Medicine of Words: Literature, Medicine, and Theology in the Middle Ages.
Call for papers
St
Anne’s College, Oxford
11-12th September 2015.
Plenary Speakers include:
Mary Carruthers (NYU, All Souls Oxford)
Vincent Gillespie (Oxford)
Ralph Hanna (Oxford)
Peregrine Horden (Royal Holloway)
Denis Renevey (Lausanne)
John Thompson (Queen’s University Belfast)
11-12th September 2015.
Words, whether in poetry or prose, have a power beyond their meaning. They are
capable not simply of expression but also of action; they can hurt or they
can heal. Throughout the Middle Ages the potency of words, their effect
and force upon the mind, body, and soul is explored and engaged with,
poured over and focused upon not simply by the arts of grammar and rhetoric,
but by poetry and theology, by medicine and psychology. Medieval texts are
pieces of linguistic craft and intention, their words chosen and arranged
with a purpose in mind. Poems in this period can be as crafted as
theological treatises, their meters and rhymes as intentional and purpose
driven as any medical instrument. Words, whether spoken or heard, emerge
from the mind and feed back into it through the senses. They possess a power
over the body as well as the soul, and can manipulate the emotions as easily
as speaking can manipulate the breath. Potentially medicinal or malign,
words in the Middle Ages are seen as tools to be used to persuade, to
please, to heal or to harm.
This conference will explore the interconnection between literature, medicine,
and theology throughout the Middle Ages. Possible texts for exploration
include prayers, charms, narratives of illness and health, medical
manuals, texts of contemplation and religious instruction, devotional
materials, accounts of conversion and healing, saints lives and
prognostications, and texts that evoke and direct the emotions in Old and
Middle English.
Possible topics for exploration include the ideas of narrative medicine;
medieval poetic theory; the arts of grammar and rhetoric; medical
manuscripts and medical humanities; science and literature; the
medicalised body; the humors; the impact of the plague on the poetic
imagination; the use of words to heal; the power of rhythm, metre, and cursus;
and the connections between sin and sickness, and heaven and health during
this period.
We welcome papers of 20 minutes addressing the issues outlined above. Please
send a 300 word abstract to medicineofwords@ell.ox.ac.uk by
January 31st 2015.
Plenary Speakers include:
Mary Carruthers (NYU, All Souls Oxford)
Vincent Gillespie (Oxford)
Ralph Hanna (Oxford)
Peregrine Horden (Royal Holloway)
Denis Renevey (Lausanne)
John Thompson (Queen’s University Belfast)
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