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You're searching for faculty members in:
Medieval Studies

Brown Faculty
11 matches found.

 Sheila Bonde
Administration
History of Art and Architecture, Department of
Medieval Studies
Sheila Bonde's research combines archaeology, architectural history, spatial analysis and digital humanities. She is co-director of the MonArch (Monastic Archaeology) research team that focuses on three monasteries in northern France: Saint-Jean-des-Vignes in Soissons, Notre Dame d'Ourscamp and the Carthusian monastery at Bourgfontaine. This project involves excavation, study of surviving architecture and texts, and digital reconstruction and representation.
 Michel-André Bossy
French Studies, Department of
Comparative Literature, Department of
Medieval Studies
Michel-André Bossy studies medieval cultural connections between France and its neighbors, especially during the period of the troubadours and the Hundred Years' War. His fields include medieval French, Anglo-Norman, and Occitan literature, 12th- to 15th-century lyric poetry, and social interpretations of literature. His emphases involve literary patronage and court politics, troubadours (especially Guiraut Riquier), manuscript compilations, cultural rivalries among book collectors, Chrétien de Troyes, Froissart.
 Elizabeth Johnson Bryan
English, Department of
Medieval Studies
Elizabeth Bryan researches medieval Brut Chronicle narratives and their evolving interpretations, medieval and early modern palaeography and codicology, theories of authorship and textual production in manuscript cultures, and Early Middle English vernacularity. She has published Collaborative Meaning in Medieval Scribal Culture: The Otho Laȝamon (Michigan, 1999) and articles on Laȝamon and on historical reception of the Middle English prose Brut.
 Susan Ashbrook Harvey
Religious Studies, Department of
Medieval Studies
I specialize in ancient Christianity of the Syriac and Byzantine traditions. I work on religion and the senses, religious culture and social history, women and gender, monasticism, asceticism, the cult of saints, hymnography, and historiography.
 Ronald Martinez
Italian Studies, Department of
Medieval Studies
I am currently finishing, in collaboration with Robert M. Durling, an edition with translation and commentary of Dante's Divine Comedy (the first two volumes, Inferno and Purgatorio, have been published). I am also preparing a book-length study on Dante's appropriation of liturgy for narrative and linguistic aspects of his work.
 William S. Monroe
Medieval Studies
Medieval manuscripts and early printed books.
History of Europe in the early Middle Ages, especially the history of the papacy in the Carolingian period.
 Stratis Papaioannou
Classics, Department of
Medieval Studies
Stratis Papaioannou studies post-classical Greek literary and cultural history, especially late antique and Byzantine writing in its social context. His wider interests are in premodern book and letter-writing cultures, literary aesthetics, and concepts of gender, self, and desire. Papaioannou has published on Gregory of Nazianzus and, especially, Michael Psellos, while his work is divided in interpretative study, critical edition, and translation.
 Joseph Michael Pucci
Classics, Department of
Medieval Studies
Joseph Pucci has research interests in late antiquity, late Latin, medieval Latin, and comparative literary history with a focus on literary allusion, ancient education, and poetic genres. He also has interests in biography as a literary form (and as practitioner) and in literature and the American presidency.
 Amy Remensnyder
History, Department of
Medieval Studies
Amy G. Remensnyder's research focuses on the cultural and religious history of medieval Europe. The author of numerous articles and of a book about monastic culture and memory in southern France, she is currently finishing a book about how pre-modern Spanish Christians used the Virgin Mary as a symbol of the conquest and conversion of non-Christians in the Iberian Peninsula and in early colonial Mexico.
 Geoffrey Russom
English, Department of
Medieval Studies
Geoffrey Russom has research interests in Old English, Middle English, Old Norse, and Old Irish literary cultures; linguistic theory; theory of poetic form; and the concept of 'barbarian' in imperialist writing.
 Mercedes Vaquero
Hispanic Studies, Department of
Medieval Studies
My teaching and research interests include the Medieval Spanish epic, chronicles, ballads, and oral tradition, and I also regularly offer a graduate/undergraduate course on Spanish Philology. Along with numerous articles, contributions to books, and bibliographies on Medieval literature, I recently published a book on an unknown prosification of the Poema de Fernan Gonzalez (Oretania Ediciones, 2008), and another one on women and the epic (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2005). I currently work on several research projects on the epic and private libraries.

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