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            thN Lng Folk 2go: Investigating Future Premoderns™

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            Contributor(s)
            Confraternity of Neoflagellants, The (editor)
            Collection
            ScholarLed
            Language
            English
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            Résumé
            Neomedievalisms are cultural practices that breathe a bouquet of premoderns as permanent rehearsals of coming events. Where medievalists may be prone to police the post-medieval weald for inauthentic medievalisms, neomedievalists embrace the articulation and mobilisation of metahistorical anachronisms. To the medievalist, medievalisms provide powerful indexes that reveal how post-medieval societies have variously imagined ‘little middle ages’ to suit modern agendas. To the neomedievalist, medievalisms are theory-fictions that facilitate ludic speculation on non-modern futurities. While neomedievalist theories have emerged in a variety of fields since the early 1970s — notably in cultural studies of medievalisms, international relations and literary theory — there are few applications that synthesise and put the methodologies of these diverse fields into practice. thN Lng folk 2go applies this extant scholarship as an extradisciplinary practice, dramatising the neomedieval turn in (quasi)objects, persons, work, education, travel, food, ethnicity, media, art, hypereconomics and technology. This speculative journey is ghost authored by a trinity of neomedievalist narrators — Journeyman, Anchorite and Host — each relic-ing their own curious neomedieval futurities
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/172859
            Keywords
            speculative fiction; medievalism; theory-fiction; geopolitics; thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology; thema EDItEUR::3 Time period qualifiers::3K CE period up to c 1500
            DOI
            10.21983/P3.0051.1.00
            ISBN
            9780615890258
            Publisher
            punctum books
            Publisher website
            http://punctumbooks.com
            Publication date and place
            Brooklyn, NY, 2013
            Pages
            242
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            • logo EUEuropean Union
              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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