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Medieval and Renaissance Studies

Medieval & Renaissance Studies

The Medieval and Renaissance Studies Programs offer the opportunity to study societies that evolved between the 5th and 17th centuries, particularly in Europe, from the perspective of various disciplines such as language and literature, history, music, theatre, or philosophy.

The courses focus on specific themes such as body and gender, heroes and narratives, travel and travelers, the perception of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance between the 19th and 21st centuries. In addition, the specific requirements of these programs include courses on this period in a variety of departments in the Faculty of Arts.

Latin, the dominant language of learning in this period, is required for the major that gives access to graduate studies.

One of the strengths of these programs is that they lead you to think differently, to open up to social practices that now seem hard to comprehend or mysterious, or to understand that these ancient societies offer alternative models to our own.

By taking courses such as those on the myths of King Arthur, long-distance travel, knights, witchcraft, or the case of Joan of Arc, you will gain access to a deep past that seems very strange today.

Middle Age And Renaissance Studies
Thomas Becket鈥檚 Murder in Canterbury Cathedral (London, British Library, Harley MS. 5102, fol. 32)

Study programs

Undergraduate studies: Major & Minor

Graduate studies: Collaborative Master鈥檚

The specialization in Medieval and Renaissance Studies is intended for students who wish to enrich their training by including to their main program an interdisciplinary component in Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Besides a thesis or a major research paper on a topic related to the medieval and Renaissance period, the specific requirements of the collaborative program include two core courses in Medieval Studies, one of which will count as a partial requirement in the main discipline.

Medieval and Renaissance Studies
The Tiger in Medieval Bestiaries (Oxford, Bodleian, MS. 764, fol. 6v)

Professors

  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 D茅partement de Fran莽ais
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of English
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Classics and Religious Studies
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Philosophy
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Classics and Religious Studies
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Classics and Religious Studies
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of History
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Theatre
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Classics and Religious Studies
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Modern Languages and Literatures
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of Modern Languages and Literatures
  • 鈥 Department of Classics and Religious Studies
  • 鈥 Department of Theatre
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of English
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Department of English

Part time professors

  • , PhD, Adjunct Professor, Department of Music
  • , PhD, Adjunct Professor, Department of Music
  • Caroline Prud鈥檋omme, PhD, D茅partement de fran莽ais

Areas of Research

  • Manuscript culture
  • Women鈥檚 writing
  • Gender and sexuality
  • History of reading
  • History of literary, religious and universitary institutions
  • History of the book and of booktrades in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
  • Renaissance Italy
  • Jews and Christians in the Renaissance
  • French literature of the Middle Ages
  • Literature, religion, and philosophy from Late Antiquity to the Renaissance
  • Literature and historiography in Late Antiquity
  • Production and social use of writing
  • Rhetoric and education in Late Antiquity
  • Theatre in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

Fall 2024

Fall 2024

Cour offert 脿 l鈥橴niversit茅 St-Paul / Course offered at St-Paul University:

  • Automne / Fall 2024 : THO 3123 (Wednesday 9:00-12:00) ; THO 3160 (Tuesday 17:30-20:30).

Winter 2025

Winter 2025

.

MDV 4900 : Recherche dirig茅e en 脡tudes m茅di茅vales et de la Renaissance

Cours 脿 th猫me variable / Variable topics courses, 2024-2025

Automne / Fall 2024

MDV 2500 / FRA 3760 鈥 Initiation 脿 la civilisation du Moyen 脗ge et de la Renaissance : 芦 H茅ros et 
grands textes de l鈥櫭﹑op茅e 禄

  • Prof. Marie-Pierre Bussi猫res (CLA)
  • Automne 2024, Lundi 14:30-15:50 + Jeudi 16:00-17:20
  • Ce cours propose d鈥櫭﹖udier la figure des h茅ros dans quelques grands textes du Moyen-芒ge et de la Renaissance, afin de d茅couvrir les lieux communs h茅ro茂ques mis en valeur par les auteurs. Les h茅ros m茅di茅vaux portent certaines caract茅ristiques h茅rit茅es de l鈥櫭﹑op茅e, le genre po茅tique noble de l鈥橝ntiquit茅. L鈥檋茅ro茂sation est en effet le moyen litt茅raire privil茅gi茅 pour donner de l鈥檃utorit茅 脿 un personnage, mythologique ou historique, dont on chante les hauts faits r茅els ou fictifs. Ce cours d鈥檌nitiation 脿 la civilisation m茅di茅vale explore les lieux communs au sujet du h茅ros litt茅raire m茅di茅val dans quelques grands textes, tout en faisant un panorama de la repr茅sentation h茅ro茂que dans divers genres litt茅raires.

MDV 4100 / HIS 4320 鈥 Seminar in Medieval and Renaissance Studies: 鈥淧lague Pandemics鈥

  • Prof. Lori Jones (HIS)
  • Fall 2024, Wednesday 19:00-21:50
  • This seminar will explore the effects of recurrent plague outbreaks on artistic, literary, religious, governmental, and medical-scientific history between the sixth and eighteenth centuries, introducing students to the ways in which plague pandemics can be used as an entry point to interdisciplinary scholarship and global history. While the primary focus will be on Europe, the seminar will also address plague鈥檚 impact across Eurasia and Africa.

MDV 5100 - Medieval and Renaissance Studies Research Methods and Tools

  • Prof. Andrew Taylor (ENG)
  • Fall 2024, Friday, 8:30-11:20
  • How do you read an old manuscript? How do you find your way through an archive? This course will provide some preliminary answers, introducing you to the experience of working with a range of medieval and early modern books and documents. We will consider how works were composed, copied, and annotated, how they have been and can be transcribed and edited, the challenges they present, at a material level, to modern scholars, and their shifting institutional context, from the medieval monastery or college library to the renaissance library to the modern library to the internet.

Hiver / Winter 2025

MDV 2100 鈥 Introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Civilization: 芦 Medievalism 禄

  • Prof. Geoffrey Rector (ENG)
  • Winter 2025, Monday 8:30-9:50 + Thursday 10:00-11:20
  • This course is concerned with the revival of popular and scholarly interest in the Middle Ages in the period between the early 19th century and the present, in such fields as literature, the visual arts, popular media, and architecture. Topics will include both the formation of medieval studies as a discipline in this period as well as the surprising and often highly sentimentalized preoccupation with the medieval past in novels, poetry, and film. What did the Middle Ages mean to writers such as Victor Hugo or Walter Scott, whose novels set in a medieval past virtually defined the historical novel as a genre? Why were so many academic and institutional buildings of 19th and 20th centuries built in a 鈥渘eo-medieval鈥 style 鈥 including our own Parliament Hill? Why were so many 鈥 historians, literary scholars, architects, poets, painters鈥 so preoccupied with the dream of reconstructing a lost and broken medieval past?

MDV 3100A 鈥 Selected Topics in Medieval and Renaissance Studies: 鈥淏yzantium and the Middle East: Foundation of the Medieval World鈥

  • Prof. to be determined (CLA)
  • Winter 2025, Wednesday 13:00-14:20 + Friday 11:30-12:50
  • Throughout this course, students will engage in an in-depth study of the transformation of the Eastern Mediterranean world from the classical epoch to the medieval era. By adopting a multidisciplinary approach, they will explore a wide range of topics and perspectives aimed at cultivating a more holistic and nuanced understanding of the myriad events and circumstances that marked this pivotal transition. Spanning from A.D. 284 to 700, the Late Antique Near East will be examined as a wide-reaching, multifaceted, and interconnected system. While the Byzantine and Persian Empires are central to the curriculum, other peoples such as the Armenians and Arabs will also be covered in significant depth. Through exposure to these diverse perspectives, students will gain insight into the complex dynamics of cultural exchange, political maneuvering, and religious identity that characterized the region during this transformative period.

MDV 4500 / HIS 4720 鈥 S茅minaire en 脡tudes m茅di茅vales et de la Renaissance : 芦 Reconnaitre et juger les agents du Diable : la sorcellerie en Europe (XIVe- XVIIe s.) 禄

  • Prof. 脿 d茅terminer (HIS)
  • Hiver 2025, Jeudi, 14:30-17:20
  • Ce s茅minaire a pour objectif d鈥櫭﹖udier le d茅veloppement de la sorcellerie en Europe entre le XIVe et le XVIIe si猫cle. La figure du sorcier ou de la sorci猫re se d茅veloppe 脿 partir de celle de l鈥檋茅r茅tique, caract茅ris茅e par la d茅sob茅issance aux normes dict茅es par l鈥櫭塯lise. La sorcellerie telle qu鈥檈lle se manifeste au XVe si猫cle associe des pratiques occultes, magiques, 脿 la pr茅sence du Diable, pour 茅laborer un personnage mena莽ant la soci茅t茅 tout enti猫re. Le s茅minaire est fond茅 sur l鈥檃nalyse des documents produits entre XIVe et XVIIe s. (trait茅s, proc猫s, r茅cits, images) pour comprendre la mani猫re dont les sorciers et les sorci猫res ont 茅t茅 d茅crit.e.s et per莽u.e.s, mais aussi comment leur description a 茅volu茅 au cours des si猫cles. Il s鈥檃git de saisir qui 茅taient ces agents diaboliques qui terroris猫rent les Europ茅ens.

MDV 5900 - S茅minaire de recherche interdisciplinaire / Interdisciplinary Research Seminar

  • Prof. Kouky Fianu (HIS)
  • Hiver 2025, Mardi, 8:30-11:20
  • S茅minaire bilingue 脿 th猫mes variables destin茅 脿 explorer le sens et la valeur du travail interdisciplinaire en 茅tudes m茅di茅vales et modernes. / Bilingual seminar using varying themes as a vehicle for exploring the meaning and value of interdisciplinary work in medieval and modern studies.the course.

Coordination

Coordination
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 Coordinateur 鈥&苍产蝉辫;贰苍驳濒颈蝉丑
  • &苍产蝉辫;鈥 脡tudes anciennes et sciences des religions
  • , Histoire
  • Noah Stripinis, B.A., Mineure en 脡tudes m茅di茅vales et de la Renaissance

Contact us

Andrew Taylor

Department of English

Pavillon Hamelin
70 Laurier Avenue E.
Ottawa ON Canada K1N 6N5