This has been discussed by Geraldine Heng & Lynn Ramey in her Early Globalities articles. Maybe it would be good to remember how citation politics go and why BIPOC and particularly BIWOC never seem to get cited when they've done the work for a long time.https://www.academia.edu/28913418/Early_Globalities_Global_Literatures_Introducing_a_Special_Issue_on_the_Global_Middle_Ages …
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Replying to @dorothyk98 @tlecaque
This is from 2014. Geraldine is publishing an entire series of Global Middle Ages books starting in late 2020. So maybe people should read the theoretical frames she's laid out for the last 5+ years before deciding that this has only recently been discussed or "discovered."
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Replying to @dorothyk98 @tlecaque
To quote: "For many of us, that troublesome fable, "the Middle Ages," can thus only be embraced under erasure as a Eurocentric construct w/ little epistemological bearing for the not-Europe cultures & chronologies of the world, & perhaps w/ little bearing for Europe itself.
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Replying to @dorothyk98 @tlecaque
"If use of problematic must continue, for intelligibility in academic discourse--in order for us to speak and write at all-critical reflection on that use should also continue. For euromedievalists, the asynchrony of temporalities across the globe importantly upturns old
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" tyrannies of periodization in the West, including that simple binary of premodern and modern eras nested w/in a monolithic model fo linear time that is the stable clone of western academic & public discourse." etc.
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