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Full Description
Violence, Trauma, and Memory: Responses to War in the Late Medieval and Early Modern World brings together eight essays that examine medieval and early modern violence and warfare in France, the Hispanic World, and the Dutch Republic through the lens of trauma studies and memory studies. By focusing on warfare, these essays by historians, literary specialists, and historians of visual culture demonstrate how individuals and groups living with the "ungraspable" outcomes of wartime violence grappled with processing and remembering (both culturally and politically) the trauma of war.
Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction, Alexandra Onuf and Nicholas Ealy
Section One: France
Chapter One: Memorializing the Battle of Crécy: Colins de Beaumont's "On the Crécy Dead" as a Textual Monument for Processing Trauma, Kimberly Lifton
Chapter Two: "Je hé guerre, point ne la doit prisier": Emotions, War, and Trauma in the Poetry of Charles of Orléans, Charles-Louis Morand-Métivier
Chapter Three: Bringing up the Dead: The Grotesque in Literature after the French Wars of Religion, Kathleen Long
Section Two: The Hispanic World
Chapter Four: Desire, Trauma, and Warfare in Fernando de Rojas's Celestina, Nicholas Ealy
Chapter Five: Violence in the Making: Remembering the Viceroy's Assassination during the Catalan Revolt of 1640, Ivan Gracia-Arnau
Chapter Six: Trauma and Postmemory in Martín Cortés's Uprising, Covadonga Lamar Prieto
Section Three: The Dutch Republic
Chapter Seven: Hendrick Goltzius's Lucretia and the Eighty Years' War, Rachel Wise
Chapter Eight: Landscape and the Memory of Place in Claes Jansz. Visscher's Prints of Brabant, Alexandra Onuf
Index
About the Contributors