Jessica Rezunyk (Author)
David Lawton (Advisor)
This dissertation explores the intersections between nature and culture in medieval literature and art with particular focus on Geoffrey Chaucer’s House of Fame, the thirteenth-century French Bible Moralisée (Vienna, Österreichische Nationalbibliothek Codex Vindobonensis 2554), and William Langland’s Piers Plowman. Current academic paradigms tend to place the study of nature firmly within the sciences and the study of culture firmly within the humanities, creating a gap between the fields that effectively isolates their respective methodologies and vocabularies from one another. This dissertation seeks to bridge that gap between the sciences and the humanities by approaching medieval literature through the lens of studies in science, technology, and society (STS). Examination of medieval literature reveals just some of the ways that the sciences and humanities overlap to create permeable intellectual spaces for the study of nature and culture. Framed within the ecological analyses of G. Evelyn Hutchinson, this dissertation demonstrates how scientific topics can be approached from a literary perspective and how, in turn, literature can be read scientifically. This project uses a highly interdisciplinary approach that relies heavily on the theories in STS developed by Bruno Latour. Latour’s theories, typically applied to writing and procedures found in modern science, provide the initial groundwork for establishing the connections between nature and culture in medieval literary sources. Because much of the previous work on science in the Middle Ages has primarily focused on the history of science through the study of educational texts and treatises, there is relatively little material available that takes on scientific observation of the natural world in medieval literature, poetry, and art. As such, the modern divide between the sciences and the humanities anachronistically separates nature and culture in ways that often unnecessarily isolate the two fields in medieval studies. By first problematizing and historicizing the academic development of science and its perceived animosity with the humanities, I strive to break down modern paradigms of knowledge to demonstrate how a medieval understanding of human culture was inextricably connected to perceptions of the natural world. The study of Chaucer’s House of Fame takes on special attention to the roles of language and translation in literature. My subsequent examination of the Bible Moralisée moves beyond the constraints of language to explore visual representations of science and nature in an explicitly Christian context. Building on the religious influences of medieval portrayals of ecology and science, I investigate Langland’s use of natural imagery in his portrayal of religious enlightenment in Piers Plowman. Each of these works demonstrates how the medieval imagination established a versatile permeability between science and the humanities that is far less common in the studies of modern science and literature.
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Thesis
B. Josh Doty;
(2016)
The Anatomy of Conscience: Science, Ethics, and Religion in Nineteenth-century American Literature
(/p/isis/citation/CBB174403585/)
Article
Wilkinson, Anouska;
(2014)
Natural Law in Dryden's Translations of Chaucer and Boccaccio
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001550494/)
Book
Giuseppe Patota;
(2023)
Parole di Galileo
(/p/isis/citation/CBB522118146/)
Book
Giulia Virgilio;
(2023)
Parole al microscopio: i composti neoclassici nell'italiano delle scienze tra Settecento e primo Ottocento
(/p/isis/citation/CBB267827261/)
Book
Nataša Raschi;
(2020)
La langue des mathématiques chez Diderot
(/p/isis/citation/CBB984952533/)
Article
Johannes, Gert-Jan;
(2011)
“Nationale filologieën” en het historisch onderzoek naar disciplinevorming in de geesteswetenschappen. Een verkenning
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001251325/)
Thesis
Jacqueline L. Cowan;
(2015)
No "Idle Fancy:" The Imagination's Work in Poetry and Natural Philosophy from Sidney to Sprat
(/p/isis/citation/CBB947007104/)
Thesis
Lisa Lynn Chen Obrist;
(2015)
Time and How to Calculate It: A Study and Edition with Translation of Book 10 of Hrabanus Maurus’ "De rerum naturis"
(/p/isis/citation/CBB862549669/)
Thesis
Nese Devenot;
(2015)
Altered States/Other Worlds: Romanticism, Nitrous Oxide, and the Literary Prehistory of Psychedelia
(/p/isis/citation/CBB236966671/)
Article
(2007)
Introduction
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000760135/)
Article
Håkansson, Håkan;
(2009)
Ordets makt. Om språkets magiska krafter i renässansens filosofi
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001220309/)
Chapter
Smith, Justin E. H.;
(2010)
A Corporall Philosophy: Language and “Body-Making” in the Work of John Bulwer (1606--1656)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001031891/)
Book
Marenbon, John;
(2007)
Many Roots of Medieval Logic: The Aristotelian and the Non-Aristotelian Traditions
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000830467/)
Article
Hein van den Berg;
(2022)
Animal languages in eighteenth-century German philosophy and science
(/p/isis/citation/CBB285555955/)
Book
Kessler, Eckhard;
Maclean, Ian;
(2002)
Res et verba in der Renaissance
(/p/isis/citation/CBB000350159/)
Article
Michael D. Gordin;
(2017)
Introduction: Hegemonic Languages and Science
(/p/isis/citation/CBB358992965/)
Article
Judith R.H. Kaplan;
(2018)
The Global Lexicostatistical Database: A Total Archive of Linguistic Prehistory
(/p/isis/citation/CBB966220627/)
Article
Elena Aronova;
(2017)
Russian and the Making of World Languages during the Cold War
(/p/isis/citation/CBB928292353/)
Book
Monika Wegmann;
(2016)
Language in Space: The Cartographic Representation of Dialects
(/p/isis/citation/CBB780577388/)
Book
Isabelle Boehm;
Nathalie Perrier-Rousseau;
(2014)
L'expressivité du lexique médical en Grèce et à rome: hommages à Françoise Skoda
(/p/isis/citation/CBB426441012/)
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