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Bad Medievalism and the Modernity Problem

Contributor(s): Lavezzo, Kathy (Author)

ISBN: 9781531512408

Publisher: Fordham University Press

Hardcover
$105.00
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Pub Date: November 4, 2025

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.94" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 1.32 lbs) 345 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Challenges the assumptions made over the medieval/modern divide by examining the medieval roots of modern racism

Humanists have long insisted on a chasm separating modernity and the Middle Ages. In Bad Medi-evalism and the Modernity Problem, Kathy Lavezzo demonstrates how the temporal divide scholars typically accept is a fiction that has shaped racial discourse over a longue durée. The hard line drawn between "then" and "now" is of a piece with the line separating whiteness from humans deemed irrevocably other. Thus, Lavezzo advocates a "bad"--that is, depressing and disturbing, even nau-seating--historicism attuned to the interpenetration of race, whiteness, and periodicity in the "west."

Teasing out the dialectical invocation of both periods by figures as diverse as W. E. B. Du Bois, Carolyn Bynum, Stuart Hall, Johan Huizinga, Paule Marshall, Karl Marx, Gloria Naylor, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Sylvia Wynter, Lavezzo demonstrates how the tension between and across categories of the "medieval" and the "modern" has mobilized intense emotional and political responses.

Inspired by Lavezzo's discovery that Hall, the beloved founder of cultural studies, planned as a student at Oxford to become a medievalist but was dissuaded from that path by his teacher Tolkien, Bad Medievalism and the Modernity Problem unpacks the implications of that charged encounter. Central chapters contrast Tolkien's white heritage medievalism with a speculative inquiry into the Piers Plowman dissertation that Hall never wrote.

Other chapters assess the white "feel" of periodization by scholars, including Jacob Burckhardt, Huizinga, Fredric Jameson, and Bynum, and draw on theorists, including Du Bois and Wynter, to chart the medieval roots of a racialized discourse of progress and primitivism. Bad Medievalism and the Modernity Problem culminates in new readings of Gloria Naylor's Bailey's Cafe and Paule Marshall's The Fisher King, demonstrating their importance as productively pessimistic engagements with the racial legacies of both the medieval and the modern.

Brief description: Kathy Lavezzo is Professor of English at the University of Iowa. She is the author of Angels on the Edge of the World: Geography, Literature, and English Community, 1000-1534 and The Accommodated Jew: English Antisemitism from Bede to Milton and is the editor of Imagining a Medieval English Nation.

Review Quotes: At the heart of Bad Medievalism are the ghosts of Stuart Hall and J. R. R. Tolkien, whose encounter in 1950s England led to the exclusion of a brilliant Black man from the study of English medieval literature, and created the conditions for his subsequent cofounding of the influential Birmingham school of cultural studies. Lavezzo unpacks this critical encounter with acuity and sensitivity, so that it becomes a node in her larger discourse on periodization, affect and emotion, white medieval studies, and medievalism today. We owe the author a debt for her discovery of how English medieval studies was robbed, and modern cultural studies emerged a winner in the western academy, as well as for her superb analysis of J. R. R. Tolkien. Chapter 3 alone is worth the price of the book.---Geraldine Heng, author of The Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages and The Global Middle Ages: An Introduction

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