Hussein Fancy (@letfancyroam) kicks off our discussion of this panel by asking, "is the "global" in "global Middle Ages" a verb or an adjective?"
#DGMA19 #GlobalMiddleAges #medievaltwitter
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Replying to @paularcurtis @letfancyroam
This was discussed in relation to self-critical reflection of the terminology and its issues but also why use it, as opposed to "world" by Gerry Heng in her roundtable on Global Middle Ages at MLA. Her point is, it's about interconnectedness & not world theories. & critically 1/2
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engages with the critical discussions in decolonial/postcolonial/anticolonial now in discussing this. So at least in one strain of the discussion of the Global Middle Ages, a discussion generated&worked on this since 2004, this has been written about & answered why use global.
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This is literally an example about the politics of citation. And it's incredibly frustrating when now Global Middle Ages is a topic but without referencing the work that has come before particularly from one of the few non-white scholars in the field.
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That is cool, but then why go back and rehash the term itself? Which is something she does write and discuss. I mean, consider that introduction to the Past and Present volume which seems to pretend no-one & especially a massive scholarly project run by a WOC does not exist.
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