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Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2012) 42 (1): 201–224.
Published: 01 January 2012
... the covenant was itself understood as a marriage. Focusing especially on poems by two canonical Puritan poets, Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor, this essay argues that this fascination with the interplay between freedom and restraint — manifest in the form as well as the content of their poetry — produced...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 397–429.
Published: 01 September 2021
... copied and illuminated roughly eighty years earlier, closely resemble this so-called game, and a dozen cities recorded iterations beginning in the thirteenth century and continuing into the fifteenth. The repetition suggests the workings of a scenario , which performance studies theorist Diana Taylor...
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Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2018) 48 (1): 153–182.
Published: 01 January 2018
...Amanda Taylor The sixteenth century witnessed the publication of landmark texts on anatomy and allegory: De humani corporis fabrica or On the Fabric of the Human Body by Andreas Vesalius in 1543 and The Faerie Queene by Edmund Spenser, published first in 1590. Each of these texts has received...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2012) 42 (3): 567–596.
Published: 01 September 2012
...Claire Taylor Jones This essay explores how the performance of the liturgy was integrated into late medieval education of nuns, for whom liturgical text conveyed both linguistic and spiritual knowledge. In southern German Observant Dominican convents, Latin language was systematically taught...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 477–486.
Published: 01 September 2021
... of Magnificent Entertainment publications. Taken collectively, these texts reveal a number of answers to the question, Whither the bodies? They direct attention back to James, his body, his boredom, his performance. Nora imagines these concepts as discrete. While Taylor's introduction of performance...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 387–395.
Published: 01 September 2021
... of substitution or replacement—to read pamphlets instead of plays—but to foreground, in one of performance studies’ definitive moves, what Diana Taylor calls the “repertoire” of gestures, movement, orality, and other ephemeral signifiers invoked in a plethora of nondramatic texts. And while repertoire...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2013) 43 (2): 419–443.
Published: 01 May 2013
... English Almanacs Laura Williamson Ambrose Saint Mary’s College Notre Dame, Indiana In 1653 and only weeks before his death, England’s famed water-­poet and local travel writer, John Taylor, undertook his last...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 509–531.
Published: 01 September 2021
... model for conceptualizing mountebanks would be Diana Taylor's “performatic,” an adjectival form of performance from the Spanish performático that accommodates at the same time the presence of theatricality—the representational world of schemes and signs—and performativity—the presentational world...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 453–473.
Published: 01 September 2021
... of Michigan Press, 2017); Kathryn Reklis, Theology and the Kinesthetic Imagination: Jonathan Edwards and the Making of Modernity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014); and Diana Taylor, The Archive and the Repertoire: Performing Cultural Memory in the Americas (Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2003...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2012) 42 (3): 749–751.
Published: 01 September 2012
... of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 42:3, Fall 2012 DOI 10.1215/10829636-­1720661  © 2012 by Duke University Press Fallon, Stephen M. Milton and Literary Virtue  181 – 200 Furey, Constance Relational Virtue: Anne Bradstreet, Edward Taylor, and Puritan Marriage  201 – 224 Hallett, Nicky...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2022) 52 (3): 407–413.
Published: 01 September 2022
... the impoverishment of modern moral philosophy in the face of radical evil. Though most of them would cavil with the rubric “virtue ethics,” all felt the strong desire to find alternatives to the dominant moral philosophy of emotivism. Iris Murdoch, Gillian Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Charles Taylor, and Alasdair...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2021) 51 (3): 497–507.
Published: 01 September 2021
... of “performance” to any kind of “theater,” dramatic or otherwise. As Diana Taylor notes in her savvy effort to restore the embodied repertoire to a history dominated by the scripted means of the archive , these principles “exist in a constant state of interaction.” 5 That interactivity implies, or might...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2024) 54 (2): 299–332.
Published: 01 May 2024
... by Siobhain Bly Calkin, in Calkin, Hisham Al Khatib, and Danielle Taylor, Relic Tales: A Descriptive Catalogue of Medieval Narratives Recounting the Circulation of Christian Passion Relics in Mixed Muslim-Christian Contexts (Toronto: Open Library, 2023), ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub/app/uploads/sites/2834...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2014) 44 (3): 503–529.
Published: 01 September 2014
... of Lindisfarne was not finally printed under Robert Hegge’s own name until 1777; a limited edition of 250 copies edited by the surgeon and antiquary John Brough Taylor was also published in 1816.22 But it is signifi- cant, at a time when manuscripts still coexisted with printed books in schol- arly as well...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2007) 37 (2): 305–334.
Published: 01 May 2007
... of concern with this topic becomes apparent if we compare it with a contemporary discussion of Matthew 25 in a sermon written by the Wycliffite preacher William Taylor. In his brief comments on the passage, Taylor perceives the needy described in the gospel as physically disabled. After explaining...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2022) 52 (3): 503–531.
Published: 01 September 2022
... such as brothels and theaters. In 1612–14, the apprentice army attacked one brothel in Shoreditch so persistently and viciously that it had to be demolished. In 1617, the Shrove Tuesday riots wrecked a theater and destroyed several houses. 53 One contemporary writer, John Taylor, describes in 1619 how on Shrove...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2011) 41 (2): 435–455.
Published: 01 May 2011
... italorum sapientia]. Edited and translated by Jason Taylor. Introduction by Robert Miner. New 438  Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies / 41.2 / 2011 Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2010. xxxiv, 143 pp. $55.00. [A new critical edition of the Latin text with facing-­page English...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2013) 43 (1): 173–190.
Published: 01 January 2013
..., ed. Gary Taylor and John Lavagnino (Oxford: Oxford Uni- versity Press, 2007), 2 – 11. All subsequent quotations from Middleton’s works are from this edition cited by line numbers. 17 See R. C. Bald, ed., Honourable Entertainments by Thomas Middleton (London: Malone Society...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2018) 48 (1): 1–9.
Published: 01 January 2018
... physiology and literature, Amanda Taylor connects Vesalius to book II of The Faerie Queene, where Edmund Spenser allegorizes the body in relation to the issue of temperance. By the time he first published this epic romance in 1590, the enthusiasm for anatomical knowledge that Vesalius had spearheaded...
Journal Article
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies (2016) 46 (3): 603–628.
Published: 01 September 2016
... (and by no means necessarily “explicit”) acts of hermeneutic scrutiny so as to gauge how their contingent objectives comport with moral and spiritual “hyper-­goods” (Charles Taylor’s term of art) without which their discrete practices and pur- suits would lack all rational coordination and intelligibility...