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El. knyga: Roadworks: Medieval Britain, medieval roads

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Roadworks: medieval roads, medieval Britain is a groundbreaking, interdisciplinary study of roads and wayfinding in medieval England, Wales, and Scotland. It looks afresh at the relationship between the road as a material condition of daily life and the formation of local and national communities. Its examination of the building and maintenance of infrastructure challenges the long-held picture of a medieval England lacking in technological sophistication, passively inheriting Roman roads and never engineering any of its own, contenting itself instead with dirt tracks and poor-quality paving. At the theoretical level, Roadworks argues that the business of road maintenance, road travel, and wayfinding, far from simply reflecting social relations actually constitutes those very associations and bonds we call social. The contributors have been carefully chosen to provide a comprehensive and diverse range of topics and chronology. Roadworks balances theoretical consideration with historical and archaeological data to create a truly interdisciplinary study that is also strongly coherent. To date, recent studies of medieval infrastructure have been tended to be discipline-specific and often technical. This collection is accessible and brings the close reading skills of literary study to draw out the imaginative, symbolic, and cultural significance of the road. The key audience for this book is scholars of medieval England (early and late) in all disciplines, both lecturers and postgraduate students. It is not a student survey or textbook. Its theoretical foundations will also ensure an audience among scholars of cultural studies, especially those in urban studies, transport studies, and economic history.

Recenzijos

The editors are to be congratulated on the strength of the essays and the way they complement each other despite the diversity of approaches taken by their authors. The reader also benefits from the clarity and uniformity of presentation, and the generally very high standard of copy editing. More illustrations would have been welcome for a subject that cries out for maps, but this is a small gripe about a book that offers so much to all of those interested in a topic that unites different disciplines. The Journal of transport history vol 37 (2), Stephen Mileson, Victoria County History, Oxfordshire

Roadworks represents a major contribution to our understanding of roads in the medieval period. Its thirteen chapters cover a wide range of sources and methodologies, and considering that much of the major literature on the subject is very old its revisionist position is very welcome. Owen Davies, University of Hertfordshire, Landscapes, June 2017

It falls beyond the scope of this review to rehearse the specific arguments made by each of these thirteen fine essays, but each and every one of them sheds important light on British roads (and rivers, bridges, forests and coastlines) and how they inscribe the wayfarer as homo viator in ways often more fundamental than how human technology imposes meaning on roads (p.3). Collectively they thus make an important contribution to the emerging field of medieval infrastructures and demonstrate its relevance to numerous subfields and medieval studies more broadly. Guy Geltner, Universiteit van Amsterdam, JRG, Vol 131, No 2, 2018 -- .

List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
List of contributors
ix
Acknowledgements xii
List of abbreviations
xiii
1 Introduction: roads and writing
1(32)
Valerie Allen
Ruth Evans
2 Sources for the English medieval road system
33(17)
Paul Hindle
3 Once a highway, always a highway: roads and English law, c. 1150--1300
50(24)
Alan Cooper
4 When things break: mending roads, being social
74(23)
Valerie Allen
5 The word on the street: Chaucer and the regulation of nuisance in post-plague London
97(30)
Sarah Rees Jones
6 Getting there: way finding in the Middle Ages
127(30)
Ruth Evans
7 The function of material and spiritual roads in the English eremitic tradition
157(20)
Michelle M. Sauer
8 The royal itinerary and roads in England under Edward I
177(21)
Michael Prestwich
9 The pilgrimage road in late medieval English literature
198(22)
Shayne Aaron Legassie
10 The romance of the road in Athelston and two late medieval Robin Hood ballads
220(29)
Christine Chism
11 London: the hub of an English river transport network, 1250--1550
249(28)
Claire A. Martin
12 Conquest, roads and resistance in medieval Wales
277(26)
Dylan Foster Evans
13 Trackless, impenetrable and underdeveloped? Roads, colonization and environmental transformation in the Anglo-Scottish border zone, c. 1100 to c. 1300
303(23)
Richard Oram
Bibliography 326(34)
Index 360
Valerie Allen is Professor of English at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY

Ruth Evans is Professor of English at Saint Louis University -- .