Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Medieval English and Dutch Literature in its European Context and the Work of David F. Johnson
- 1 Reconstructing a Lost Manuscript of the Old English Gospels
- 2 The Reception of the Old English Version of Gregory the Great’s Dialogues between the Conquest and the Close of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 An Unrecorded Copy of Heinrich Krebs’s An Anglo-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Dialogues, Printer’s Proofs
- 4 The Body as Media in Early Medieval England
- 5 Who Snatched Grendel in Beowulf 852b?
- 6 ‘Mobile as Wishes’: Anchoritism, Intersubjectivity, and Disability in the Liber confortatorius
- 7 The Presence of the Hands: Sculpture and Script in the Eighth to Twelfth Centuries
- 8 Perceval’s Name and the Gifts of the Mother
- 9 A Relaxed Knight and an Impatient Heroine: Ironizing the Love Quest in the Second Part of the Middle Dutch Ferguut
- 10 Multilingualism in Van den vos Reynaerde and its Reception in Reynardus Vulpes
- 11 Three Characters as Narrator in the Roman van Walewein
- 12 As the Chess-Set Flies: Arthurian Marvels in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale and the Roman van Walewein
- 13 For a Performer’s Personal Use: The Corrector’s Lines in the Lower Margin of the Middle Dutch Lanceloet Manuscript
- 14 ‘Oft leudlez alone’: The Isolation of the Hero and its Consequences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 15 Shifting Skin: Passing as Human, Passing as Fay in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 16 The Lover Caught Between his Mother and his Maiden in Lanseloet van Denemerken
- 17 Afterlives: The Abbey at Amesbury and the ‘Rehabilitation’ of Guinevere in Malory and the Stanzaic Morte Arthur
- 18 The Importance of Being an Arthurian Mother
- Select Bibliography
- Bibliography of David F. Johnson’s Works
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
4 - The Body as Media in Early Medieval England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 October 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Medieval English and Dutch Literature in its European Context and the Work of David F. Johnson
- 1 Reconstructing a Lost Manuscript of the Old English Gospels
- 2 The Reception of the Old English Version of Gregory the Great’s Dialogues between the Conquest and the Close of the Nineteenth Century
- 3 An Unrecorded Copy of Heinrich Krebs’s An Anglo-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Dialogues, Printer’s Proofs
- 4 The Body as Media in Early Medieval England
- 5 Who Snatched Grendel in Beowulf 852b?
- 6 ‘Mobile as Wishes’: Anchoritism, Intersubjectivity, and Disability in the Liber confortatorius
- 7 The Presence of the Hands: Sculpture and Script in the Eighth to Twelfth Centuries
- 8 Perceval’s Name and the Gifts of the Mother
- 9 A Relaxed Knight and an Impatient Heroine: Ironizing the Love Quest in the Second Part of the Middle Dutch Ferguut
- 10 Multilingualism in Van den vos Reynaerde and its Reception in Reynardus Vulpes
- 11 Three Characters as Narrator in the Roman van Walewein
- 12 As the Chess-Set Flies: Arthurian Marvels in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale and the Roman van Walewein
- 13 For a Performer’s Personal Use: The Corrector’s Lines in the Lower Margin of the Middle Dutch Lanceloet Manuscript
- 14 ‘Oft leudlez alone’: The Isolation of the Hero and its Consequences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 15 Shifting Skin: Passing as Human, Passing as Fay in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
- 16 The Lover Caught Between his Mother and his Maiden in Lanseloet van Denemerken
- 17 Afterlives: The Abbey at Amesbury and the ‘Rehabilitation’ of Guinevere in Malory and the Stanzaic Morte Arthur
- 18 The Importance of Being an Arthurian Mother
- Select Bibliography
- Bibliography of David F. Johnson’s Works
- Index
- Tabula Gratulatoria
Summary
UNDERST ANDING THE FUNCTION of media in the early Middle Ages remains a work in progress. While media as a critical approach has much to offer early medieval studies, and with a small (but growing) list of exceptions from recent medieval scholarship notwithstanding, the history, study, and theory of media remains largely conceived of as a discipline of modernity. Media studies today intersect both with theoretical aspects of new materialism, and the cyborg-manifest, techno-culture of the posthuman (i.e., what, following the social notions of Bruno Latour, may be considered the material ecologisation of humanity outside traditional definitions of the ‘human’). Medieval humanity is similarly defined through complex transactions of the material, technological, and ideological practices; this (post)humanity is in part defined by the way, as corporeal entities, medieval bodies also function as media, not as senders or receivers, but as a medium for information and communication within the ecology of premodern media discourse.
In times of cultural disruption or social breakdown, early medieval bodies operate as physically hybrid media, and as informational focal points for crises of numerous kinds – criminal, moral, national, salvific – in order to highlight these crises and then propose some form of ideological and practical correction. In early medieval England, literary, legal, and historical texts highlight the cultural significance of bodies qua media: the mounting of Grendel's arm in the Old English epic Beowulf, hagiographic accounts of the martyrdom of King Edmund by Viking invaders in 869, and the spiritual and juridical fragmentation of bodies in tenth- and eleventh-century excommunication formulae and law codes. The violence done to these bodies is more than an individual physical act, and also more than just symbolic or prosthetic moments rhetorically appropriating and extending the body as a textual trope. Such moments of somatic violence reveal the medieval body to be a material node in a social network of secular, spiritual, and juridical representations preoccupied with relationships between bodies, body parts, money, worship, words, and information; to employ Armand Mattelart's term, a constellation of communicational practices.
In Mattelart's formulation, information and the media technologies which carry it must be considered together with cultural practices that share their circulatory qualities, and the line between media and anything else that moves across or through a social landscape remains indistinct.
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- Medieval English and Dutch Literatures: the European ContextEssays in Honour of David F. Johnson, pp. 65 - 88Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2022
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