Kerby-Fulton Wins 2010 Haskins Gold Medal for Books Under Suspicion

Author: Lisa Walenceus

Books_Under_Suspicion:_Censorship_and_Tolerance_of_Revelatory_Writing_in_Late_Medieval_England

Kathryn Kerby-Fulton, Notre Dame Professor of English, has received the 2010 Haskins Gold Medal from the Medieval Academy of America for her work, Books Under Suspicion: Censorship and Tolerance of Revelatory Writing in Late Medieval England. This award is given annually to a book, published in the previous six years, that is judged to be distinguished in the field of medieval studies.

“It is rare that a book requires the reevaluation of major writers and movements in both Latin and the vernacular, in the realm of both theological treatises and literary art, permitting us to see both discourses as parts of a broader fabric,” the committee announced in presenting the award. “Kerby-Fulton’s magnum opus presents a fresh panorama of theology, literature, and history in the age of Chaucer with an originality that promises to have an impact across numerous disciplines within and beyond medieval studies for years to come.”

Books Under Suspicion, published by University of Notre Dame Press, explores censorship and tolerance of controversial revelatory theology in England from 1329 to 1437, suggesting that writers and translators as different as Chaucer, Langland, Julian of Norwich, “M.N,” and Margery Kempe positioned their work to take advantage of the tacit toleration that both religious and secular authorities extended to this type of writing. Kerby-Fulton makes use of neglected material in manuscripts and archives to construct an acclaimed revisionist account of theological politics in late medieval England and academic freedom in universities of the time.

A member of the English faculty since 2005, Kerby-Fulton is also affiliated with the College of Arts and Letter’s Medieval Institute.

“The Haskins Medal is an extraordinary recognition of the achievement of a scholar who has in just a few years become absolutely central to Notre Dame’s high place in the world of medieval studies and our doctoral program,” John Sitter, Department of English chair, says. “Our colleague Kathryn Kerby-Fulton’s award of course shines a light on her important work, but it also brightens the department, the Medieval Institute, and the University.”

Books Under Suspicion was also awarded the John Ben Snow Prize from the American Conference on British Studies in 2007. That prize is awarded annually for the best book by a North American scholar in any field of British Studies dealing with the period from the Middle Ages through the 18th century.

Kerby-Fulton specializes in Middle English literature and related areas of medieval studies. She has written several books and articles on medieval literary writers, including Reformist Apocalypticism and Piers Plowman. Her edited collections include Written Work: Langland, Labour and Authorship with Steven Justice; Iconography and the Professional Reader: The Politics of Book Production in the Douce Piers Plowman with Denise Despres; and Voices in Dialogue: Reading Women in the Middle Ages with Linda Olson.

The Medieval Academy of America, founded in 1925, is the largest professional organization in the world devoted to medieval studies. The Haskins Medal was established in 1940 to honor the academy’s founder and second president, Charles Homer Haskins.

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