Archiv für Januar 2014

Labors Lost: The Work of Devotion in Tudor Literature

The dissolution of the monasteries in the 1530s and early 1540s had significant effects on Tudor England, transforming traditional understandings of work and religious devotion. This article examines three elements of social life, associated with mona…

Devotion and Intellectual Labor

This special issue is a response to three remarkable developments in the humanities: religion’s return to the center of scholarly attention, an outpouring of work on the changing nature and historical conditions of intellectual labor, and the widespre…

„Shameless“: Augustine, After Augustine, and Way After Augustine

The pejorative „shameless,“ applied liberally to religious and intellectual antagonists until quite recently, now has a distinct period feel, and has frequently and casually been taken to justify diagnosing those who use it as „anxious.“ The essay sho…

Putting Faith to the Test: Anne de Gonzague and the Incombustible Relic

This article explores the cognitive struggle against „doubt“ that impeded the conversion of the female aristocrat Anne de Gonzague, princesse Palatine, in seventeenth-century France. Anne’s conversion came only after a life-long intellectual battle th…

Dialogi | 10/2013

Quelle: http://www.eurozine.com/journals/dialogi/issue/2014-01-03.html

Volume 134

The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Volume 134 The Journal of Hellenic Studies (JHS) is recognised internationally as one of the foremost periodicals in the field of classical scholarship. It contains articles on a wide variety of Hellenic topics includi…

Volume 68 Issue 267

TEMPO, Volume 68 Issue 267 Tempo is the premier English-language journal devoted to twentieth-century and contemporary concert music. Literate and scholarly articles, often illustrated with music examples, explore many aspects of the work of composers…

Volume 89 Issue 01

Speculum, Volume 89 Issue 01

Speculum , published quarterly since 1926, was the first scholarly journal in North America devoted exclusively to the Middle Ages. It is open to contributions in all fields studying the Middle Ages, a period ranging from 500 to 1500. The journal’s primary emphasis is on Western Europe, but Arabic, Byzantine, Hebrew, and Slavic studies are also included. Articles may be submitted on any medieval topic; all disciplines, methodologies, and approaches are welcome, with articles on interdisciplinary topics especially encouraged. The language of publication is English. Speculum

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