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Sommario
Introduction: Directions of Thought - The Middle Ages at the Mid-century R. D. Perry and Benjamin A. Saltzman; Part I. Politics: 1. Outside History: Fanon's Negative Manicheism D. Vance Smith; 2. 'The noblest blood God ever made': W. E. B. Du Bois's Medievalism in the Contexts of the World Wars Cord J. Whitaker; 3. Ernst Kantorowicz, Carl Schmitt, and the University of California Regents Nancy van Deusen; 4. Hannah Arendt's Middle Ages for the Left R. D. Perry; Part II. Arts: 5. Curtius and Jung: Commonplaces, Archetypes, and Literature's Collective Unconscious Emily V. Thornbury; 6. Old English at the Midcentury: Poetry, Scholarship, and Fiction in Britain in the 1940s and 1950s Clare A. Lees; 7. Erwin Panofsky's Neo-Kantian Humanism and the Purported Relation between Gothic Architecture and Scholasticism C. Oliver O'Donnell; 8. 'Are women human?': Authority, Gender, and Dante in Dorothy L. Sayers's Scholarship Helen Brookman; Part III. Epochs: 9. Periodization Trouble: Auerbach, Huizinga, and the Question of Medieval Realism Jane O. Newman; 10. Medieval Mysticism and the Making of Simone Weil Anna Kelner; 11. Hermeneutics and the Medieval Horizon: Zumthor, Jauss, Barthes, and Gadamer Benjamin A. Saltzman; Afterword Martin Jay; Bibliography; Index.
Info autore
Benjamin A. Saltzman is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Chicago.R. D. Perry is Assistant Professor, Department of English and Literary Arts, University of Denver.
Riassunto
Revealing the profound influence of the Middle Ages on mid-twentieth-century thought and the influence of these intellectual endeavours on present-day politics, art, and history, this interdisciplinary collection reveals a surprising undercurrent in the work of a diverse group of thinkers and traces their ongoing legacy in intellectual history.
Prefazione
This book examines how mid-twentieth-century intellectuals' engagement with the Middle Ages shaped politics, art, and history.