gatechmedieval.blogspot.com
Medieval@GeorgiaTech: Utz reviews Oexle, Die Gegenwart des Mittelalters
http://gatechmedieval.blogspot.com/2015/08/utz-reviews-oexle-die-gegenwart-des.html
Tuesday, August 4, 2015. Utz reviews Oexle, Die Gegenwart des Mittelalters. Otto Gerhard Oexle, Die Gegenwart des Mittelalters. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 2015, at Medievally Speaking. Reviewed by yours truly:. Brian Bowen, Architecture. John Cressler, Electrical and Computer Engineering. Leah Haught, Literature, Media, and Communication. Laura Hollengreen, Architecture. Valerie Johnson, Literature, Media, and Communication. Dina Khapaeva, Modern Languages. Nicolay Koposov, History, Science, and Technology.
gatechmedieval.blogspot.com
Medieval@GeorgiaTech: May 2016
http://gatechmedieval.blogspot.com/2016_05_01_archive.html
Tuesday, May 31, 2016. LMC's Valerie Johnson reviews: The Middle Ages Unlocked. Please find Valerie Johnson's recent review of Gillian Polack and Katrin Kania,. The Middle Ages Unlocked: A Guide to Life in Medieval England, 1050-1300. Forword by Elizabeth Chadwick. Stroud, UK: Amberley Publishing, 2015, for. Kara McShane curated this review for us. Monday, May 30, 2016. GT Medieval Faculty at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. Friday, November 18. Is th...
coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com
Screen Shot 2016-03-18 at 12.50.53 PM | coloradomedievalist
https://coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com/2016/03/18/oh-deer-reflections-on-gaston-phoebuss-livre-de-la-chasse/screen-shot-2016-03-18-at-12-50-53-pm
Screen Shot 2016-03-18 at 12.50.53 PM. March 18, 2016. March 18, 2016. Reflections on Gaston Phoebus’s Livre de la chasse. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. Enter your comment here. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:. Address never made public). You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Twitter account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Facebook account. ( Log Out. You are commenting using your Google account. ( Log Out.
coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com
MIND 288 | coloradomedievalist
https://coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com/memes-inspired-by-tolkiens-_children-of-hurin_
My students are blowing me away with their final projects this semester. Here are pictures of one student’s recreation of the hall of Rohan in. Another student created a series of seasonal poems, inspired by Tolkien’s Tom Bombadil poetry, and bound them into a book:. Another student was inspired by Tolkien’s. Can’t wait to see what else they come up with! Memes inspired by Tolkien’s. This spring, as my MIND 288: The Worlds of J. R. R. Tolkien worked their way through. The Children of Túrin,.
coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com
Sudden Noise, White Noise | coloradomedievalist
https://coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com/2015/10/13/sudden-noise-white-noise
Sudden Noise, White Noise. October 13, 2015. As I was leaving campus the other day, I was nearly run over. This is certainly not the first time that I’ve nearly been run over by an animal. As a child, I was walking along the shores of Red Rock Reservoir, a large beaver nearly barreled into me on its way into the water. But I digress. I couldn’t help but think, as I watched the quarreling squirrels, of this clip from Disney’s 1963 film. The Sword in the Stone. Perhaps some of you have seen this story.
coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com
Flooding of Memories | coloradomedievalist
https://coloradomedievalist.wordpress.com/2015/10/22/flooding-of-memories
October 22, 2015. October 22, 2015. Years ago, one of my poetry professors told us to take an opening line from a published poem and to then write our own poem to go with it. I chose the first line of Seamus Heaney’s “Two Lorries” (first published, I believe, in his collection. The Spirit Level: Poems. It’s raining on black coal and warm wet ashes. In which I discovered efts hiding beneath rocks and branches. It seemed as if the rain would never stop, and I forgot, for a time, what dry socks felt like.
medievalrobots.org
Medieval Robots: Past Perfect: King Hereafter
http://www.medievalrobots.org/2011/08/past-perfect-king-hereafter.html
Medieval is the new modern. Monday, August 8, 2011. Past Perfect: King Hereafter. I haven't posted anything new for a while because I've been living in genre fiction. This world has fierce creatures and fiercer warriors; beautiful, intelligent, cunning women; seers and mystics; religious conflict between an established northern religion and a more recent transplant from the East; and a web of shifting and occult political alliances that stretch over vast geographic terrain. Is about the historical figure.
medievalrobots.org
Medieval Robots: Out of Time: Outlander's Medievalism
http://www.medievalrobots.org/2015/04/out-of-time-outlanders-medievalism.html
Medieval is the new modern. Thursday, April 2, 2015. Out of Time: Outlander's Medievalism. Outlander,"* the captivating historical fantasy/romance based on the series by Diana Gabaldon, has a lot going on: a charismatic, capable hero. A gorgeous love interest. And something else: medievalism. Later, Claire steps through the standing stones at Craigh na Dun and is thrown back in time, to 1743. Y the end of the episode, she ends up at the same castle- Castle Leoch- where she and Frank had their intimate in...
medievalrobots.org
Medieval Robots: July 2015
http://www.medievalrobots.org/2015_07_01_archive.html
Medieval is the new modern. Sunday, July 12, 2015. Six And A Half Ways of Being Undead in "Game of Thrones". Is Jon Snow really dead? That is the question that has been on everyone's minds. Since the finale of Season 5 (or since the end of ADWD)- including President Obama's. D B Weiss has said that Snow won't be back- "Dead is dead,". Quoth he. But of course, the learned reader knows that this phrase appears on the first page. Of A Game of Thrones. What proof have we? 2) Mirri Maz Duur's. Of course we do...
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