CONTENTS FROM THE EDITOR Michelle M. Hamilton IN MEMORIAM Noel Fallows (December 25, 1961–December 29, 2021) Joseph T. Snow LA CORÓNICA INTERNATIONAL BOOK AWARD FORUM Sol Miguel Prendes. Narrating Desire: Moral Consolation and Sentimental Fiction in Fifteenth-Century Spain. U of
Winner of the 2024 La corónica John K. Walsh Award
La corónica is pleased to announce the 2024 winner of the John K. Walsh Prize, Julia Perratore, for her article, “The Art of Medieval Iberia at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Met Cloisters.” This award is given annually
Volume 50 Table of Contents
CONTENTS FROM THE EDITORS Fifty years of La corónica: From the (Current) Editor Michelle M. Hamilton DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/cor.2021.a910102 Reflections on 50 years of La corónica Isidro J. Rivera DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/cor.2021.a910103 A Retrospective View of La corónica‘s First Ten Years John
Resource: PhiloBiblon
PhiloBiblon PhiloBiblon is a free internet-based bio-bibliographical database of texts written in the various Romance vernaculars of the Iberian Peninsula during the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance. PhiloBiblon (which takes its name from Richard de Bury’s 14th-c. description of
Race in the Iberian Middle Ages: A Critical Roundtable
Race in the Iberian Middle Ages: A Critical Roundtable Geraldine Heng’s The Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages(2018) is but a single intervention in a changing horizon of understanding of medieval race and racializing practices in the
Volume 49.3 Table of Contents – Open Access
CONTENTS FROM THE EDITOR Michelle M. Hamilton, Editor https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/114/article/870801 INTRODUCTION “Premodern Food Studies: Practices and Ideologies” Emily Colbert Cairns, Guest Editor https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/114/article/870811 ARTICLES En torno a la mesa: cultura material y ritos de convivialidad en los reinos hispánicos bajomedievales Juan
New Resource: Red Jacobea
“RED JACOBEA” The Chair of the Camino de Santiago and Pilgrimages of the University of Santiago de Compostela has opened an on-line database of institutions, initiatives, journals and research centers engaged with all aspects of pilgrimage to the shrine of
Volume 49.1 Table of Contents
CONTENTS FROM THE EDITOR Michelle M. Hamilton, Editor IN MEMORIAM Richard P. Kinkade (1939-2020) Jaime Leanos ARTICLES Bad Moon Rising: Coded Critique of Frederick II in the Libro de Alexandre Robert K. Fritz From Seduction to Sexual Assault: Consent and
Picturing Hispanismo (Open Access, Digital Culture Project)
Ãngel Ranales Pérez and his 300-level Spanish students announce the launch of their open access digital project “PicturingHispanismo: History, Voices and Texts.” The project focuses on examining and experiencing Transatlantic Hispanismo and the humanities in a non-conventional format within the
IMANA Roundtable Kalamazoo 2021
Iberomedieval Studies: Taking Stock, Moving Forward (a roundtable sponsored by IMANA) Anniversaries often inspire moments of reflection. The 56th International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo (or “KalamaZoom”) was no exception, as demonstrated by the roundtable organized by Linde M.
Session #592 “An Axis of Monstrosity…” by Eli Cohen
Session #592 Isidore of Seville and the Persistence of Classical Antiquity in Iberia and the British Isles during the Middle Ages “An Axis of Monstrosity: Isidore of Seville and the Transition of the Limits of Knowledge” Eli Cohen, Swarthmore College
Online Teaching Resources
As many of us transition to remote instruction, La corónica Commons users are compiling resources to support teaching and learning. Categories include: General Resources for Online Instruction Resources for Teaching Language Classes Online Resources for Teaching Medieval Literature Online Resources
Discussion Panel – Life after Grad School: Navigating the Job Market and Getting Published
Panel organized by the Medieval and Early Modern Studies Student Association (MEMSSA) and hosted by the University of Kansas. Location: online, via Zoom Register here: https://kansas.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0of-Cqpz8pHtcI4V4Pdaz3WrcG-9npqrPy Date: 11 March 2021 at 1:00 p.m. Central Time Contact: Sadie Arft ([email protected])
Session #447 “The Origins of a Theory of Race…” by David Wacks
Session #447 New Currents in Medieval Iberian Studies “The Origins of a Theory of Race in Jewish, Muslim, and Christian Retellings of the Noah Story“ David Wacks, University of Oregon Read: “The Curse of Ham in Medieval Iberia and the
Session #79 “An Online, Open-Access Teaching Anthology…” by David Wacks
Session #79 Digital Medieval Iberia “An Online, Open-Access Teaching Anthology of Premodern Iberian and Latin American Texts“ David Wacks, University of Oregon Access: Open Iberia/América: Online, Open Access Teaching Anthology of Premodern Iberian and Latin American Texts
Session #169 “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity…” by Lauren Beck
Session #169 Race and Its Historiography in Medieval Iberian Studies “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity in the Modern Age through the De-Occidentalization of the Cid” Lauren Beck, Mount Allison University Recording of “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity in the Modern Age through the De-Occidentalization
Virtual Talk by Carolyn Nadeau
Virtual Talk, “European Perspectives on the Olla podrida and other Medieval and Early Modern Spanish Fare,” by Carolyn Nadeau organized by the Center for Medieval Studies at the University of Minnesota and La corónica. Location: online, via Zoom Event Link:
Presentations from Virtual Symposium “Pilgrimage in the Midst of Pandemic”
Virtual Symposium “Pilgrimage in the Midst of Pandemic” organized by the Institute for Pilgrimage Studies and hosted by William and Mary University. Location: online, via Institute for Pilgrimage Studies’ YouTube channel Presentation videos currently available for viewing on YouTube (live
Session #592 “Medieval Iberian Grammar…” by Marlena Petra Cravens
Session #592 Isidore of Seville and the Persistence of Classical Antiquity in Iberia and the British Isles during the Middle Ages “‘Partes Orationis Quot Sunt?’: Medieval Iberian Grammar in the Wake of Isidore of Seville, 600-1481” Marlena Petra Cravens, University
Newly updated Cantar del mio cid website
Check out the newly updated Cantar de mio Cid website (https://miocid.wlu.edu) by Matthew Bailey (Washington and Lee U) and colleagues. Also available: Recitation of entire poem, MP3 audio(https://miocid.wlu.edu/mp3/cid.mp3) Recitation of entire poem, HTML5 Video with subtitles (https://miocid.wlu.edu/main/movs/cid.html)