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A consideration of the ways in which the past was framed and
remembered in the pre-modern world. The training and use of memory
was crucial in medieval culture, given the limited literacy at the
time, but to date, very little thought has been given to the
complex and disparate ways in which the theory and practices of
memoryinteracted with the inherently unstable concepts of time and
gender at the time. The essays in this volume, drawing on
approaches from applied poststructural and queer theory among
others, reassess those ideologies, meanings and responses generated
by the workings of memory within and over "time". Ultimately, they
argue for the inherent instability of the traditional
gender-time-memory matrix (within which men are configured as the
recorders of "history"and women as the repositories of a more
inchoate familial and communal knowledge), showing the Middle Ages
as a locus for a far more fluid conceptualization of time and
memory than has previously been considered. Elizabeth Cox is
Lecturer in Old English at Swansea University; Roberta Magnani is
Lecturer in Medieval Literature at Swansea University; Liz Herbert
McAvoy is Professor of Medieval Literature at Swansea University.
Contributors: Anne E. Bailey, Daisy Black, Elizabeth Cox, Fiona
Harris-Stoertz, Ayoush Lazikani, Liz Herbert McAvoy, Pamela E.
Morgan, William Rogers, Patricia Skinner, Victoria Turner.
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