Interfaces: A Journal of Medieval European Literatures (May 2017)

The Theory and Phenomenology of Love

  • Paolo Borsa,
  • Christian Høgel,
  • Lars Boje Mortensen,
  • Elizabeth M. Tyler,
  • Lorenzo Livorsi,
  • Fabrizia Baldissera,
  • Cameron Cross,
  • Elisabetta Bartoli,
  • Thomas Hinton,
  • Giovanna Perrotta,
  • Aðalheiður Guðmundsdóttir,
  • Efthymia Priki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.13130/interfaces-8354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 0, no. 2

Abstract

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This second issue of Interfaces: A Journal fo Medieval European Literatures addresses the subject of "The Theory and Phenomenology of Love." It brings together readings of medieval representations and explanations of love as an affection, passion, sentiment, attraction, or tension, with work on the connections between literary discourses of love and the history both of emotions and gender roles. Approaching the subject of the nature of love, and the ways it manifests itself, the authors create links between scientific and poetic discourse and highlight the relationship between the experiences of love, described and treated in literary texts, and the specific historical, cultural, and social environments in which those texts were produced. Not only do the articles reach original results within their fields; taken as a whole, the dossier, ranging as it does from the Late Antiquity to the fifteenth century, and across a Europe situated within a wider Eurasian space, offers deep insights into social history, the history of emotions, and the study of gender and sexuality.

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