Gábor Klaniczay
This book-project is relying upon my previous studies on the medieval stigmatized fame of Saint Margaret of Hungary, and its broader context: the Cistercian and the Dominican Orders’ enduring endeavor in the Middle Ages to find a female stigmatized counterpart to Saint Francis of Assisi. This rivalry prompted the emergence of several claims for stigmatized Beguines or nuns associated to these two orders: Elisabeth of Spalbeek, Christina of Stommeln, Margaret of Hungary, Lukardis of Oberweimar, and others. The Dominicans finally obtained their objective with the canonization of Saint Catherine of Siena, but this same rivalry continued with new living saints of the Dominicans: Lucia Brocadelli, Osanna Andreasi, Caterina Racconigi. Another background for this research has been provided by the collaborative research group dealing with a historical, anthropological and psychological enquiry into visions, a group we have been coordinating with my anthropologist colleague William Christian since 2007. As a researcher interested in a historical-anthropological analysis of late medieval spirituality, I would like now to situate the phenomena of the stigmatics in the broader context of all kinds of bodily effects of visions. Furthermore, I would like to study the phenomenon from its emergence with the new spirituality of the mendicant orders, and above all, with the towering personality of Saint Francis, not only throughout the centuries of the Middle Ages. My proposal is to open it up to a real longue durée (or long term), and to analyze, using the medieval bases, also the modern and contemporary cases, which have much more ample documentation, adding medical and psychological record to textual and iconographic sources.
Journées du programme collaboratif n°3 du LabEx Hastec : « Les techniques du (faire) croire » International conference organized by Gabor Klaniczay (Paris IAS fellow) Talk by Gabor Klaniczay (Paris IAS fellow) Talk by Gabor Klaniczay (Paris IAS fellow) Lecture by Gabor Klaniczay (Paris IAS fellow) Talk by Gabor Klaniczay (Paris IAS fellow) |
Archivio italiano per la storia della pietà |
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