In "Pornographic Archaeology: Medicine, Medievalism, and the
Invention of the French Nation," Zrinka Stahuljak explores the
connections and fissures between the history of sexuality,
nineteenth-century views of the Middle Ages, and the
conceptualization of modern France. This cultural history uncovers
the determinant role that the sexuality of the Middle Ages played
in nineteenth-century French identity.Stahuljak's provocative study
of sex, blood, race, and love in nineteenth- and early
twentieth-century medical and historical literature demonstrates
how French medicine's obsession with the medieval past helped to
define European sexuality, race, public health policy, marriage,
family, and the conceptualization of the Middle Ages. Stahuljak
reveals the connections between the medieval military order of the
Templars and the 1830 colonization of Algeria, between a
fifteenth-century French marshal and the development of Richard von
Krafft-Ebing's theory of sadism, between courtly love and the 1884
law on divorce. Although the developing discipline of medieval
studies eventually rejected the influence of these medical
philologists, the convergence of medievalism and medicine shaped
modern capitalist French society and established a vision of the
Middle Ages that survives today.
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