[editorial note from Karl Steel: Boyarin responds to Leahy's posts here and here; for an earlier guest post by Boyarin, see his "Decentering Medieval Studies," here, which provided the title for a roundtable moderated yesterday by Jennifer Alberghini, featuring Anna Akasoy, who also spoke last night at the Graduate Center on medieval Arabic falconry treatises, and Hyunhee Park, whose Mapping the Chinese and Islamic Worlds looks essential).
And now Shamma:
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Jewish tradition distinguishes (broadly)
between t'o types
of arguments: arguments that
are not “for the sake of heaven”, where one or both sides are debating for the
sake of their own reputation or just out of spite, and those that are “for the
sake of heaven” where both sides are looking towards a common goal and are
arguing in good faith with the aim of getting closer to understanding or
achieving this goal. I see this exchange as an example of the second kind of
argument. While I fully believe that the intentions of both Chad Leahy’s post
of (Feb 25) Dear Fellow Iberianists where are we? ( http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/2018/02/dear-fellow-iberianists-where-are-we.html) and
the editorial board of ITM in running it were good, and while I obviously
support the broader context in which this conversation is happening I would
like to explain why myself and other Iberianists might take exception. To quote
the Andalusi poet and Philosopher Judah Ha-Levi- ניתך מרציה ועמלך גיר מרצי- which means “your intentions are welcome, but your deeds are
not welcome”. Further,
while Chad has somewhat responded to some of the pushback against his first
post in his second post (see here: http://www.inthemedievalmiddle.com/),
I feel it’s important to articulate this pushback in a more thorough fashion
than had been expressed till now on various social media, both because Chad’s
second post makes it clear that such a response was needed, and, perhaps more
importnatly in order to make this to be a more inclusive conversation- to give
non-Iberianists more context and resources to look at this issue.
I first want to begin with why having ITM host
this particular post felt troubling to me and some of my colleagues. It is a
well-established fact that in North America anything related to England
dominates medieval studies. The majority of jobs, and majority of panels at big
conferences (and small specialized conferences) etc. all revolve around England
in some way. This of course has understandable reasons, and on some level,
makes sense. But because of this, for those of us working in other areas, our
topics, interests, areas of expertise, and struggles are often sidelined,
marginalized and invisible. ITM, which is run entirely by scholars whose area
of expertise is England, and which is considered by many (myself included) to
be one of the important online voices in medieval studies cannot be seen as
separated from this reality.
I understand that both the editors of ITM and
Chad Leahy are aware of this- and that that is why he wished to publish his
post in this influential venue, and that the regular contributors of ITM saw
this as an opportunity to use the platform ITM has to create the space that in
my previous paragraph I argue that we have been fighting for. I also
immediately understood that both parties, the author and editors of ITM, viewed
this piece as being in line with the active discussion that took place on ITM
earlier this summer about similar topics (and to which I contributed as well).
But, there is a big difference: all of those earlier pieces were aimed at
medieval studies as a whole, even when someone was writing from their specific subfield,
the idea was to think about ways in which we all can be part of a general
conversation that improves the field as a whole. In that context using ITM as a
platform made sense: its centrality to the field was its strength and made
conversation across various boundaries possible. This recent piece calls out a
specific group (“Iberianists”) for not contributing to a collective discussion:
“Look, medieval studies has been having these important conversations, why are
you lagging behind? Why don’t you care enough about RFB? AF?” It reinforces the
message that we only matter to the extent that we are doing the things that are
important to those working on the “real medieval studies.”
The fact that ITM chose to provide space for
this touches a nerve, because we have been trying to have these conversations
with you, explain why our work matters to these issues long before this summer.
Often we have been ignored, sometimes condescended to (“oh yes yes we know
Spain is special place… yes yes we know Jews and Arabs and Muslims and all
that- but how is that relevant to the rest of Europe?”), and sometimes even
actively attacked because we don’t know enough about “issue X”.
Furthermore, because none of those running ITM
know enough about Medieval Iberian studies to properly assess some of the
issues with the piece and the many ways it comes off as short-sighted.
The general thrust of the post is a call for
Iberianists to be more visible in calling out the use of the medieval by white
supremacists and other nationalistic groups, particularly when it relates to
Spain. The argument is that Iberianists have been tacitly complicit or not
vocal enough in the current fight about medieval studies that has become
especially fierce because of the pushback against scholars like RFB, AF, and
certain events at last year’s IMC Leeds. But what the post fails to account for
is that there is a long complex history of Iberianists fighting this fight, in
Spain, Europe, and North America. Indeed, for many of us the very choice to
become “Iberianists” was a choice to be part of struggle over the identity of
not just the Iberian Peninsula but the medieval world.
As Jesús R Velasco
wrote (in a discussion responding to the post that took place on my Facebook
wall, I’m quoting him with permission):
Iberianists have been making noise for a long time --including
university revolts in the late Francoist era, the fight against right-wing
politics of literary criticism during the ‘transition’ and beyond, the renewal
of archival research, the study of many languages across the Iberian
Peninsula, new studies in Medieval and Early Modern models of conflictive ‘coexistence’
for years, etc.” Some these scholars risked their freedom and were forced into
exile for the scholarly work. Yes, there is a history of drawing upon accounts
of medieval Spain to support fascism, but there is as well a complicated
history of resistance that is embedded into much of our scholarship both in
Spain and here.
As David Wack notes in a review of the history of the study of medieval
Spain in the US:
For those of us working in the US, it was the legacy of Américo
Castro that had the greatest impact on this debate. Castro threw down the
multicultural gauntlet. It was a real challenge to the field, a call to arms...
… Castro’s students and followers in the US, notably Francisco Márquez
Villanueva, Sam Armistead, and James Monroe, during the last quarter of the
20th century and the first decade of the 21st, all continued to explore the
idea that Spain’s literary and vernacular cultures were not simply a reaction to
the history of Islam and Judaism in the Peninsula, but were heirs, hybrids, a
multicultural product of this history. Consequently, any assessment of medieval
Iberian culture that omitted the Peninsula’s Semitic legacy was incomplete at
best and patently racist at worst.
Castro’s students, and his students’ students, took up the
challenge with great zeal. His multicultural thesis resonated with the brewing
US multiculturalism that exploded in the wake of the Vietnam War. James Monroe
(Emeritus at UC Berkeley), who took his PhD in Romance Languages at Harvard,
went on to almost single-handedly champion Andalusi literary studies outside of
Spain, always with the idea that, as he put it, and with only slight
exaggeration, “Spanish is a dialect of Arabic.” The late Francisco Márquez-Villanueva
(Emeritus at Harvard) wrote extensively on the semitic cultures of the Iberian
peninsula and their deep footprint in what would become Castilian and then
Spanish literary and intellectual culture. The late Samuel Armistead (Emeritus
at UC Davis) dedicated a lifetime to the study of the culture of medieval
Iberia and its transformations in the culture of the Sephardic Jews. His
student, the late María Rosa Menocal (Yale) famously disrupted the field first
with her book The Arabic Role in Medieval Literary History in
which she championed the so-called thèse arabe of the genesis
of troubadour poetry, and also challenged Hispanist approaches to the Andalusi
legacy of Peninsular literary culture. More recently Menocal published a
popular trade book, titled The Ornament of the World, a
multicultural history of medieval Iberia that delighted general readers and
sympathetic specialists, and infuriated more orthodox historians who felt that
her intervention was an incursion on their territory and a heresy of
speculative, even revisionist history in the spirit of her academic
grandfather, Américo Castro. The academic grandchildren of Castro, such as
Harvard’s Luis Girón-Negrón, Minnesota’s Michelle Hamilton, and Michigan’s Ryan
Szpiech, are continuing and nuancing the work begun by Castro and his students,
and continue to interrogate linguistic and religious categories of scholarly
inquiry.” (For the full post read here: https://davidwacks.uoregon.edu/2014/05/02/lestreilles/)
I will reiterate in case it has
not been clear: Spanish scholars like Américo Castro were in exile because of
their ideas. Our field has never not been a site of struggle. For many of us
our engagement with medieval Spain as Hebraists or Arabists is a result of the
work of Castro and others- and we see it as a direct continuation of it. That
is there isn’t a specific moment (last summer for example) when we are engaging
these questions- we are always doing so- in our writing, speaking and teaching.
In his post Chad asks “why Fernández-Morera’s rabidly polemical The
Myth of the Andalusian Paradise (2016) not give rise to a more
vigorous public response by scholars in the field in 2017?” And points to Sarah Pearce’s review of it as
the lone exception (read here: https://wp.nyu.edu/sjpearce/2017/03/17/paradise-lost/).
Sarah Pearce (again on Facebook discussing the ITM post) has suggested
that part of the problem with the post is that the author fails to adequately
distinguish between “Hispanists” and “Iberianists”. She says: “the former
ultimately being the heirs to the national-Catholic foundations of the field in
some way or another, who see an integrity to "Spain", and who work in
Spanish and Latin only; and the latter being people who work with more
languages and see Spain as part of a broader system that requires a broader
historiographic and theoretical approach.” This failure to distinguish
re-anacts (perhaps inadvertently) the very problem which the post is trying to
mobilize scholars to fight against. The scholars named above by Wacks are what
I (and others) would consider “Iberianists.”
As Chad himself suggests in his post many of us imbued this struggle as
part of training and its defined our scholarship in significant ways. Chad
turns this into a negative worrying that perhaps because we already see Iberia
as a complex site of multicultural struggle we are silent when these important
conversations are taking place all around us- but its simply not the case- scholars of Iberia/al-Andlaus/Sepharad have
been making noise for a long time in many different ways about these issues.
Are you listening?
Some recommendations for going further in this direction:
In addition to the scholars mentioned in the post above also look at the
work of Vincent Barletta (Stanford) and
Nuria Martínez de Castilla (EPHE, Paris)
A very brief reading list that might be useful:
Monroe, James The Art of Badi az-Zaman al-Hamadhani as Picarsque
Narrative, American University of Beirut, 1984.
Brann, Ross The Compunctious
Poet: Cultural Ambiguity and Hebrew
Poetry in Muslim Spain, Johns Hopkins Jewish Studies 1991
Menocal, Maria Rosa The Ornament
of the World: How Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance
in Medieval Spain, Back Bay Books,
Little Brown, 2002
and Shards of Love: Exile and the
origins of the Lyric, Duke UP, 1994
Akbari and Mallette eds. A
Sea of Languages: Rethinking the Arabic Role in Medieval Literary History,
University of Toronto Press, 2013
Pearce, Sarah The
Andalusi Literary and Intellectual Tradition: The Role of Arabic in Judah ibn Tibbon’s
Ethical Will, Indiana Univerist Press 2017
Some shorter pieces:
Gumbrecht. (1994) "A
Philological Invention of Modernism: Menéndez Pidal, García Lorca, and the
Harlem Renaissance," in The Future
of the Middle Ages: Medieval French
Literature in the 1990s, ed. William D. Paden (Gainesville: University of
Florida Press, 1994), 32-49.
Ray, Jonathan. (2005). Beyond Tolerance and Persecution: Reassessing Our
Approach to
Medieval Convivencia. Jewish Social Studies, 11(2), 1–18.
Rojinsky, D. (2010). Companion to Empire: A
Genealogy of the Written Word in Spain and New Spain, C.550-1550. Rodopi.
(in particular Intro and post-script):
Postscript
“In his contrastive
Analysis of the Romance and national philological traditions, Gumbrecht (1986)
suggested that, Romance Philology might be better understood at the discipline
of the outsider, of the exile, the entranced “with the fragmentation, the loveliness
and merits of the scattering of the long-lost empire” (Menocal 1994:109).
Bearing this in mind, it comes as no surprise that Gumbrecht should also note
that the founder of Romance Philology, Friedrich Diez, actually fit the bill
himself: Diez was Prussian, and hence a non-native Romance speaker, and born at
a time when Germany did not even yet exist as a nation. Moreover, Diez dwelt on
Provencal poetry in Languedoc and therefore on a language not correlated with
any National boundaries, and in fact a tongue destined for destruction to allow
for the emergence of France as a linguistically unified polity. If later nationalistic
philological institutions of individual powerful cultures “bound by a
specific and particular language” (Menocal 1994:109) stood in contrast to Diez’
apparent love of diasporic fragmentation and languages ‘without homes’, then
Romance Philology, in its preoccupation with an essentially atemporal Romania
“written in all languages and at all times”, presupposed that for all its practitioners
– not least of all in case of Erich Auerbach – the “the logical home is the
earth: it can no longer be the nation” (110).
Cerquiglini, B. (1989). Éloge de la variante: Histoire critique de la
philologie. Paris: Seuil.
Szpiech, R. (2014). Américo Castro, Erich Auerbach, y la “ciencia”
historiográfica. In Encrucijada de culturas: Alfonso X y su tiempo. Homenaje a Francisco Márquez Villanueva, edited
by. Emilio González Ferrín, 101–124.
Menocal, Maria Rosa Writing
Without Footnotes: The role of the medievalist in contemporary intellectual
life:
Jones, Nicholas Cosmetic Ontologies, Cosmetic Subversions: Articulating Black
Beauty and Humanity in Luis de Góngora's "En la fiesta del Santísimo
Sacramento" Journal for Early Modern
Cultural Studies, Volume 15, Number 1, Winter2015, pp. 26-54
(I want to thank Sarah Pearce, Jesús R Velasco,
David Wacks and Valerie Wilhite for reading drafts of this post and providing
great suggestions and information.
Please note that I have a disability that
impacts my writing- we have tried to clean things up- but in the interest of
making this post available in a timely manner we could not copy edit it as
closely as might be necessary. Please don’t let any typos, grammar errors etc
influence how you evaluate the post).
5 comments:
I absolutely love this response, Shamma. Your points are both fair and accurate, and I thank you for articulating them. In particular, I think you've hit the nail on the head by pointing out my problematically fuzzy --or rather non-existent-- distinction between Iberianists and Hispanists. As someone trained in this latter tradition, I think my anxieties have much much more to do with the place of Medieval Iberia within Hispanism, rather than the place of broader Iberian Studies within Medieval Studies. My third post was written to reflect on some addition problems I see as related to our field --especially relating to the history/theory divide, hiring practices, intimidation, and silencing-- but having read your piece now, I really feel that these are in large measure quite specifically Hispanic Studies problems, and it is unfair to paint with such a broad brush. I'll be sure to acknowledge your essential points here in a revised version of this last post. And I'm sincerely looking forward to more dialogue. The positive and balanced tone of your rebuttal here is a beautiful thing that I can't thank you enough for.
--CL
I agree with everything, but I have my doubts with the division between Hispanists and Iberianists. I like it to emphasize the gap between pre and post 1714 Spain, thus making more difficult racist and nationalistic appropriations in Spain. However, Hispanists have worked from multicultural perspectives in several linguistic traditions for a long time - see, for example, Mabel Moraña's "Ideologies of Hispanism" (2005). For Emilio García Gómez, Juan Vernet or Américo Castro, it was crucial to defend that non-Catholic traditions were a consubstantial part of Hispanism and the "Spanish" - lo español. Not so much for Eugenio Asensio. To separate Iberia from Hispania or Spain is useful from the point of view of the U.S.A. as an intervention in contemporary culture wars - counteracting alt-right triumphalist views based on race, religion and the Reconquista narrative; but it does a disfavor to those that were persecuted and exiled after the Civil War for maintaining that non-Catholic traditions were an integral part of Spanish culture, identity and history. Although I always write about "medieval Iberia" instead of medieval Spain - besides Dangler's wonderful arguments in "Why Iberia?, the "hispaniae" in De rebus hispaniae, the "Espanna" in the Estoria de Espanna, Sefarad and Al-Andalus designate the Eurasian peninsula south of the Pyrenees - I will never do the favor to Asensio-like scholars to leave Hispanism for them. It is battle that has been fought and is being won; I believe that to abandon it would be a mistake.
Hi Juan,
I completely agree with all of this. I think the terminology is confusing. My introduction to medieval Spain in university was via James Monroe and for him Hebrew and Arabic were an integral part of Spain- and this came from the battles fought by those who went before them. If using Iberia vs. Spain feels like betraying their vision- then I’m with you, we should rethink using this term. Shamma
Let me also add, as the one who was making the sharp distinction, that I'm not wedded to the terminology in any way; I was working with what we got in the initial post and going from there. What I was really trying to get at was that there are two constituencies in the field; but I'm not particularly invested in what we call them. One thing that labels can do is serve as a quick shorthand to outsiders and tbh, when I'm talking to someone outside my field I'm more likely to say I'm a Hispanist, on geographic grounds, because Iberianist doesn't mean anything to most people. And inside/adjascent to the field I describe what I work on rather that saying that I am a this or a that in large part because modern field distinctions really don't serve medieval work well. In fact, part of my critique of Dangler is that "non-modern Iberia" is, in a way, the perfect name for our object of study but also totally unhelpful as a label because it encodes internal debates without having a legible external face. —SJP
Thank you for all of this. It resonates especially for me because it shows the disconnects that have plagued this conversation much better than I have been able to. One thing that struck me in both, but especially the second, of Chad’s posts is the absence of he early Middle Ages. Chad refers to the scholarship of C10-11, but shows no indication that he’s conversant with work done on pre-11th C Iberia. In fact, much of that work is along the lines of what you say has been happening in “Iberianist” scholarship, i.e., regularly challenging the nationalist traditions and institutions that sought to portray a particular sort of “Spanish” history. For me, one of the real problems with the way this conversation has gone is that the way so much of it has been framed seems not ‘for the sake of heaven.’ Because I know many of the people involved personally, I have to believe that they are. But honestly, arguments that start with the assumption that medievalists (and early medievalists have been called out especially here and elsewhere, as have the Iberianists — nobody seems to worry about the Byzantinists...) are doing nothing, or not enough, or don’t care about racism in the field make it very hard to believe that everyone is acting in good faith. That’s true in any dialogue where one side initiates the dialogue with accusations, rather than “what are you doing now, and are there ways we can all do better?” I see Chad’s posts as carrying on in the same vein, especially in that the ‘accusatory’ questions reflect little familiarity with what is being, or has been done to address issues of race, etc. The examples for Iberian history that you’ve given yourself and in citing Velasco are very similar to ones that can be found in my own field of continental Europe from Late Antiquity through the Carolingian period, The risk factor for non-Iberianists is obviously different — none operated under the very real threat of the Franco regime, after all.
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