Rezultati pretraživanja
  1. My brilliant student, , on ’s “The Mongol Princess of Tars: Global Relations and Racial Formation in The King of Tars (c. 1330)"—reflecting on the “chilling mythmaking” that justifies racial violence to this day:

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  2. a chapter section abt ethnoracial erasure of N. African women in Petrarch's _Africa_. Up next: Gauls and Avignon Papacy. I couldn't do this w/o & BIPOC scholars. They're trailblazers whose work has irrevocably changed the way I read the past.

  3. 2. velj
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  6. 1. velj

    Y’all already know how I feel about . Lol. It’s because of her that I ever thought of blackness in Shakespeare and other premodern texts.

  7. 1. velj

    I am eternally grateful to and for their kindness, support, and scholarship. ❤️❤️❤️ Thank you for sharing this, !

  8. 31. sij

    Thanks to whoever did the Wikipedia entry for King of Tars; grateful this entry cites recent scholarship by & & contextualizes/summarizes things so well. Will definitely refer my students to this!

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  10. 30. sij

    As was pointed out by many at it’s very hard not to see the profit motive and BIPOC erasure behind such endeavors. Doing race work means acknowledging who came before but also making space for BIPOC scholars for centering them and their work. 2/2

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  11. 30. sij

    [CW racist violence; lynching] Also, the amount of BIPOC hanging from trees in medieval / EM lit *should* stop any serious scholar from ever saying we can’t look at racism in these texts.

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  12. 30. sij
    Odgovor korisniku/ci

    I’ll work on it! And also, next time we see each other, I got your swag! 😁

  13. 29. sij

    Every single time I return to 's necessary words, I learn something new and get a little more fuel and affirmation to persist in doing this important work. A thread. 👇🏾

  14. Read this thread and the thread embedded in this thread. It is hard to imagine a field without -- but you'll learn a lot (if you do not know already) about how actively the field attempted to "forget" her work.

  15. On writing important things that people don't want to hear. Methinks a T-shirt with "It's in Things of Darkness" might be in order, ?

  16. 29. sij

    This hit me hard. It happens, and like Elisa Oh said at Periodization, BIPOC (under)grads don’t have the “garden variety imposter syndrome.” Dismissing ?s/not answering them made me doubt that I could do/should do work despite reading PCR&IS scholarship. 1/

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  17. 29. sij

    But the young people give me hope. There is SO MUCH WORK TO DO.

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  18. 29. sij

    I'm also angry at the field for the students at all level who have been (and continue to be) gaslit by the erasure of . Students questions about race are still being dismissed --even they ever are made comfortable enough to raise them at all.

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  19. 28. sij
    Odgovor korisnicima

    any thoughts? I’ll do all the upfront labor...

  20. 28. sij

    So where are you white medievalists the 99%+ of the field. Why so silent? You haven't done a thing to address these senior white men and their alt-medieval groupies from constantly doing this? This is why the field is toxic. Your silence.

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