medieval Utopia News From Nowhere (1890).[51] Morris formed Morris, Marshall, Faulkner & Co. in 1861, which produced and sold furnishings and furniture, often with medieval themes, to the emerging middle classes.[52] The first arts and crafts exhibition in the United States was held in Boston in 1897 and local societies spread across the country, dedicated to preserving and perfecting disappearing craft and beautifying house interiors.[53] Whereas the Gothic revival had tended to emulate ecclesiastical and military architecture, the arts and crafts movement looked to rustic and vernacular medieval housing.[54] The creation of aesthetically pleasing and affordable furnishings proved highly influential on subsequent artistic and architectural developments.[55]

Romantic nationalism edit

 
Ludwig II of Bavaria built a fairy-tale castle at Neuschwanstein in 1868 (later appropriated by Walt Disney) as a symbolic merger of art and politics. (Photochrom from the 1890s)

By the late nineteenth century real and pseudo-medieval symbols were a currency of European monarchical state propaganda. German emperors dressed up in and proudly displayed medieval costumes in public, and they rebuilt the great medieval castle and spiritual home of the Teutonic Order at Marienburg.[56] Ludwig II of Bavaria built a fairy-tale castle at Neuschwanstein and decorated it with scenes from Wagner's operas, another major Romantic image maker of the Middle Ages.[57] The same imagery would be used in Nazi Germany in the mid-twentieth century to promote German national identity with plans for extensive building in the medieval style and attempts to revive the virtues of the Teutonic knights, Charlemagne and the Round Table.[58]

In England, the Middle Ages were trumpeted as the birthplace of democracy because of the Magna Carta of 1215.[59] In the reign of Queen Victoria there was considerable interest in things medieval, particularly among the ruling classes. The notorious Eglinton Tournament of 1839 attempted to revive the medieval grandeur of the monarchy and aristocracy.[60] Medieval fancy dress became common in this period at royal and aristocratic masquerades and balls and individuals and families were painted in medieval costume.[61] These trends inspired a nineteenth-century genre of medieval poetry that included Idylls of the King (1842) by Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson and "The Sword of Kingship" (1866) by Thomas Westwood, which recast specifically modern themes in the medieval settings of Arthurian romance.[62][63]

Twentieth and twenty-first centuries edit

Popular culture edit

Depictions of the Middle Ages can be found in different cultural media, including advertising.[64]

 
Douglas Fairbanks as Robin Hood

Film edit

Film has been one of the most significant creators of images of the Middle Ages since the early twentieth century. The first medieval film was also one of the earliest films ever made, about Jeanne d'Arc in 1899, while the first to deal with Robin Hood dates to as early as 1908.[65] Influential European films, often with a nationalist agenda, included the German Nibelungenlied (1924), Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky (1938) and Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957), while in France there were many Joan of Arc sequels.[66] Hollywood adopted the medieval as a major genre, issuing periodic remakes of the King Arthur, William Wallace and Robin Hood stories, adapting to the screen such historical romantic novels as Ivanhoe (1952—by MGM), and producing epics in the vein of El Cid (1961).[67] More recent revivals of these genres include Robin Hood Prince of Thieves (1991), The 13th Warrior (1999) and The Kingdom of Heaven (2005).[68]

Fantasy edit

While the folklore that fantasy drew on for its magic and monsters was not exclusively medieval, elves, dragons, and unicorns, among many other creatures, were drawn from medieval folklore and romance. Earlier writers in the genre, such as George MacDonald in The Princess and the Goblin (1872), William Morris in The Well at the World's End (1896) and Lord Dunsany in The King of Elfland's Daughter (1924), set their tales in fantasy worlds clearly derived from medieval sources, though often filtered through later views.[69] In the first half of the twentieth century pulp fiction writers like Robert E. Howard and Clark Ashton Smith helped popularise the sword and sorcery branch of fantasy, which often utilised prehistoric and non-European settings beside elements of the medieval.[70] In contrast, authors such as E. R. Eddison and particularly J.R.R. Tolkien, set the type for high fantasy, normally based in a pseudo-medieval setting, mixed with elements of medieval folklore.[71] Other fantasy writers have emulated such elements, and films, role-playing and computer games also took up this tradition.[72] Modern fantasy writers have taken elements of the medieval from these works to produce some of the most commercially successful works of fiction of recent years, sometimes pointing to the absurdities of the genre, as in Terry Pratchett's Discworld novels, or mixing it with the modern world as in J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter books.[73]

Living history edit

 
2003 re-enactment of the Battle of Grunwald
 
A re-enactment during the traditional Medieval Market Festival of Turku in summer 2006.

In the second half of the twentieth century interest in the medieval was increasingly expressed through form of re-enactment, including combat reenactment, re-creating historical conflict, armour, arms and skill, as well as living history which re-creates the social and cultural life of the past, in areas such as clothing, food and crafts. The movement has led to the creation of medieval markets and Renaissance fairs, from the late 1980s, particularly in Germany and the United States of America.[74]

Neo-medievalism edit

Neo-medievalism (or neomedievalism) is a neologism that was first popularized by the Italian medievalist Umberto Eco in his 1973 essay "Dreaming of the Middle Ages".[75] The term has no clear definition but has since been used to describe the intersection between popular fantasy and medieval history as can be seen in computer games such as MMORPGs, films and television, neo-medieval music, and popular literature.[76] It is in this area—the study of the intersection between contemporary representation and past inspiration(s)—that medievalism and neomedievalism tend to be used interchangeably.[77] Neomedievalism has also been used as a term describing the post-modern study of medieval history[78] and as a term for a trend in modern international relations, first discussed in 1977 by Hedley Bull, who argued that society was moving towards a form of "neomedievalism" in which individual notions of rights and a growing sense of a "world common good" were undermining national sovereignty.[79]

The study of medievalism edit

Leslie J. Workman, Kathleen Verduin and David Metzger noted in their introduction to Studies in Medievalism IX "Medievalism and the Academy, Vol I" (1997) their sense that medievalism had been perceived by some medievalists as a "poor and somewhat whimsical relation of (presumably more serious) medieval studies".[80] In The Cambridge Companion to Medievalism (2016), editor Louise D'Arcens noted that some of the earliest medievalism scholarship (that is, study of the phenomenon of medievalism) was by Victorian specialists including Alice Chandler (with her monograph A Dream of Order: The Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century England (London: Taylor and Francis, 1971), and Florence Boos, with her edited volume History and Community: Essays in Victorian Medievalism (London: Garland Publishing, 1992)).[2] D'Arcens proposed that the 1970s saw the discipline of medievalism become an academic area of research in its own right, with the International Society for the Study of Medievalism formalised in 1979 with the publication of its Studies In Medievalism journal, organised by Leslie J. Workman.[2] D'Arcens notes that by 2016 medievalism was taught as a subject on "hundreds" of university courses around the world, and there were "at least two" scholarly journals dedicated to medievalism studies: Studies in Medievalism and postmedieval.[2]

Clare Monagle has argued that political medievalism has caused medieval scholars to repeatedly reconsider whether medievalism is a part of the study of the Middle Ages as a historical period. Monagle explains how in 1977 the International Relations scholar Hedley Bull coined the term "New Medievalism" to describe the world as a result of the rising powers of non-state actors in society (such as terrorist groups, corporations, or supra-state organisations such as the European Economic Community) which, due to new technologies, boundaries of jurisdiction that cross national borders, and shifts in private wealth challenged the exclusive authority of the state.[81] Monagle explained that in 2007 medieval scholar Bruce Holsinger published Neomedievalism, Conservativism and the War on Terror, which identified how George W. Bush's administration relied on medievalising rhetoric to identify al-Qaeda as "dangerously fluid, elusive, and stateless".[81] Monagle documents how Gabrielle Spiegel, then president of the American Historical Society "expressed concern at the idea that scholars of the historical medieval period might consider themselves licensed to in some way to intervene in contemporary medievalism", as to do so "conflates two very different historical periods".[81] Eileen Joy (co-founder and co-editor of the postmedieval journal),[82] responded to Spiegel that "the idea of a medieval past itself, as something that can be demarcated and cordoned off from other historical time periods, was and is of itself [...] a form of medievalism. Therefore, practising medievalists should absolutely pay heed to the use and abuse of the Middle Ages in contemporary discourse".[81]

Medievalism topics are now annual features at the major medieval conferences the International Medieval Congress hosted at the University of Leeds, UK, and the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo, Michigan.[2]

Exhibitions about medievalism edit

Further reading edit

  • Kegel, Paul L. (1970). "Henry Adams and Mark Twain: Two Views of Medievalism". Mark Twain Journal. 15 (3): 11–21. ISSN 0025-3499.

Bibliography edit

  • Chandler, Alice (1970). A Dream of Order: The Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803207042.

Notes edit

  1. ^ J. Simpson; E. Weiner, eds. (1989). "Medievalism". Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  2. ^ a b c d e D'Arcens, Louise (2016-03-02). The Cambridge Companion to Medievalism. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–10. ISBN 978-1-316-54620-8.
  3. ^ Kathleen Davis and Nadia Altschul, eds. Medievalisms in the Postcolonial World: The Idea of "the Middle Ages" Outside Europe (2009)
  4. ^ Mommsen, Theodore E. (1942). "Petrarch's Conception of the 'Dark Ages'". Speculum. Cambridge MA: Medieval Academy of America. 17 (2): 226–42. doi:10.2307/2856364. JSTOR 2856364. S2CID 161360211.
  5. ^ C. Rudolph, A companion to medieval art: Romanesque and Gothic in Northern Europe (Wiley-Blackwell, 2006), p. 4.
  6. ^ a b Albrow, Martin, The global age: state and society beyond modernity (1997), p. 205.
  7. ^ Random House Dictionary (2010), "Mediaeval"
  8. ^ F. Oakley, The medieval experience: foundations of Western cultural singularity (University of Toronto Press, 1988), pp. 1-4.
  9. ^ R. D. Linder, The Reformation Era (Greenwood, 2008), p. 124.
  10. ^ K. J. Christiano, W. H. Swatos and P. Kivisto, Sociology of Religion: Contemporary Developments (Rowman Altamira, 2002), p. 77.
  11. ^ a b R. Bartlett, Medieval Panorama (Getty Trust Publications, 2001), p. 12.
  12. ^ S. J. Barnett, The Enlightenment and Religion: the Myths of Modernity (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2003), p. 213.
  13. ^ a b N. Yates, Liturgical Space: Christian Worship and Church Buildings in Western Europe 1500-2000 (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2008), p. 114,
  14. ^ A. Chandler, A Dream of Order: the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1971), p. 184.
  15. ^ a b c M. Moffett, M. W. Fazio, L. Wodehouse, A World History of Architecture (2nd edn., Laurence King, 2003), pp. 429-41.
  16. ^ M. Alexander, Medievalism: the Middle Ages in Modern England (Yale University Press, 2007), pp. 71-3.
  17. ^ D. D. Volo, The Antebellum Period American popular culture Through History (Greenwood, 2004), p. 131.
  18. ^ F. Botting, Gothic (CRC Press, 1996), pp. 1-2.
  19. ^ S. T. Joshi, Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: an Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares (Greenwood, 2007), p. 250.
  20. ^ S. T. Joshi, Icons of Horror and the Supernatural: an Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares, Volume 1 (Greenwood, 2007), p. 350.
  21. ^ A. L. Smith, American Gothic Fiction: an Introduction (Continuum, 2004), p. 79.
  22. ^ D. David, The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), p. 186.
  23. ^ S. Arata, Fictions of Loss in the Victorian Fin de Siècle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), p. 111.
  24. ^ a b A. Chandler, A Dream of Order: the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1971), p. 4.
  25. ^ a b R. R. Agrawal, "The Medieval Revival and its Influence on the Romantic Movement", (Abhinav, 1990), p. 1. ISBN 978-8170172628
  26. ^ Perpinyà, Núria. Ruins, Nostalgia and Ugliness. Five Romantic perceptions of the Middle Ages and a spoonful of Game of Thrones and Avant-garde oddity. Berlin: Logos Verlag. 2014 ISBN 978-3-8325-3794-4
  27. ^ C. S. Lewis, The Discarded Image (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964), ISBN 0-521-47735-2, p. 9.
  28. ^ A. Chandler, A Dream of Order: the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-century English Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1971), pp. 54-7.
  29. ^ W. P. Gerritsen, A. G. Van Melle and T. Guest, A Dictionary of Medieval Heroes: Characters in Medieval Narrative Traditions and Their Afterlife in Literature, Theatre and the Visual Arts (Boydell & Brewer, 2000), p. 256.
  30. ^ R. E. Chandler and K. Schwart, A New History of Spanish Literature (LSU Press, 2nd edn., 1991), p. 29.
  31. ^ M. Alexander, Beowulf: a Verse Translation (London: Penguin Classics, 2nd edn., 2004), p. xviii.
  32. ^ G. S. Burgess, The Song of Roland (London: Penguin Classics, 1990), p. 7.
  33. ^ S. P. Sondrup and G. E. P. Gillespie, Nonfictional Romantic Prose: Expanding Borders (John Benjamins, 2004), p. 8.
  34. ^ a b c d e K. F. Reinhardt, Germany: 2000 years, Volume 2 (Continuum, 1981), p. 491.
  35. ^ A. Chandler, A Dream of Order: the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1971), p. 191.
  36. ^ K. Curran, The Romanesque Revival: Religion, Politics, and Transnational Exchange (Penn State Press, 2003), p. 4.
  37. ^ Chandler 1970, pp. 65–68.
  38. ^ "medievalism". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2022-08-08.
  39. ^ Chandler 1970, p. 138.
  40. ^ Bennett, J. A. W. (1978). "Carlyle and the medieval past". Reading Medieval Studies. IV: 3–18. ISSN 0950-3129.
  41. ^ Kegel, Charles H. (1961). "Lord John Manners and the Young England Movement: Romanticism in Politics". The Western Political Quarterly. 14 (3): 691–697. doi:10.2307/444286. ISSN 0043-4078.
  42. ^ Chandler 1970, p. 153.
  43. ^ Chandler 1970, pp. 198–203.
  44. ^ Cook and Wedderburn, 17.lxx.
  45. ^ Cook and Wedderbun, 35:13
  46. ^ Cook and Wedderbun, 27:116
  47. ^ G., T. F. (1893). "John Ruskin". The Sewanee Review. 1 (4): 491–497. ISSN 0037-3052. JSTOR 27527781.
  48. ^ a b R. Cronin, A. Chapman and A. H. Harrison, A Companion to Victorian Poetry (Wiley-Blackwell, 2002), p. 305.
  49. ^ J. Rothenstein, An Introduction to English Painting (I.B.Tauris, 2001), p. 115.
  50. ^ S. Andres, The pre-Raphaelite art of the Victorian novel: narrative challenges to visual gendered boundaries (Ohio State University Press, 2004), p. 247.
  51. ^ a b F. S. Kleiner, 'Gardner's Art Through the Ages: A Global History (13th edn., Cengage Learning EMEA, 2008), p. 846.
  52. ^ C. Harvey and J. Press, William Morris: Design and Enterprise in Victorian Britain (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1991), pp. 77-8.
  53. ^ D. Shand-Tucci, and R. A. Cram, Boston Bohemia, 1881-1900: Ralph Adams Cram Life and Literature (University of Massachusetts Press, 1996), p. 174.
  54. ^ V. B. Canizaro, Architectural Regionalism: Collected Writings on Place, Identity, Modernity, and Tradition (Princeton Architectural Press, 2007), p. 196.
  55. ^ John F. Pile, A History of Interior Design (2nd edn., Laurence King, 2005), p. 267.
  56. ^ R. A. Etlin, Art, Culture, and Media Under the Third Reich (University of Chicago Press, 2002), p. 118.
  57. ^ Lisa Trumbauer, King Ludwig's Castle: Germany's Neuschwanstein (Bearport, 2005).
  58. ^ V. Ortenberg, In Search of the Holy Grail: the Quest for the Middle Ages (Continuum, 2006), p. 114.
  59. ^ R. Chapman, The Sense of the Past in Victorian Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1986), pp. 36-7.
  60. ^ I. Anstruther, The Knight and the Umbrella: An Account of the Eglinton Tournament - 1839 (London: Geoffrey Bles, 1963), pp. 122-3.
  61. ^ J. Banham and J. Harris, William Morris and the Middle Ages: a Collection of Essays, together with a Catalogue of Works Exhibited at the Whitworth Art Gallery, 28 September-8 December 1984 (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1984), p. 76.
  62. ^ R. Cronin, A. Chapman and A. H. Harrison, A Companion to Victorian Poetry (Wiley-Blackwell, 2002), p. 247.
  63. ^ I. Bryden, Reinventing King Arthur: the Arthurian Legends in Victorian Culture (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2005), p. 79.
  64. ^ Examples for the depiction of the Middle Ages in advertising (including gender stereotypes): Megan Arnott (2019-01-31): “Viking Tough”: How Ads Sell Us Medieval Manhood. The Public Medievalist. Retrieved 2024-01-15.
  65. ^ T. G. Hahn, Robin Hood in Popular Culture: Violence, Transgression, and Justice (Boydell & Brewer, 2000), p. 87.
  66. ^ Norris J. Lacy, A History of Arthurian Scholarship (Boydell & Brewer Ltd, 2006), p. 87.
  67. ^ S. J. Umland, The Use of Arthurian Legend in Hollywood Film: from Connecticut Yankees to Fisher Kings (Greenwood, 1996), p. 105.
  68. ^ N. Haydock and E. L. Risden, Hollywood in the Holy Land: Essays on Film Depictions of the Crusades and Christian-Muslim Clashes (McFarland, 2009), p. 187.
  69. ^ R. C. Schlobin, The Aesthetics of Fantasy Literature and Art (University of Notre Dame Press, 1982), p. 236.
  70. ^ J. A. Tucker, A Sense of Wonder: Samuel R. Delany, Race, Identity and Difference (Wesleyan University Press, 2004), p. 91.
  71. ^ Jane Yolen, "Introduction", After the King: Stories in Honor of J. R. R. Tolkien, ed, Martin H. Greenberg, pp. vii-viii. ISBN 0-312-85175-8.
  72. ^ D. Mackay, The Fantasy Role-Playing Game: a New Performing Art (McFarland, 2001), ISBN 978-0786450473, p. 27.
  73. ^ Michael D. C. Drout, J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment (Taylor & Francis, 2007), ISBN 978-0415969420, p. 380.
  74. ^ M. C. C. Adams, Echoes of War: A Thousand Years of Military History in Popular Culture (University Press of Kentucky, 2002), p. 2.
  75. ^ Umberto Eco, "Dreaming of the Middle Ages," in Travels in Hyperreality, transl. by W. Weaver (New York: Harcourt Brace, 1986), pp. 61–72. Eco wrote, "Thus we are at present witnessing, both in Europe and America, a period of renewed interest in the Middle Ages, with a curious oscillation between fantastic neomedievalism and responsible philological examination."
  76. ^ M. W. Driver and S. Ray, eds, The medieval hero on screen: representations from Beowulf to Buffy (McFarland, 2004).
  77. ^ J. Tolmie, "Medievalism and the Fantasy Heroine", Journal of Gender Studies, vol. 15, No. 2 July 2006, pp. 145–58
  78. ^ Cary John Lenehan., University of Tasmania, November 1994.
  79. ^ K. Alderson and A. Hurrell, eds, Hedley Bull on International Society (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2000), p. 56.
  80. ^ Workman, Leslie J.; Verduin, Kathleen; Metzger, David; Metzger, David D. (1999). Medievalism and the Academy. Boydell & Brewer. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-85991-532-8.
  81. ^ a b c d Monagle, Clare (2014-04-18). "Sovereignty and Neomedievalism". In D'arcens, Louise; Lynch, Andrew (eds.). International Medievalism and Popular Culture. Cambria Press. ISBN 978-1-60497-864-3.
  82. ^ "A word from the co-editor of postmedieval, Eileen A. Joy". www.palgrave.com. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
  83. ^ "New Medievalist visions Exhibition at the Maughan Library | Website archive | King's College London". www.kcl.ac.uk. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  84. ^ Wilson, Lain. "Juggling the Middle Ages". Dumbarton Oaks. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  85. ^ Nguyen, Sophia (2018-10-18). "The Juggler's Tale". Harvard Magazine. Retrieved 2020-10-24.
  86. ^ Dame, Marketing Communications: Web | University of Notre. "D.C. museum tells an old Notre Dame story | Stories | Notre Dame Magazine | University of Notre Dame". Notre Dame Magazine. Retrieved 2020-10-24.

medievalism, interdisciplinary, study, medieval, period, medieval, studies, system, belief, practice, inspired, middle, ages, europe, devotion, elements, that, period, which, have, been, expressed, areas, such, architecture, literature, music, philosophy, scho. For the interdisciplinary study of the medieval period see Medieval studies Medievalism is a system of belief and practice inspired by the Middle Ages of Europe or by devotion to elements of that period which have been expressed in areas such as architecture literature music art philosophy scholarship and various vehicles of popular culture 1 2 Since the 17th century a variety of movements have used the medieval period as a model or inspiration for creative activity including Romanticism the Gothic revival the pre Raphaelite and arts and crafts movements and neo medievalism a term often used interchangeably with medievalism Historians have attempted to conceptualize the history of non European countries in terms of medievalisms but the approach has been controversial among scholars of Latin America Africa and Asia 3 The Middle Ages in art a Pre Raphaelite painting of a knight and a mythical seductress the lamia Lamia by John William Waterhouse 1905 Contents 1 Renaissance to Enlightenment 2 Gothic revival 3 Romanticism 3 1 The Nazarenes 3 2 Social commentary 3 3 The Pre Raphaelites 3 4 The arts and crafts movement 3 5 Romantic nationalism 4 Twentieth and twenty first centuries 4 1 Popular culture 4 1 1 Film 4 1 2 Fantasy 4 2 Living history 4 3 Neo medievalism 5 The study of medievalism 6 Exhibitions about medievalism 7 Further reading 8 Bibliography 9 NotesRenaissance to Enlightenment editMain articles Middle Ages Protestant Reformation and Age of Enlightenment nbsp Voltaire one of the key Enlightenment critics of the medieval eraIn the 1330s Petrarch expressed the view that European culture had stagnated and drifted into what he called the Dark Ages since the fall of Rome in the fifth century owing to among other things the loss of many classical Latin texts and to the corruption of the language in contemporary discourse 4 Scholars of the Renaissance believed that they lived in a new age that broke free of the decline described by Petrarch Historians Leonardo Bruni and Flavio Biondo developed a three tier outline of history composed of Ancient Medieval and Modern 5 The Latin term media tempestas middle time first appears in 1469 6 The term medium aevum Middle Ages is first recorded in 1604 6 Medieval first appears in the nineteenth century and is an Anglicised form of medium aevum 7 During the Reformations of the 16th and 17th centuries Protestants generally followed the critical views expressed by Renaissance Humanists but for additional reasons They saw classical antiquity as a golden time not only because of Latin literature but because it was the early beginnings of Christianity The intervening 1000 year Middle Age was a time of darkness not only because of lack of secular Latin literature but because of corruption within the Church such as Popes who ruled as kings pagan superstitions with saints relics celibate priesthood and institutionalized moral hypocrisy 8 Most Protestant historians did not date the beginnings of the modern era from the Renaissance but later from the beginnings of the Reformation 9 In the Age of Enlightenment of the 17th and 18th centuries the Middle Ages was seen as an Age of Faith when religion reigned and thus as a period contrary to reason and contrary to the spirit of the Enlightenment 10 For them the Middle Ages was barbaric and priest ridden They referred to these dark times the centuries of ignorance and the uncouth centuries 11 The Protestant critique of the Medieval Church was taken into Enlightenment thinking by works including Edward Gibbon s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1776 89 12 Voltaire was particularly energetic in attacking the religiously dominated Middle Ages as a period of social stagnation and decline condemning Feudalism Scholasticism The Crusades The Inquisition and the Catholic Church in general 11 Gothic revival editMain articles Gothic revival and Gothic fiction nbsp Notable Neo Gothic edifices top Palace of Westminster London left Cathedral of Learning Pittsburgh right Sint Petrus en Pauluskerk OstendThe Gothic Revival was an architectural movement which began in the 1740s in England 13 Its popularity grew rapidly in the early nineteenth century when increasingly serious and learned admirers of neo Gothic styles sought to revive medieval forms in contrast to the classical styles prevalent at the time 14 In England the epicentre of this revival it was intertwined with deeply philosophical movements associated with a re awakening of High Church or Anglo Catholic self belief and by the Catholic convert Augustus Welby Pugin concerned by the growth of religious nonconformism 13 He went on to produce important Gothic buildings such as Cathedrals at Birmingham and Southwark and the British Houses of Parliament in the 1840s 15 Large numbers of existing English churches had features such as crosses screens and stained glass removed at the Reformation restored or added and most new Anglican and Catholic churches were built in the Gothic style 16 Viollet le Duc was a leading figure in the movement in France restoring the entire walled city of Carcassonne as well as Notre Dame and Sainte Chapelle in Paris 15 In America Ralph Adams Cram was a leading force in American Gothic with his most ambitious project the Cathedral of St John the Divine in New York one of the largest cathedrals in the world as well as Collegiate Gothic buildings at Princeton Graduate College 15 On a wider level the wooden Carpenter Gothic churches and houses were built in large numbers across North America in this period 17 In English literature the architectural Gothic Revival and classical Romanticism gave rise to the Gothic novel often dealing with dark themes in human nature against medieval backdrops and with elements of the supernatural 18 Beginning with The Castle of Otranto 1764 by Horace Walpole 4th Earl of Orford it also included Mary Shelley s Frankenstein 1818 and John Polidori s The Vampyre 1819 which helped found the modern horror genre 19 This helped create the dark romanticism or American Gothic of authors like Edgar Allan Poe in works including The Fall of the House of Usher 1839 and The Pit and the Pendulum 1842 and Nathanial Hawthorne in The Minister s Black Veil 1836 and The Birth Mark 1843 20 This in turn influenced American novelists like Herman Melville in works such as Moby Dick 1851 21 Early Victorian Gothic novels included Emily Bronte s Wuthering Heights 1847 and Charlotte Bronte s Jane Eyre 1847 22 The genre was revived and modernised toward the end of the century with works like Robert Louis Stevenson s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 Oscar Wilde s The Picture of Dorian Gray 1890 and Bram Stoker s Dracula 1897 23 Romanticism editMain article Romanticism nbsp William Blake s The Lovers Whirlwind illustrates Hell in Canto V of Dante s Inferno Romanticism was a complex artistic literary and intellectual movement that originated in the second half of the eighteenth century in Western Europe and gained strength during and after the Industrial and French Revolutions 24 It was partly a revolt against the political norms of the Age of Enlightenment which rationalised nature and was embodied most strongly in the visual arts music and literature 24 Romanticism has been seen as the revival of the life and thought of the Middle Ages 25 reaching beyond rational and Classicist models to elevate medievalism and elements of art and narrative perceived to be authentically medieval in an attempt to escape the confines of population growth urban sprawl and industrialism embracing the exotic unfamiliar and distant 25 26 The name Romanticism itself was derived from the medieval genre chivalric romance This movement contributed to the strong influence of such romances disproportionate to their actual showing among medieval literature on the image of Middle Ages such that a knight a distressed damsel and a dragon is used to conjure up the time pictorially 27 The Romantic interest in the medieval can particularly be seen in the illustrations of English poet William Blake and the Ossian cycle published by Scottish poet James Macpherson in 1762 which inspired both Goethe s Gotz von Berlichingen 1773 and the young Walter Scott The latter s Waverley Novels including Ivanhoe 1819 and Quentin Durward 1823 helped popularise and shape views of the medieval era 28 The same impulse manifested itself in the translation of medieval national epics into modern vernacular languages including Nibelungenlied 1782 in Germany 29 The Lay of the Cid 1799 in Spain 30 Beowulf 1833 in England 31 The Song of Roland 1837 in France 32 which were widely read and highly influential on subsequent literary and artistic work 33 The Nazarenes edit Main article Nazarene movement nbsp Jacob encountering Rachel with her father s herd by Joseph von Fuhrich 1836The name Nazarene was adopted by a group of early nineteenth century German Romantic painters who reacted against Neoclassicism and hoped to return to art which embodied spiritual values They sought inspiration in artists of the Late Middle Ages and the early Renaissance rejecting what they saw as the superficial virtuosity of later art 34 The name Nazarene came from a term of derision used against them for their affectation of a biblical manner of clothing and hair style 34 The movement was originally formed in 1809 by six students at the Vienna Academy and called the Brotherhood of St Luke or Lukasbund after the patron saint of medieval artists 35 In 1810 four of them Johann Friedrich Overbeck Franz Pforr Ludwig Vogel and Johann Konrad Hottinger moved to Rome where they occupied the abandoned monastery of San Isidoro and were joined by Philipp Veit Peter von Cornelius Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld Friedrich Wilhelm Schadow and a loose grouping of other German artists 34 They met up with Austrian romantic landscape artist Joseph Anton Koch 1768 1839 who became an unofficial tutor to the group and in 1827 they were joined by Joseph von Fuhrich 1800 76 34 In Rome the group lived a semi monastic existence as a way of re creating the nature of the medieval artist s workshop Religious subjects dominated their output and two major commissions for the Casa Bartholdy 1816 17 later moved to the Alte Nationalgalerie in Berlin and the Casino Massimo 1817 29 allowed them to attempt a revival of the medieval art of fresco painting and gained then international attention 36 However by 1830 all except Overbeck had returned to Germany and the group had disbanded Many Nazareners became influential teachers in German art academies and were a major influence on the later English Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood 34 Social commentary edit nbsp Thomas Carlyle by John Everett Millais 1877 Eventually medievalism moved from the confines of fiction into the immediate realm of social commentary as a means of critiquing life in the Industrial Era An early work of this kind is William Cobbett s History of the Protestant Reformation 1824 6 which was influenced by his reading of John Lingard s History of England 1819 30 among other sources Cobbett attacked the Reformation as having divided a once unified and wealthy England into masters and slaves a very few enjoying the extreme of luxury and millions doomed to the extreme of misery while decrying how this land of meat and beef was changed all of a sudden into a land of dry bread and oatmeal porridge 37 In the Victorian era the principal representatives of this school were Thomas Carlyle and his disciple John Ruskin 38 In Carlyle s Past and Present 1843 which Oliver Elton called the most remarkable fruit in English literature of the medieval revival 39 the modern workhouse is contrasted with the medieval monastery He draws on Jocelyn de Brakelond s twelfth century account of Samson of Tottington s abbotcy of Bury St Edmunds Abbey to answer the Condition of England Question calling for a Chivalry of Labour based on cooperation and fraternity rather than competition and Cash payment for the sole nexus and for the leadership of paternalistic Captains of Industry 40 Along with medievalist writers Walter Scott Robert Southey and Kenelm Henry Digby Carlyle was among the important literary influences on Young England a parliamentary experiment in romanticism which created considerable stir during the eighteen forties led by Lord John Manners and Benjamin Disraeli 41 Young England developed contemporaneously with the Oxford Movement which has been defined as medievalism in religion 42 Ruskin connected the quality of a nation s architecture with its spiritual health comparing the originality and freedom of medieval art with the mechanistic sterility of modernism in such works as Modern Painters Volume II 1846 The Seven Lamps of Architecture 1849 and The Stones of Venice 1851 3 43 At the urging of Carlyle 44 Ruskin who identified as both a violent Tory of the old school 45 and a Communist of the old school 46 adapted this thesis to his theory of political economy in Unto This Last 1860 and to his Ideal Commonwealth in Time and Tide 1867 the characteristics of which were derived from the Middle Ages the guild system the feudal system chivalry and the church 47 The Pre Raphaelites edit Main article Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood nbsp John Ruskin by John Everett Millais 1854 The Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood was a group of English painters poets and critics founded in 1848 by William Holman Hunt John Everett Millais and Dante Gabriel Rossetti 48 The three founders were soon joined by William Michael Rossetti James Collinson Frederic George Stephens and Thomas Woolner to form a seven member brotherhood 49 The group s intention was to reform art by rejecting what they considered to be the mechanistic approach first adopted by the Mannerist artists who succeeded Raphael and Michelangelo 48 They believed that the Classical poses and elegant compositions of Raphael in particular had been a corrupting influence on the academic teaching of art Hence the name Pre Raphaelite In particular they objected to the influence of Sir Joshua Reynolds the founder of the English Royal Academy of Arts believing that his broad technique was a sloppy and formulaic form of academic Mannerism In contrast they wanted to return to the abundant detail intense colours and complex compositions of Quattrocento Italian and Flemish art 50 The arts and crafts movement edit Main article Arts and crafts movement nbsp Artichoke wallpaper by John Henry Dearle for Morris amp Co circa 1897 Victoria and Albert Museum The arts and crafts movement was an aesthetic movement directly influenced by the Gothic revival and the Pre Raphaelites but moving away from aristocratic nationalist and high Gothic influences to an emphasis on the idealised peasantry and medieval community particularly of the fourteenth century often with socialist political tendencies and reaching its height between about 1880 and 1910 The movement was inspired by the writings of Carlyle and Ruskin and was spearheaded by the work of William Morris a friend of the Pre Raphaelites and a former apprentice to Gothic revival architect G E Street He focused on the fine arts of textiles wood and metal work and interior design 51 Morris also produced medieval and ancient themed poetry beside socialist tracts and the medieval Utopia News From Nowhere 1890 51 Morris formed Morris Marshall Faulkner amp Co in 1861 which produced and sold furnishings and furniture often with medieval themes to the emerging middle classes 52 The first arts and crafts exhibition in the United States was held in Boston in 1897 and local societies spread across the country dedicated to preserving and perfecting disappearing craft and beautifying house interiors 53 Whereas the Gothic revival had tended to emulate ecclesiastical and military architecture the arts and crafts movement looked to rustic and vernacular medieval housing 54 The creation of aesthetically pleasing and affordable furnishings proved highly influential on subsequent artistic and architectural developments 55 Romantic nationalism edit Main article Romantic nationalism nbsp Ludwig II of Bavaria built a fairy tale castle at Neuschwanstein in 1868 later appropriated by Walt Disney as a symbolic merger of art and politics Photochrom from the 1890s By the late nineteenth century real and pseudo medieval symbols were a currency of European monarchical state propaganda German emperors dressed up in and proudly displayed medieval costumes in public and they rebuilt the great medieval castle and spiritual home of the Teutonic Order at Marienburg 56 Ludwig II of Bavaria built a fairy tale castle at Neuschwanstein and decorated it with scenes from Wagner s operas another major Romantic image maker of the Middle Ages 57 The same imagery would be used in Nazi Germany in the mid twentieth century to promote German national identity with plans for extensive building in the medieval style and attempts to revive the virtues of the Teutonic knights Charlemagne and the Round Table 58 In England the Middle Ages were trumpeted as the birthplace of democracy because of the Magna Carta of 1215 59 In the reign of Queen Victoria there was considerable interest in things medieval particularly among the ruling classes The notorious Eglinton Tournament of 1839 attempted to revive the medieval grandeur of the monarchy and aristocracy 60 Medieval fancy dress became common in this period at royal and aristocratic masquerades and balls and individuals and families were painted in medieval costume 61 These trends inspired a nineteenth century genre of medieval poetry that included Idylls of the King 1842 by Alfred Tennyson 1st Baron Tennyson and The Sword of Kingship 1866 by Thomas Westwood which recast specifically modern themes in the medieval settings of Arthurian romance 62 63 Twentieth and twenty first centuries editPopular culture edit Main article Depiction of the Middle Ages in popular culture Depictions of the Middle Ages can be found in different cultural media including advertising 64 nbsp Douglas Fairbanks as Robin HoodFilm edit Main article Middle Ages in film Film has been one of the most significant creators of images of the Middle Ages since the early twentieth century The first medieval film was also one of the earliest films ever made about Jeanne d Arc in 1899 while the first to deal with Robin Hood dates to as early as 1908 65 Influential European films often with a nationalist agenda included the German Nibelungenlied 1924 Eisenstein s Alexander Nevsky 1938 and Bergman s The Seventh Seal 1957 while in France there were many Joan of Arc sequels 66 Hollywood adopted the medieval as a major genre issuing periodic remakes of the King Arthur William Wallace and Robin Hood stories adapting to the screen such historical romantic novels as Ivanhoe 1952 by MGM and producing epics in the vein of El Cid 1961 67 More recent revivals of these genres include Robin Hood Prince of Thieves 1991 The 13th Warrior 1999 and The Kingdom of Heaven 2005 68 Fantasy edit Main articles Fantasy and Medieval fantasy While the folklore that fantasy drew on for its magic and monsters was not exclusively medieval elves dragons and unicorns among many other creatures were drawn from medieval folklore and romance Earlier writers in the genre such as George MacDonald in The Princess and the Goblin 1872 William Morris in The Well at the World s End 1896 and Lord Dunsany in The King of Elfland s Daughter 1924 set their tales in fantasy worlds clearly derived from medieval sources though often filtered through later views 69 In the first half of the twentieth century pulp fiction writers like Robert E Howard and Clark Ashton Smith helped popularise the sword and sorcery branch of fantasy which often utilised prehistoric and non European settings beside elements of the medieval 70 In contrast authors such as E R Eddison and particularly J R R Tolkien set the type for high fantasy normally based in a pseudo medieval setting mixed with elements of medieval folklore 71 Other fantasy writers have emulated such elements and films role playing and computer games also took up this tradition 72 Modern fantasy writers have taken elements of the medieval from these works to produce some of the most commercially successful works of fiction of recent years sometimes pointing to the absurdities of the genre as in Terry Pratchett s Discworld novels or mixing it with the modern world as in J K Rowling s Harry Potter books 73 Living history edit nbsp 2003 re enactment of the Battle of Grunwald nbsp A re enactment during the traditional Medieval Market Festival of Turku in summer 2006 Main article Medieval reenactment In the second half of the twentieth century interest in the medieval was increasingly expressed through form of re enactment including combat reenactment re creating historical conflict armour arms and skill as well as living history which re creates the social and cultural life of the past in areas such as clothing food and crafts The movement has led to the creation of medieval markets and Renaissance fairs from the late 1980s particularly in Germany and the United States of America 74 Neo medievalism edit Main article Neo medievalism Neo medievalism or neomedievalism is a neologism that was first popularized by the Italian medievalist Umberto Eco in his 1973 essay Dreaming of the Middle Ages 75 The term has no clear definition but has since been used to describe the intersection between popular fantasy and medieval history as can be seen in computer games such as MMORPGs films and television neo medieval music and popular literature 76 It is in this area the study of the intersection between contemporary representation and past inspiration s that medievalism and neomedievalism tend to be used interchangeably 77 Neomedievalism has also been used as a term describing the post modern study of medieval history 78 and as a term for a trend in modern international relations first discussed in 1977 by Hedley Bull who argued that society was moving towards a form of neomedievalism in which individual notions of rights and a growing sense of a world common good were undermining national sovereignty 79 The study of medievalism editLeslie J Workman Kathleen Verduin and David Metzger noted in their introduction to Studies in Medievalism IX Medievalism and the Academy Vol I 1997 their sense that medievalism had been perceived by some medievalists as a poor and somewhat whimsical relation of presumably more serious medieval studies 80 In The Cambridge Companion to Medievalism 2016 editor Louise D Arcens noted that some of the earliest medievalism scholarship that is study of the phenomenon of medievalism was by Victorian specialists including Alice Chandler with her monograph A Dream of Order The Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century England London Taylor and Francis 1971 and Florence Boos with her edited volume History and Community Essays in Victorian Medievalism London Garland Publishing 1992 2 D Arcens proposed that the 1970s saw the discipline of medievalism become an academic area of research in its own right with the International Society for the Study of Medievalism formalised in 1979 with the publication of its Studies In Medievalism journal organised by Leslie J Workman 2 D Arcens notes that by 2016 medievalism was taught as a subject on hundreds of university courses around the world and there were at least two scholarly journals dedicated to medievalism studies Studies in Medievalism and postmedieval 2 Clare Monagle has argued that political medievalism has caused medieval scholars to repeatedly reconsider whether medievalism is a part of the study of the Middle Ages as a historical period Monagle explains how in 1977 the International Relations scholar Hedley Bull coined the term New Medievalism to describe the world as a result of the rising powers of non state actors in society such as terrorist groups corporations or supra state organisations such as the European Economic Community which due to new technologies boundaries of jurisdiction that cross national borders and shifts in private wealth challenged the exclusive authority of the state 81 Monagle explained that in 2007 medieval scholar Bruce Holsinger published Neomedievalism Conservativism and the War on Terror which identified how George W Bush s administration relied on medievalising rhetoric to identify al Qaeda as dangerously fluid elusive and stateless 81 Monagle documents how Gabrielle Spiegel then president of the American Historical Society expressed concern at the idea that scholars of the historical medieval period might consider themselves licensed to in some way to intervene in contemporary medievalism as to do so conflates two very different historical periods 81 Eileen Joy co founder and co editor of the postmedieval journal 82 responded to Spiegel that the idea of a medieval past itself as something that can be demarcated and cordoned off from other historical time periods was and is of itself a form of medievalism Therefore practising medievalists should absolutely pay heed to the use and abuse of the Middle Ages in contemporary discourse 81 Medievalism topics are now annual features at the major medieval conferences the International Medieval Congress hosted at the University of Leeds UK and the International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo Michigan 2 Exhibitions about medievalism edit30 January 22 May 2013 New Medievalist visions King s College London Maughan Library 83 October 16 2018 March 3 2019 Juggling the Middle Ages Dumbarton Oaks Washington DC Juggling the Middle Ages explores the influence of the medieval world by focusing on this single story with a long lasting impact Le Jongleur de Notre Dame or Our Lady s Tumbler 84 85 86 Further reading editKegel Paul L 1970 Henry Adams and Mark Twain Two Views of Medievalism Mark Twain Journal 15 3 11 21 ISSN 0025 3499 Bibliography editChandler Alice 1970 A Dream of Order The Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century English Literature Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 9780803207042 Notes edit J Simpson E Weiner eds 1989 Medievalism Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press a b c d e D Arcens Louise 2016 03 02 The Cambridge Companion to Medievalism Cambridge University Press pp 1 10 ISBN 978 1 316 54620 8 Kathleen Davis and Nadia Altschul eds Medievalisms in the Postcolonial World The Idea of the Middle Ages Outside Europe 2009 Mommsen Theodore E 1942 Petrarch s Conception of the Dark Ages Speculum Cambridge MA Medieval Academy of America 17 2 226 42 doi 10 2307 2856364 JSTOR 2856364 S2CID 161360211 C Rudolph A companion to medieval art Romanesque and Gothic in Northern Europe Wiley Blackwell 2006 p 4 a b Albrow Martin The global age state and society beyond modernity 1997 p 205 Random House Dictionary 2010 Mediaeval F Oakley The medieval experience foundations of Western cultural singularity University of Toronto Press 1988 pp 1 4 R D Linder The Reformation Era Greenwood 2008 p 124 K J Christiano W H Swatos and P Kivisto Sociology of Religion Contemporary Developments Rowman Altamira 2002 p 77 a b R Bartlett Medieval Panorama Getty Trust Publications 2001 p 12 S J Barnett The Enlightenment and Religion the Myths of Modernity Manchester Manchester University Press 2003 p 213 a b N Yates Liturgical Space Christian Worship and Church Buildings in Western Europe 1500 2000 Aldershot Ashgate Publishing 2008 p 114 A Chandler A Dream of Order the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century English Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1971 p 184 a b c M Moffett M W Fazio L Wodehouse A World History of Architecture 2nd edn Laurence King 2003 pp 429 41 M Alexander Medievalism the Middle Ages in Modern England Yale University Press 2007 pp 71 3 D D Volo The Antebellum Period American popular culture Through History Greenwood 2004 p 131 F Botting Gothic CRC Press 1996 pp 1 2 S T Joshi Icons of Horror and the Supernatural an Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares Greenwood 2007 p 250 S T Joshi Icons of Horror and the Supernatural an Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares Volume 1 Greenwood 2007 p 350 A L Smith American Gothic Fiction an Introduction Continuum 2004 p 79 D David The Cambridge Companion to the Victorian Novel Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 p 186 S Arata Fictions of Loss in the Victorian Fin de Siecle Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 p 111 a b A Chandler A Dream of Order the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century English Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1971 p 4 a b R R Agrawal The Medieval Revival and its Influence on the Romantic Movement Abhinav 1990 p 1 ISBN 978 8170172628 Perpinya Nuria Ruins Nostalgia and Ugliness Five Romantic perceptions of the Middle Ages and a spoonful of Game of Thrones and Avant garde oddity Berlin Logos Verlag 2014 ISBN 978 3 8325 3794 4 C S Lewis The Discarded Image Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1964 ISBN 0 521 47735 2 p 9 A Chandler A Dream of Order the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth century English Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1971 pp 54 7 W P Gerritsen A G Van Melle and T Guest A Dictionary of Medieval Heroes Characters in Medieval Narrative Traditions and Their Afterlife in Literature Theatre and the Visual Arts Boydell amp Brewer 2000 p 256 R E Chandler and K Schwart A New History of Spanish Literature LSU Press 2nd edn 1991 p 29 M Alexander Beowulf a Verse Translation London Penguin Classics 2nd edn 2004 p xviii G S Burgess The Song of Roland London Penguin Classics 1990 p 7 S P Sondrup and G E P Gillespie Nonfictional Romantic Prose Expanding Borders John Benjamins 2004 p 8 a b c d e K F Reinhardt Germany 2000 years Volume 2 Continuum 1981 p 491 A Chandler A Dream of Order the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century English Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1971 p 191 K Curran The Romanesque Revival Religion Politics and Transnational Exchange Penn State Press 2003 p 4 Chandler 1970 pp 65 68 medievalism Oxford Reference Retrieved 2022 08 08 Chandler 1970 p 138 Bennett J A W 1978 Carlyle and the medieval past Reading Medieval Studies IV 3 18 ISSN 0950 3129 Kegel Charles H 1961 Lord John Manners and the Young England Movement Romanticism in Politics The Western Political Quarterly 14 3 691 697 doi 10 2307 444286 ISSN 0043 4078 Chandler 1970 p 153 Chandler 1970 pp 198 203 Cook and Wedderburn 17 lxx Cook and Wedderbun 35 13 Cook and Wedderbun 27 116 G T F 1893 John Ruskin The Sewanee Review 1 4 491 497 ISSN 0037 3052 JSTOR 27527781 a b R Cronin A Chapman and A H Harrison A Companion to Victorian Poetry Wiley Blackwell 2002 p 305 J Rothenstein An Introduction to English Painting I B Tauris 2001 p 115 S Andres The pre Raphaelite art of the Victorian novel narrative challenges to visual gendered boundaries Ohio State University Press 2004 p 247 a b F S Kleiner Gardner s Art Through the Ages A Global History 13th edn Cengage Learning EMEA 2008 p 846 C Harvey and J Press William Morris Design and Enterprise in Victorian Britain Manchester Manchester University Press 1991 pp 77 8 D Shand Tucci and R A Cram Boston Bohemia 1881 1900 Ralph Adams Cram Life and Literature University of Massachusetts Press 1996 p 174 V B Canizaro Architectural Regionalism Collected Writings on Place Identity Modernity and Tradition Princeton Architectural Press 2007 p 196 John F Pile A History of Interior Design 2nd edn Laurence King 2005 p 267 R A Etlin Art Culture and Media Under the Third Reich University of Chicago Press 2002 p 118 Lisa Trumbauer King Ludwig s Castle Germany s Neuschwanstein Bearport 2005 V Ortenberg In Search of the Holy Grail the Quest for the Middle Ages Continuum 2006 p 114 R Chapman The Sense of the Past in Victorian Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1986 pp 36 7 I Anstruther The Knight and the Umbrella An Account of the Eglinton Tournament 1839 London Geoffrey Bles 1963 pp 122 3 J Banham and J Harris William Morris and the Middle Ages a Collection of Essays together with a Catalogue of Works Exhibited at the Whitworth Art Gallery 28 September 8 December 1984 Manchester Manchester University Press 1984 p 76 R Cronin A Chapman and A H Harrison A Companion to Victorian Poetry Wiley Blackwell 2002 p 247 I Bryden Reinventing King Arthur the Arthurian Legends in Victorian Culture Aldershot Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2005 p 79 Examples for the depiction of the Middle Ages in advertising including gender stereotypes Megan Arnott 2019 01 31 Viking Tough How Ads Sell Us Medieval Manhood The Public Medievalist Retrieved 2024 01 15 T G Hahn Robin Hood in Popular Culture Violence Transgression and Justice Boydell amp Brewer 2000 p 87 Norris J Lacy A History of Arthurian Scholarship Boydell amp Brewer Ltd 2006 p 87 S J Umland The Use of Arthurian Legend in Hollywood Film from Connecticut Yankees to Fisher Kings Greenwood 1996 p 105 N Haydock and E L Risden Hollywood in the Holy Land Essays on Film Depictions of the Crusades and Christian Muslim Clashes McFarland 2009 p 187 R C Schlobin The Aesthetics of Fantasy Literature and Art University of Notre Dame Press 1982 p 236 J A Tucker A Sense of Wonder Samuel R Delany Race Identity and Difference Wesleyan University Press 2004 p 91 Jane Yolen Introduction After the King Stories in Honor of J R R Tolkien ed Martin H Greenberg pp vii viii ISBN 0 312 85175 8 D Mackay The Fantasy Role Playing Game a New Performing Art McFarland 2001 ISBN 978 0786450473 p 27 Michael D C Drout J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Scholarship and Critical Assessment Taylor amp Francis 2007 ISBN 978 0415969420 p 380 M C C Adams Echoes of War A Thousand Years of Military History in Popular Culture University Press of Kentucky 2002 p 2 Umberto Eco Dreaming of the Middle Ages in Travels in Hyperreality transl by W Weaver New York Harcourt Brace 1986 pp 61 72 Eco wrote Thus we are at present witnessing both in Europe and America a period of renewed interest in the Middle Ages with a curious oscillation between fantastic neomedievalism and responsible philological examination M W Driver and S Ray eds The medieval hero on screen representations from Beowulf to Buffy McFarland 2004 J Tolmie Medievalism and the Fantasy Heroine Journal of Gender Studies vol 15 No 2 July 2006 pp 145 58 Cary John Lenehan Postmodern Medievalism University of Tasmania November 1994 K Alderson and A Hurrell eds Hedley Bull on International Society London Palgrave Macmillan 2000 p 56 Workman Leslie J Verduin Kathleen Metzger David Metzger David D 1999 Medievalism and the Academy Boydell amp Brewer p 2 ISBN 978 0 85991 532 8 a b c d Monagle Clare 2014 04 18 Sovereignty and Neomedievalism In D arcens Louise Lynch Andrew eds International Medievalism and Popular Culture Cambria Press ISBN 978 1 60497 864 3 A word from the co editor of postmedieval Eileen A Joy www palgrave com Retrieved 2020 11 08 New Medievalist visions Exhibition at the Maughan Library Website archive King s College London www kcl ac uk Retrieved 2020 10 24 Wilson Lain Juggling the Middle Ages Dumbarton Oaks Retrieved 2020 10 24 Nguyen Sophia 2018 10 18 The Juggler s Tale Harvard Magazine Retrieved 2020 10 24 Dame Marketing Communications Web University of Notre D C museum tells an old Notre Dame story Stories Notre Dame Magazine University of Notre Dame Notre Dame Magazine Retrieved 2020 10 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Medievalism amp oldid 1197901265, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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