1: Miniature Manifestos for a Post/medieval Studies, edited by Eileen A. It is also an ephemeral gathering in the present tense. Authors in both volumes, in various ways, lay claim to the act(s) of manifesting, and also anti-manifesting, as a collective endeavor that works on behalf of the future without laying any belligerent claims upon it, where we might craft new spaces for the University-at-large, which is also a University that wanders, that is never just somewhere, dwelling in the partitive - of a particular place - but rather, seeks to be everywhere, always on the move, pandemic, uncontainable, and always to-come, while also being present/between us (manifest). Gathering together a rowdy multiplicity of voices from within medieval and early modern studies, these two volumes seek to extend and intensify a conversation about how to shape premodern studies, and also the humanities, in the years ahead. The essays, manifestos, rants, screeds, pleas, soliloquies, telegrams, broadsides, eulogies, songs, harangues, confessions, laments, and acts of poetic terrorism in these two volumes - which collectively form an academic “rave” - were culled, with some later additions, from roundtable sessions at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in 20, organized by postmedieval: a journal for medieval cultural studies and the BABEL Working Group (“Burn After Reading: Miniature Manifestos for a Post/medieval Studies,” “Fuck This: On Letting Go,” and “Fuck Me: On Never Letting Go”) and George Washington University’s Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (“The Future We Want: A Collaboration”), respectively. Reflecting on both the insights and limitations of Ohly’s penetrating account of medieval significs (the meaning of things in the world as expressed through words), the essay poses several art historical challenges to Ohly’s vision of medieval works of art and architecture, while arguing for the continuing relevance of his thought for art historical consideration of the meaning of things in the Middle Ages. This essay serves as an introduction to Friedrich Ohly’s life and work and offers an analytic orientation to the methodological and historical questions taken up by this special issue of Gesta dedicated to medieval conceptions of significationes rerum (the signification of things). In his landmark 1958 essay, “Vom geistigen Sinn des Wortes im Mittelalter” (On the Spiritual Sense of the Word in the Middle Ages), the cultural philologist Friedrich Ohly described the medieval meaning of things (Dingbedeutung) as authorized by modes of scriptural analysis but exceeding the boundaries of sacred texts to include monuments, artifacts, and materials. Chellis Glendinning, Dr.Influenced by typological exegesis and traditions of theological- philosophical speculatio, medieval people understood materials and material things as participants in powerful economies of signification. In order to broadcast NPR, KRZA is required to broadcast all of NPR's underwriting.Ĭolorado Land Grants Conference 58 Minutesīridging the Great Divide : Moving Beyond Class & Cultural Differences. Sandia & LANL's Impact on Indigenous Peoples - Six Native Women Speak Donna House, Mildred Chino, Chief Verna Teller, Ramona Montoya, Rose Marie Tsigowanu-Tunn, & Kathy Powohge Oweenge Sanchezįull version inlcuding Taos community comments on Walmart's NPR underwriting. Taos Town Council Passes LANL Area G Resolution Shauna Williams, Juman & Magduline Khweis Please email us at about any problems in listening to segments. Higher quality sound was broadcast on the radio and may be available for purchase on our CDs. We are using compressed 24bps mp3 files to allow those with dialup modems to listen. You may need to download RealPlayer or Windows Media Player if it is not installed in your browser. Click on the underlined links below to hear the segment. They may not be reproduced in any form except one copy to listen to on your own computer or mp3 player.īelow are listed some of our segments now online. National Federation of Community BroadcastersĪ Showcase & Workshop for New Public RadioĪll audio segments and photos are copyright 2003-2008 by Cultural Energy and/or the creators. Xi Creating Media Voices for Youth, Arts & Activism in Northern New Mexico Ixi K C E I - Cultural Energy Independent Radio & Television Cultural Energy Archive 05 - Media Voices of Northern New Mexico
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