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Barbara H. Rosenwein is Professor of History at Loyola University Chicago. She is the author of Negotiating Space: Power, Restraint, and Privileges of Immunity in Early Medieval Europe and To Be the Neighbor of Saint Peter: The Social Meaning of Cluny's Property, 909-1049, editor of Anger's Past: The Social Uses of an Emotion in the Middle Ages and coeditor of Monks and Nuns, Saints and Outcasts: Religion in Medieval Society, all from Cornell. She is also the editor of the Cornell series Conjunctions of Religion and Power in the Medieval Past.
"This is a landmark book, not only for the early middle ages but
also for the emerging field of the history of emotions. Barbara H.
Rosenwein evaluates with superb intelligence the strengths and
weaknesses of the various methods that have been applied in this
field, and fashions an approach of her own that will serve as a
useful model for many other researchers. Using this carefully
constructed method, she is able to bring to life for us, as no
other scholar has, the emotional communities whose existence is
implied in the scattered texts and epigraphs of the sixth, seventh,
and eighth centuries. A real tour de force." William M. Reddy,
William T. Laprade Professor of History and Professor of Cultural
Anthropology, Duke University"
"Thoroughly discrediting the view of many scholars that medieval
people, in contrast to modern ones, were 'emotionally childish,
impulsive, and unrestrained, ' Barbara H. Rosenwein ably develops
and deploys the concept of 'emotional communities' to investigate
several groups in early Medieval Europe whose members adhered to
'the same norms of emotional expression and valued or devalued the
same or related emotions.'" Stephen D. White, Candler Professor of
Medieval History, Emory University"
"What did people 1400 years ago mean when they told a woman that
they 'were moved by her tears, ' or found an event 'hell raising'?
Historians have always been puzzled by medieval descriptions of
emotions. They interpreted them in simplistic terms, or at best
explained displays of emotion as ritual performances quite
unconnected to what people really felt. Barbara H. Rosenwein, using
recent psychological theory, opens doors to a completely new
understanding of past emotions. Instead of a general and
necessarily blurred picture of a 'typical' medieval set of
emotions, she subtly reconstructs feelings and attitudes,
'emotives' and passions shared by specific 'emotional communities.'
Various languages of emotion connected stereotypes and metaphors
with inner feelings. The book opens fascinating new ways of access
to a 'dark age, ' and should be read not only by medieval
historians but also by anyone interested in the study of emotions
past or present." Walter Pohl, Professor of Medieval History,
University of Vienna, and Director, Institute for Medieval
Research, Austrian Academy of Sciences"
"With her original book, Emotional Communities in the Early Middle
Ages, Barbara H. Rosenwein opens new perspectives on the history of
emotions. This includes a persuasive critique of Norbert Elias's
influential notion of the civilizing process. Proposing that people
lived (and live) in emotional communities, each having its own
particular norms and emotional expressions, Rosenwein has written a
groundbreaking book that is highly important to historians as well
as to social scientists working on the history of emotions." Ingrid
Kasten, Freie Universitet Berlin"
"With this book Barbara Rosenwein has made the emotions an
essential component of our approach to the changing social
history." Jacques Le Goff"
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