Embodied epistemology as rigorous historical method /

"This Element proposes that, in addition to using traditional historical methodologies, historians need to find extra-textual, embodied ways of understanding the past in order to more fully comprehend it. Written by a medieval historian, the Element explains why historians assume they cannot us...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mancia, Lauren (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2025.
Series:Cambridge elements. Elements in histories of emotions and the senses.
Subjects:
Description
Summary:"This Element proposes that, in addition to using traditional historical methodologies, historians need to find extra-textual, embodied ways of understanding the past in order to more fully comprehend it. Written by a medieval historian, the Element explains why historians assume they cannot use reperformance in historical inquiry and why they, in fact, should. The Element employs tools from the discipline of performance studies, which has long grappled with the differences between the archive and the repertoire, between the records of historical performances and the embodied movements, memories, and emotions of the performance itself, which are often deemed unknowable by scholars. It shows how an embodied epistemology is particularly suited to studying certain premodern historical topics, using the example of medieval monasticism. Finally, using the case of performance-lectures given at The Met Cloisters, it shows how using performance as a tool for historical investigation might work."--
Physical Description:67 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 53-65).
ISBN:9781009590358
1009590359
9781009590327
1009590324
ISSN:2632-105X