Thursday, August 28, 2008

Barack Obama, Medievalist (?)

From the annals of strange stuff, I ran across this Italian article that has the mayor San Giovanni of Fiore inviting Barack Obama to his town in order to become an honorary citizen. Apparently, according to this article, Obama has invoked the 12th-century mystic and theologian Joachim of Fiore on no fewer than 3 occasions.

Excuse me. What???

Does anyone know anything about this? The article doesn't give details of those occasions and I can't find -- anywhere -- independent verification of this. I've used the google, searched through Obama's website, used LexisNexis, Aldo Civico's website (the scholar who's mentioned in the article), etc. Nothing.

If, however, the report is true. I would like to formally declare my interest in becoming -- for either major candidate, McCain or Obama -- the US' 1st Cabinet Secretary of Medieval Stuff. I encourage the campaign staff for either candidate to get in touch.


UPDATE: Little more (in Italian) here. Seems more about Joachim than Obama though...

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

John McCain's Judeo-Christian "Crusade" (?)

This Boston Globe article caught my eye last week and I've been meaning to blog about it once the hectic-ness of the first week of classes passed. Here, Peter Canellos wonders aloud about McCain's peculiar use of the phrase "Judeo-Christian values" and how the Republican presidential candidate seems to use that phrase to specifically draw distinctions between the US and countries that are predominantly Muslim. For example:
"This just wasn't the elimination of a threat to Iraq - this was elimination of a threat to the West, part of this titanic struggle we are in between western Judeo-Christian values and principles and Islamic extremists," McCain said in 2006, after the killing of Al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Then again, "in arguing for a strong defense of Georgia in its struggles with Russia, McCain twice noted that Georgia is a Christian nation - perhaps to distinguish it from other crumbling pieces of the former Soviet Union that are Muslim, such as Chechnya and Azerbaijan."

Canellos ends by wondering aloud whether most Americans would even notice this language, but also by wondering how those Americans who aren't Jews or Christians might feel -- Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, etc.

*****

I'm left wondering too, specifically because of how McCain seems to be championing a manichaean world-view (like George W. Bush) but pushing it into a starkly religious territory that Bush, at least ostensibly, has tried hard to avoid. Samuel Huntington's "clash of civilizations" but with a (new) pentecostal evangelical bent* -- something others have noted too. All this reminds me, unfortunately, of something I've talked about again and again and again here, specifically how the ideas that reside behind the word "crusade" survive, move, and adapt.

Here, McCain (in many ways, like Bush) is framing the -- note -- violent struggles that the US faces in the context of a quasi-apocalyptic religious struggle of good (Judeo-Christian) vs. evil (non-Christian -- Islamic in the case of Iraq, Iran, & Al-Qaeda; "heathen?" in the case of Russia). McCain's rhetoric is not Gen. Boykin's but it's not far off. I'm don't know if Sen. McCain is quite aware of all the connotations of his words here. I do, however, know that I'm not particularly comfortable with either response he might give to that query.




*See especially Richard Bulliet's critique of Huntington and the idea of the West as an exclusively Judeo-Christian civilization.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

In Light of Things....

This article from today's Inside Higher Ed might be of interest in light of discussions on academia, Allen, and the like that we have had here:

http://insidehighered.com/news/2008/08/20/georgia

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Medieval Studies, Civility, and Theory

Larry Swain now has (what he describes as) a long, boring, homiletic sort of post over at The Ruminate. It's not that long and certainly not boring. Indeed, it's well worth a thorough read and think-through. Jon Jarrett at Tenth Medieval also posted on something that seems related a bit earlier. That one's worth a read as well.

I certainly don't want to be the "let's all play nice" guy but, seriously, "let's play nice." I too am quite sick of the feuds and ad hominems that plague academia (well, and society) generally. There's no place for it. This is, and always has been, a collaborative exercise. We only really get anywhere by talking to each other.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Back in the New World

Finally back from Oxford, where I attended this NEH Summer Institute. Overall, a tremendous experience. More regular blogging will resume shortly...

I will, however, now point you to a great lecture series that's I'm organizing for Fall 2008 at Virginia Tech. All are, of course, welcome...

Crusades, Then & Now

Fri. 9/26 -- 7pm
"The Origins of the Crusades"
Gregory Bell

Duke University

Thurs. 10/9 -- 7pm
"The First Crusade and the Origins of Europe"

Jay Rubenstein

2007 MacArthur Fellow
Univ. Tennessee, Knoxville

Thurs. 10/23 -- 7pm
"By Sword or Word: Spreading the Gospel in the Age of Crusade"

Brett Whalen

Univ. North Carolina, Chapel-Hill

Thurs. 11/13 -- 7pm
Using "Crusade" Today: A Discussion

Rachel Scott, Virginia Tech
Ananda Abeysekara, Virginia Tech
Matthew Gabriele, Virginia Tech


UPDATE: Forgot to mention that I'm going to try to podcast each of these talks, so you can all listen to them yourselves.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Ossetia's Medieval Troubles

Scott Nokes over at Unlocked Wordhoard justifiably drew attention to Jeff Spycek's recent post on the medieval roots of the current situation over Ossetia: http://www.quidplura.com/?p=209