Medieval Violence provides a detailed analysis of the practice of medieval brutality, focusing on a thriving region of northern France in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. It examines how violence was conceptualised in this period, and uses this framework to investigate street violence, tavern brawls, urban rebellions, student misbehaviour, and domestic violence. The interactions between these various forms of violence are examined in order to demonstrate the complex and communicative nature of medieval brutality. What is often dismissed as dysfunctional behaviour is shown to have been highly strategic and socially integral. Violence was a performance, dependent upon the spaces in which it took place. Indeed, brutality was contingent upon social and cultural structures. At the same time, the common stereotype of the thoughtlessly brutal Middle Ages is challenged, as attitudes towards violence are revealed to have been complex, troubled, and ambivalent. Whether violence could function effectively as a form of communication which could order and harmonise society, or whether it inevitably degenerated into chaotic disorder where meaning was multivalent and incomprehensible, remained a matter of ongoing debate in a variety of contexts. Using a variety of source material, including legal records, popular literature, and sermons, Hannah Skoda explores experiences of, and attitudes towards, violence, and highlights profound contemporary ambiguity concerning its nature and legitimacy.
Hannah Skoda is Tutorial Fellow in History at St John’s College, Oxford. She has published on the subject of concepts of the law in medieval France, co-editing an interdisciplinary volume on legalism with the anthropologist, Paul Dresch, and she is currently embarking on research into the misbehaviour of students in fifteenth-century Oxford, Paris and Heidelberg. Other publications have ranged from Dante to the experience of disability in the Middle Ages. She is particularly interested in the relationship between constructions of deviance, and the ways in which those thus labelled react to these stereotypes.
Table des matières :
Introduction
1: Grammars of Violence
2: Violence on the Street in Paris and Artois
3: ‘Oés comme il fierent grans caus !’: Tavern violence in thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century Paris and Artois
4: Student Violence in Thirteenth- and Early Fourteenth-Century Paris
5: Urban Uprisings
6: Domestic Violence in Paris and Artois
Conclusion
Informations pratiques :
Hannah Skoda, Medieval Violence Physical Brutality in Northern France, 1270-1330, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015 (Oxford Historical Monographs). 304 pages, 4 black and white figures, 216x138mm. 978-0-19-873787-2. Price: £24.99.
Winner of the 2014 Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship
Source : Oxford University Press






Vous devez être connecté pour poster un commentaire.