1st Edition

Vigor Mortis The Vitality of the Dead in Medieval Societies

Edited By Scott G. Bruce, Stephen Gordon Copyright 2025
166 Pages
by Routledge

166 Pages
by Routledge

166 Pages
by Routledge

This volume explores the enduring presence and participation of the dead in the lives of premodern people from the Carolingian period to the end of the Middle Ages. Unlike modern states, which erect barriers to separate the dying and the deceased from their families, friends, and associates, premodern societies in western Europe fostered an on-going relationship between the living and the dead... Read more

Preface

Scott G. Bruce

 

Introduction: The vitality of the dead in medieval cultures

Stephen Gordon

 

1. The worm and the corpse: Carolingian visions of Gehenna’s undead cemetery

Matthew Bryan Gillis

 

2. ‘Agite, agite et uenite!’ Corrupted breath, corrupted speech and encounters with the restless dead in Geoffrey of Burton’s Vita sancte Moduenne virginis

Stephen Gordon

 

3. The necromancer and the abbot: summoning the dead in Cistercian exempla

Martha G. Newman

 

4. The dead in dreams: medieval Icelandic conceptions of the unquiet dead

Kirsi Kanerva

 

5. Talking with ghosts: Rancière, Derrida and the archive

John H. Arnold

 

6. Landscapes of the dead in the late medieval imagination

Carl Watkins

 

7. Byland Revisited, or, Spectres of Inheritance

Tom Johnson

 

8. Bodies of Earth and Air: Corporeality and Spirituality in Pre-Modern British Narratives of the Undead

Martha McGill

 

9. Of Saxons and spectres

Matthew Vernon

 

Biography

Scott G. Bruce is Professor of Medieval History at Fordham University.  His research interests include monasticism, hagiography, and the reception of classical and patristic traditions in medieval Europe.  He is the editor of The Penguin Book of the Undead (2016), The Penguin Book of Hell (2018), and The Penguin Book of Demons (2024).

 

Stephen Gordon is Lecturer in Medieval Literature at Cardiff University. He has taught previously at the University of Manchester and Royal Holloway. Stephen is an interdisciplinary scholar of the premodern supernatural with an especial interest in the literature and archaeology of the medieval walking dead.