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Fall 2003: Undergraduate Courses
MI 206 Castles and Courts in Medieval Europe
J. Boulton
M W 11:45-12:35
The expanded title of this course is Castles, Castellanies, and
Courts in Latin Europe, 900-1650. This course will examine the
high period in the history of the castle - a combination of fort
and residence - of the castellany or district subjected to the
domination of a castle, and of the household and court of the
kings, princes, and barons who built such residences and organized
their lives and their activities within their various structures.
It will first consider the castle as a form of fortification,
review briefly the history of fortifications before 900, and examine
the ways in which lords and their builders steadily improved their
defensive capabilities in response to new knowledge and to new
methods and tools of siegecraft. It will then examine the relationship
of the castle to the contemporary forms of non-fortified or semi-fortified
house, and finally its relationship to the lordly household (the
body of servants organized into numerous departments associated
with particular rooms or wings of the castle) and with the court
(or body of soldiers, officers, allies, students, and temporary
guests) who filled the castle when the lord was present. The course
will conclude with an examination of the history of the castellany
as a form of jurisdiction. The course will concentrate on the
castles of the British Isles and France, but will examine the
great variety of types found throughout Latin Europe. The course
will require students to participate in discussions, to write
two short papers, and to take three in-class tests and a final
examination.
Students enrolled in HIST 206 must also take HIST 206T, a tutorial.
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MI 301 01,02 Ancient and Medieval
Philosophy
D. Burrell, S. Dumont
A study of the ways in which Plato and Aristotle set out to understand
our world, followed by a consideration of the various ways in
which Greek thought was transformed at the hands of later pagan
(Plotinus), Muslim (al-Farabi, Avicenna), Jewish (Maimonides),
and Christian (Anselm, Aquinas) thinkers. The key point of contact
and of difference will be the one which galvanized them, and remains
contemporary as well: the universe and the recurring questions
surrounding its origins.
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MI 307 Middle Ages I
D. Hobbins
The early Middle Ages, roughly the years 400-1000, marked the
transition in Europe from the Roman Empire to a separate culture,
distinct from the Christian and Orthodox East and as well from
the Muslim cultures all around the Mediterranean. Germanic peoples
set up new kingdoms and new ways of life, the Irish came into
their own as a people of poetry and religion, Christian monks
and bishops re-shaped the spiritual landscape. This course will
focus upon politics and upon culture, concluding in the world
of Charlemagne and the Anglo-Saxon kings. Students will write
two papers and a mid-term, and will read extensively in translated
sources from the early medieval period.
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MI 309 Muslim and Christian
in the Medieval World
O. R. Constable
M W 1:55-2:45
The encounter between Christianity and Islam began in the seventh
century, AD, the time of the Prophet Muhammad. Within a few centuries,
Islamic rule had spread across the southern Mediterranean world
from Syria to Spain. This shift initiated a long term relationship
- sometimes hostile and sometimes peaceful - between Christians
and Muslims in these regions. The neighboring presence of Islam
had an enduring influence on medieval Christian theology, philosophy,
medical knowledge, literature, culture, imagination, art, and
material life. Likewise, developments in Christian Europe and
Byzantium, especially the Crusades, affected the Islamic world.
This course will trace the history of the Christian-Muslim relationship,
from its beginnings in the early medieval period until the Renaissance
(fifteenth century). The heritage of this medieval encounter still
has profound resonance in the modern world of today.
Students enrolled in HIST 309/309A must also take HIST 309T, a
tutorial.
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MI 310A 100 Years' War
D. Hobbins
MWF 12:50-1:40
This course surveys the history of France and England during the fourteenth
and early fifteenth centuries. Major themes include the dynastic
claims of English kings upon the crown of France, the Black Death,
the rise of the Burgundian state, the growth of a middle class,
the question of growing national identity, and new trends in the
arts. The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries in northern Europe
have traditionally been seen as a period of excess and autumnal
decay, as a decline from an earlier period of order and tranquility,
or as a "calamitous" age, a distant mirror of our own
troubled world. To what extent have these views colored our perception
of the later Middle Ages, and how does our periodization of the
modern world, with its commencement (according to the standard
model) in 1500, exert pressure on us to find in the fourteenth
and fifteenth centuries signs of imminent collapse? Literary and
artistic sources for the period are particularly rich, and invite
a broad, interdisciplinary approach. A series of 5-page-papers
emphasizing close readings of primary sources.
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MI 332 Survey of Medieval Architecture.
MWF 12:50-1:40
P. San Vito
This course will introduce students to the architecture of the
Middle Ages (ca. 300 - 1400). This introductory course will begin
with Early Christian architecture and culminates in the great
Gothic Cathedrals of northern Europe. Students will not only be
invited to consider the development of the architectural forms
of the church building, but will also be able to consider the
degree to which the changing nature of the church building reflects
broader issues in the history of Christianity in the Middle Ages.
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MI 337 The Journey in Medieval Literature
T. Bays
T H 3:30-4:45
This course explores "the literature of errancy--knightly
and otherwise." Texts representing a range of genres, regions,
and generations will enable assessment of those factors' effect
on the shape of the journey. Assignments: 3 papers and a Final
Exam, plus informal responses and an oral presentation. Texts
(in Modern English translation): Dante's Divine Comedy, Chaucer's
Canterbury Tales, and Cervantes' Don Quixote.
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MI 371 Survey of French Literature
M. Boulton
M W 11:45-1:00
The course is designed to serve as an introduction to French literature
of the Middle Ages, the Renaissance and the Seventeenth Century.
We will read a combination of representative whole works and selections
from authors of each period, including Marie de France, Chrétien
de Troyes, Marguerite de Navarre, Ronsard, DuBellay, Labé,
Montaigne, Molière and Racine. In addition to acquiring
a basic familiarity with early French literature, students will
be introduced to the vocabulary of literary criticism. Close readings,
some oral presentations, and active participation in classroom
discussions are expected. All discussions and written work will
be in French. Three moderate length papers (5-7 pages) and a final
exam will be required.
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MI 371E 01, 02 Survey of Spanish Lit I 01,
02
D. Nuñyez
T H 9:30-10:45 (01); 11:00-12:15 (02)
Prerequisite: ROSP 202 or above; ROSP 310 (Textual Analysis) highly
recommended.
This course will survey major literary works-epic, lyric, prose
fiction, and drama-from the medieval, renaissance, and baroque
periods in Spain. Emphasis will be on cultural as well as literary
history and on methods of literary analysis. Works to be studied
include: Poema de mio Çid; Gonzalo de Berceo, Milagros
de Nuestra Señora; Juan Ruiz, Libro de buen amor; Jorge
Manrique, "Coplas"; Fernando de Rojas, Celestina; Golden
Age poetry (Garcilaso, Fray Luis de León, San Juan de la
Cruz, Quevedo, Góngora); Lazarillo de Tormes; Cervantes,
Don Quijote (excerpts); Lope de Vega, Fuenteovejuna; and Calderón
de la Barca, La vida es sueño. Selections from the required
literary anthology will be supplemented by class handouts. Required
course work includes three short papers in Spanish (20% of final
grade), class presentation and participation (20%), midterm exam
(25%), and final exam (35%). This course satisfies the early Spanish
peninsular requirement. Note for continuing students: ROSP 371
replaces ROSP 318. If you have completed ROSP 318 prior to Fall
2003 you may not take ROSP 371.
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MI 371I Introduction to Italian
Lit I
C. Moevs
T H 2:00-3:15
An introduction to the close reading and textual analysis of
representative texts from the Duecento through the Renaissance,
including Lentini, Guinizzelli, Cavalcanti, Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio,
Poliziano, Machiavelli, and Ariosto. We will trace the profile
of Italian literary history in this period, setting the texts
in their cultural and historical context (including music, art,
and architecture), with attention to the changing understanding
of human nature and the physical world in these centuries. Requirements
include class participation, short essays, a midterm and a final.
Taught in Italian. Pre-requisite: ROIT 202 or equivalent. The
course is required for majors and supplementary majors.
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MI 377 Engendering War, Business
and Law
K. Biddick
T H 11:00-12:15
(In a recent Foreign Affairs article, US Defense Secretary. Rumsfield
envisaged war as an extension of the free-market ideology: "we
must promote a more entrepreneurial approach. [One] that anticipates
them before they appear and develop new capabilities to dissuade
and deter them." At the same time the ENRON code of ethics
book was selling on Ebay for $40.) This course explores a historical
genealogy between the alliance of enterprise war and enterprise
fraud. It explores the emergence of bureaucratic accounting systems
in 12th century Europe and relates the emergence of bureaucratic
accounting to the waging of the Crusades and to the development
of popular best-selling Arthurian romances of the day. The purpose
of the course is to explore this history as a source for rethinking
ethics today in the business of war, accounting, and entertainment.
Enroll with your ethical antennae turned to ON. We will study
12th-century breakthroughs in royal accounting procedures as a
powerful formal rhetoric with links to law and war. As a formal
rhetoric capable of abstracting space, accounting transformed
the social space of the body, household, and the court and also
inaugurated new notions of social time. We will also consider
how the same court patronized new forms of Arthurian romance.
We will ask how romance renders violence and forgets the violence
perpetrated by Christians, elsewhere, especially on the crusades
(First Crusade (1096-1102); Second Crusade (1147-49); Third Crusade
(1189-92); Fourth Crusade (1202-04). Finally, we will question
how accounting and violence intersects with the treatment of Jewish
communities residing in England during the twelfth century. Your
participation in the course will be evaluated according to the
following guidelines: Attendance (forfeited after third unexcused
absence): 15, Four short papers: 40, Final project: 45.
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MI 395 Christian Theological
Traditions I
J. Wawrykow
M W F 9:30-10:25
A survey of Christian theology from the end of the New Testament
period to the eve of the Reformation. Through the close reading
of primary texts, the course focuses on the Christology of such
influential thinkers as Origen, Athanasius, Augustine, Anselm
and Aquinas. How do these thinkers understand the person and work
of Jesus Christ? What are the Christological problems that they
tried to resolve? How do the different Christologies of these
thinkers reflect their differing conceptions of the purpose and
methods of 'theology'? Some attention will also be given to non-theological
representations of Christ. How does the art of the early and medieval
periods manifest changes in the understanding of the significance
of Jesus? This course is obligatory for all first and second majors
but is open to others who have completed the university requirements
of theology and who wish to gain a greater fluency in the history
of Christian thought.
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MI 411B Dante I
F. Ferrucci
T H 12:30-1:45
The course will be a journey inside the ultimate nightmare in
the whole history of Literature: Dante's Inferno - a prison for
eternity, accurately subdivided like a model-dungeon, perfectly
organized, with no possible evasions, no bribery to the guardians,
no leagues between inmates, crossed through by two traveling poets,
one of them relating about their trip with outstanding precision,
the other guiding him after rescuing him and becoming one of the
great characters of the entire Poem. We will study this great
metaphor of a cosmic incarceration created by Dante' genius, and
the amazing variety of the world of the convicted felons, and
the philosophical ideas that rule this descent into the womb of
the Earth where Lucifer, the utmost convict, lies. Students will
be asked to write their individual reports according to the choice
of their favored ward.
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MI 412 Politics and Religion in Medieval Europe
J. Van Engen
T H 2:00-3:15
This course considers the intersection between political action
and religious claims in medieval Europe. Virtually all the powers-kings
and popes, princes and bishops-claimed to act on religious principle
and in accord with transcendent notions of virtue or world order.
And yet they fought bitterly with each other, with words and with
swords, and mutually condemned one another. The course will begin
with the showdown between emperors and popes known as the Investiture
Contest, then take up pivotal figures like Pope Innocent III,
King Frederick II, and Pope Boniface IX, and conclude with sections
on the Spiritual Franciscans and on conciliarism. Two papers based
on primary sources, one midterm, and a final.
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MI 416 From Roland to the Holy Grail
M. Boulton
M W 3:00-4:15
This course is designed as an introduction to the literature
of twelfth- and thirteenth-century France, including such works
as the Chanson de Roland, the Lais of Marie de France, the Romances
of Chrétien de Troyes, the poetry of the troubadours and
trouvères, and the Quête du saint Graal. We will
pay particular attention to medieval obsessions with love and
chivalry, and examine how different writers reconciled these concerns
with the often conflicting demands of Christianity. Classes, conducted
in French, will combine discussion, lecture and student presentations.
Two 7-page papers, class participation, and a final examination
will be required.
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MI 428 Anglo-Saxon England
A. O'Leary
T H 9:30-10:45
Who are the English? In this course we will explore the origins
of England, and discuss the social, cultural, and political changes
which took place on the island of Britain from the pre-Christian
era until the twelfth century. Beginning with an exploration of
Celtic Britain, we will then analyze the principal Anglo-Saxon
kings and their achievements; the historical significance of English
poems such as Beowulf; the lasting effects of the Vikings in England;
and the Norman conquest of England in the eleventh century. General
themes will include the problems associated with Anglo-Saxon Christianity,
how the English portrayed their own history, England's relationship
with her neighbors (e.g. Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and France),
and the contributions of medieval England to European history.
Requirements include participation in class discussion, midterm
and final exams, and a research paper on a topic of the student's
choice.
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MI 430C Intro to Old English
K. O'Brien O'Keefe
T H 9:30-10:45
Canst þu þis gewrit understandan? Want to?
"Introduction to Old English" will give you the tools
to read a wide variety of writings from Anglo-Saxon England. Approximately
half the course is dedicated to getting students up and running
with the language, and the rest will provide practical experience
in reading and discussing Old English works on monsters, saints,
and heroes. In-class discussion will cover questions of cultural
difference, translation, subjectivity, and otherness. Students
in the course will get hands on experience with facsimile texts
in the library and will work as well with on-line and CD-rom resources.
No prior experience with Old or Middle English is necessary for
this course. Required work: Mid-term assessment, final examination,
daily class participation, short paper, one or two in-class reports.
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MI 431 Late Antique and Early
Christian Art
C. Barber
T H 2:00-3:15
Art in late antiquity has traditionally been characterized as
an art in decline, but this judgment is relative, relying on standards
formulated for art of other periods. Challenging this assumption,
we will examine the distinct and powerful transformations within
the visual culture of the period between the third and the eighth
centuries AD. This period witnesses the mutation of the institutions
of the Roman Empire into those of the Christian Byzantine Empire.
The fundamental change in religious identity that was the basis
for this development had a direct impact upon the visual material
that survives from this period, such that the eighth century witnesses
extensive and elaborate debates about the status and value of
religious art in Jewish, Moslem, Byzantine, and Carolingian society.
This course will examine the underlying conditions that made images
so central to cultural identity at this period.
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MI 438B Falling in Love in the
Middle Ages
J. Mann
T H 2:00-3:15
During the medieval period, love became a central literary subject,
one might say, the central literary subject, replacing war as
the defining experience in which human beings discovered their
destiny and affirmed their identity. What made it so endlessly
fascinating? Does medieval love have a special character of its
own? Did "courtly love" really exist? This course attempts
to explore the variety of medieval representations of love, and
to show how they are intimately bound up with questions of free
will and destiny, interiority, gender relations, the secularisation
of learning, time and eternity. Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde
will occupy a central position in this course, but it will also
take in related works, such as Chretien de Troyes' Knight of the
Cart, Dante's Paolo and Francesca episode, Dante's Beatrice, Andreas
Capellanus, Marie de France, Pamphilus, and The Romance of the
Rose (European texts are read in translation).
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MI 441A Jews and Christians
Throughout History
M. Signer
T H 2:00-3:15
In the closing days of the II Vatican Council Nostra Aetate (Declaration
on non-Christian Religions) reversed a negative attitude of the
Catholic Church toward Judaism and the Jewish people. This remarkable
change promoted "dialogue" with Jews, and positive changes
in the ways in which Judaism was presented in Liturgy and Catechesis.
Reactions from the Jewish communities were diverse: from rejection
to welcoming. This course will explore a number of issues which
emerge from the history of Christian thought and theology: How
did a negative image of Judaism develop within Christianity? In
what ways did these unfavorable teachings contribute toward violence
against the Jews? What is the relationship between Christian anti-Jewish
teachings and Antisemitism? Is there any correspondence to Christian
hostility within Judaism? In what ways have Jewish authors reacted
to Christian tradition? We shall also want to construct a more
positive theology for the future. How can Jews and Christians
develop religious responses to modernity? In what senses can a
study of Judaism by Christians, or Christianity by Jews, help
either community to understand itself better? How can Christians
and Jews develop a theology of "the other" which is
not triumphalist, but empathic.
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MI 443 Northern Renaissance
Art
C. Rosenberg
T H 12:30-1:45
This course traces the development of painting in northern Europe
(France, Germany, Flanders, and Holland) from approximately 1300
to 1560. Special attention is given to the art of Jan van Eyck,
Heironymus Bosch, Albrecht Dürer, and Pieter Brueghel. In
tracing the evolution of manuscript and oil painting and the graphic
media, students become conscious of the special wedding of nature,
art, and spirit that defines the achievement of the northern Renaissance.
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MI 475 Intro to Christian Latin
D. Sheerin
M-F 8:30-9:20
"Introduction to Christian Latin Texts" has two goals:
to improve the student's all-around facility in dealing with Latin
texts and to introduce the student to the varieties of Christian
Latin texts and basic resources that facilitate their study. Study
of syntax and vocabulary will be facilitated by regular exercises
in Latin composition. Exposure to texts will be provided through
common readings which will advance in the course of the semester
from the less to the more demanding: Latin translations of Scripture,
exegesis, homiletic, texts dealing with religious life, formal
theological texts, and Christian Latin poetry. Medieval Latin
II, a survey of medieval Latin texts, will follow this course
in the spring term.
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MI 475 B Medieval Latin Texts
MWF 9:35-10:25
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MI 482 Seminar: Out of the Purple
Chamber
C. Barber
T H 11:00-12:15
Byzantine court culture offered a highly codified and visual
display of power that was designed to entrance both friend and
foe, familiar and stranger Through the manipulation of imagery,
costume, movement, and space one's position in court was carefully
policed. Even so, these constructs were constantly tested, manipulated,
and subverted. This course will examine this court culture from
the sixth to the fifteenth century. Using images and texts it
will introduce students to the carefully nuanced world of public
display and the choreography of power. Particular emphasis will
be placed on the play of gender within this realm and the degree
to which powerful empresses and ubiquitous eunuchs test the primarily
male vision of the court.
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