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Essays on aspects of iconography as manifested in the material
culture of medieval England. Professor Jane Hawkes has devoted her
career to the study of medieval stone, exploring its iconographies,
symbolic significances and scholarly contexts, and shedding light
on the obscure and understudied sculpted stone monuments of
Anglo-Saxon England. This volume builds on her scholarly interests,
offering new engagements with medieval culture and the current
scholarly methodologies that shape the discipline. The contributors
approach several significantobjects and texts from the early and
later Middle Ages, working across several disciplinary backgrounds
and periods, largely focusing on the Insular World as it intersects
with wider global contexts of the period. The chapters cover a wide
range of subjects, from the material culture of baptism, to the
material, symbolic and iconographic consideration of the artistic
outputs of the Insular world, with essays on sculpture, metalwork,
glass and manuscripts,to ideas of stone and salvation in both
material and textual contexts, to intellectual puzzles and patterns
- both material and mathematic - to consideration of the ways in
which the conversion to Christianity played out on the landscape.
MEG BOULTON is Research Affiliate and Visiting Lecturer in the
History of Art Department at the University of York; MICHAEL D.J.
BINTLEY is Lecturer in Early Medieval Literature and Culture at
Birkbeck, University of London. Contributors: Elizabeth Alexander,
Michael Brennan, Melissa Herman, Mags Mannion, Thomas Pickles,
Harry Stirrup, Heidi Stoner, Colleen Thomas, Philippa Turner,
Carolyn Twomey,
Calamity Jane is a very small dog who always tries to do what is
right. Even so, on Christmas Eve, her own curiosity and some bad
advice from Sneakers the cat lead her into trouble. Calamity loves
Christmas, and she can hardly wait to open all those presents under
the tree. Sneakers tells her that one little present will never be
missed, and so she rips and she shreds and she pulls those presents
apart-and she finds everything she wants for Christmas. But now the
presents are open, and there's a great, big mess! Calamity tries to
put the presents back together, but nothing seems to help; the tape
sticks to her paws, and there are bits and pieces of Christmas
paper everywhere. Whatever will she do? Fortunately, most
calamities can be resolved with the help of someone who loves you,
especially a grandmother. This children's story tells the tale of a
little dog who gets into big trouble on Christmas Eve after
following her cat friend's bad advice.
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