@ETreharne is gives a glimpse of her rethinking her anthology (going into 4th ed): more Cornish, more Welsh, a bit of Latin, more Old Norse (en face translations) -- AND more textual objects to provide our students with a richer sense of the full culture and record #mla18 #s398
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Replying to @BridgetWhearty @ETreharne
#MLA18#s398. So what happened to the Hebrew? If it's a medieval lit in British Isles anthology, is there a reason we are skipping this entirely?2 replies 2 retweets 2 likes -
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Replying to @dorothyk98 @ETreharne
Yes -- I failed to get that one in the tweet (bad copyist). But medieval English Hebrew literature, importantly, has not yet been mentioned.
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Replying to @BridgetWhearty @ETreharne
#MLA18#s398 There are Medieval English colonies. Have we decided not to address these issues--that would mean medieval Arabic, medieval Armenian, as well as Sephardic Hebrew stuff, Greek, etc.2 replies 1 retweet 4 likes -
Replying to @dorothyk98 @BridgetWhearty
Its a session on the North Atlantic Borderlands, with five minutes per speaker.
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#MLA18 #s398 North Atlantic would also mean some work on Native American, possibly Abenaki material. Also, Wouldn't Medieval North Atlantic technically begin in Africa up through Iberia etc? I think @Nahir_Otano has discussed this.
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