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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Don't Be Snobs, Medievalists, Richard Utz
Medievalism And The Subject Of Religion, Richard Utz
Medievalism And The Subject Of Religion, Richard Utz
Richard Utz
Assesses the reasons for the relative disregard of scholarly work on studying the continuity of religious thought and faith by scholarship in Medievalism Studies over the last 25 years. Postulates that medievalism scholars have an ethical obligation to investigate and historicize religion and theology, at least in its temporal manifestations.
Review Of Die Gegenwart Des Mittelalters, By Otto Gerhard Oexle, Medievally Speaking (2015)., Richard Utz
Review Of Die Gegenwart Des Mittelalters, By Otto Gerhard Oexle, Medievally Speaking (2015)., Richard Utz
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Review Of: Renaissance Retrospections: Tudor Views Of The Middle Ages, Ed. Sarah A. Kelen, Journal Of English And Germanic Philology 114.2 (2015): 303-5., Richard Utz
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Professor Richard Utz's Medievalism, Richard Utz
The Year's Work In Medievalism 29 (2014), Richard Utz, E L. Risden, Gale Sigal
The Year's Work In Medievalism 29 (2014), Richard Utz, E L. Risden, Gale Sigal
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Rev. Of On The Trail Of King Arthur: A Journey Into Dark Age Scotland, By Robin Crichton, Arthuriana 24.1 (2014): 141-3., Richard Utz
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Can We Talk About Religion, Please? Medievalism’S Eschewal Of Religion, And Why It Matters, Richard Utz
Can We Talk About Religion, Please? Medievalism’S Eschewal Of Religion, And Why It Matters, Richard Utz
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Medievalism Now, Special Issue (28 [2013]) Of The Year's Work In Medievalism, Richard Utz, E.L. Risden, Karl Fugelso
Medievalism Now, Special Issue (28 [2013]) Of The Year's Work In Medievalism, Richard Utz, E.L. Risden, Karl Fugelso
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.
Past, Present, And Neo, Richard Utz
Past, Present, And Neo, Richard Utz
Richard Utz
At first sight, few cities could have less of a link with the Middle Ages than Atlanta. Founded in 1837 to provide a train terminus to connect the port of Savannah with the Midwest, and about 3,500 miles and 400 years removed from Old Europe, Georgia’s capital seems to be quintessentially modern. Nevertheless, an alert first time visitor might notice dozens of medieval signposts: At the airport’s baggage claim, a colorful screen display invites her to be “swept away to an age of bravery and honor” and partake in “a feast of the eyes and appetite with all the splendor …
Negotiating The Paradigm: Literary Nominalism And The Theory And Practice Of Re-Reading Late Medieval Texts, Richard Utz
Negotiating The Paradigm: Literary Nominalism And The Theory And Practice Of Re-Reading Late Medieval Texts, Richard Utz
Richard Utz
No abstract provided.