Emotions in a Crusading Context is the first book-length study of the
emotional rhetoric of crusading. It investigates the ways in which a
number of emotions and affective displays — primarily fear, anger,
and weeping — were understood, represented, and utilized in twelfth-
and thirteenth-century western narratives of the crusades, making use
of a broad range of comparative material to gauge the distinctiveness
of those texts: crusader letters, papal encyclicals, model sermons,
chansons de geste, lyrics, and an array of theological and
philosophical treatises. In addition to charting continuities and
changes over time in the emotional landscape of crusading, this study
identifies the underlying influences which shaped how medieval authors
represented and used emotions; analyzes the passions crusade
participants were expected to embrace and reject; and assesses whether
the idea of crusading created a profoundly new set of attitudes
towards emotions. Emotions in a Crusading Context calls on scholars of
the crusades to reject the traditional methodological approach of
taking the emotional descriptions embedded within historical
narratives as straightforward reflections of protagonists' lived
feelings, and in so doing challenges the long historiographical
tradition of reconstructing participants' beliefs and experiences from
these texts. Within the history of emotions, Stephen J. Spencer
demonstrates that, despite the ongoing drive to develop new
methodologies for studying the emotional standards of the past,
typified by experiments in 'neurohistory', the social constructionist
(or cultural-historical) approach still has much to offer the
historian of medieval emotions.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780192569868
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter