Members

SMGS members who have chosen to share information are listed below. If you are a member and would like to be added to the list, please contact us.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

A

Adamson, Melitta

  • Professor, University of Western Ontario

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Barnhouse, Lucy C.

  • Assistant Professor of History, Arkansas State University
  • Research interests: canon law, hospitals, religious status, medical texts
  • Recent publications:
    • “Religious Women’s Authority and Rules for Nuns in Vision: From the Life of Hildegard von Bingen (2009).” In: Law, Justice, and Society in the Medieval World: An Introduction Through Film, eds. Esther Liberman. Cuenca, M. Christina Bruno, and Anthony Perron, 96-104 and 218-220. Fordham University Press, 2025.
    • “Contentious Catalysts: Beguines, Place, and Identity in Late Medieval Mainz.” Women’s History Review 33:3 (2024): 391-405.
    • Hospitals in Communities of the Late Medieval Rhineland: Houses of God, Places for the Sick. Premodern Health, Disease, and Disability, Amsterdam University Press, 2023.

Bennewitz, Ingrid

  • Professorin Emerita, Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg

Beringer, Alison L.

  • Associate Professor of Classics & Humanities, Montclair State University; NHC fellow 2025-26
  • Research interests: reception of Antiquity, Meisterlieder, history of aesthetics, gender studies
  • Recent publications:    
    • The Sight of Semiramis. Medieval and Early Modern Narratives of the Babylonian Queen. Tempe, AZ: ACMRS, 2016.
    • Gender Bonds, Gender Binds. Women, Men, and Family in Middle High German Literature. Co-edited with Sara S. Poor and Olga V. Trokhimenko. Berlin: De Gruyter 2021; paperback 2022. 
    • “Writing to Mothers: a Humanist’s Justification of Sculpture.” Euphorion 117.3 (2023): 351-72.
    • “A Fate worse than Death? Virgil’s ‘steinîn wîp’ in Jans der Enikel’s Weltchronik. In Gender Bonds, Gender Binds. 177-98.

Boggs, Roy

  • Professor Emeritus, Florida Gulf Coast University

Boyer, Tina

  • Associate Professor, Chair, Department of German and Russian, Wake Forest University
  • Research interests: medieval German literature and linguistics, with a particular focus on the role and representation of monsters in medieval literary traditions, as well as broader topics in premodern German studies, including philology and medievalism in contemporary culture. Current research includes a co-edited special issue of the journal Seminar that explores early conceptions of ‘race’ in premodern German studies.
  • Recent publications:
    • Boyer, Tina and Heiko Wiggers, eds. Germanic Philology: Perspectives in Linguistics and Literature. Vernon Press, 2024.
    • “Metaphors in the Muspilli.” Neophilologus 108 (2024): 245-259.
    • “Riesen im Spannungsfeld von Monstrosität, Religion und Maskulinität.” In RIESEN – Entwürfe und Deutungen des Außer/Menschlichen in mittelalterlicher Literatur, edited by Ronny F. Schulz and Silke Winst, 151-174. Wien: Fassbaender, 2020.
    • “Losing your religion in American Gods.” In American/Medieval: Nature and Mind in Cultural Transfer. Volume 2, edited by Gillian R. Overing and Ulrike Wiethaus, 189-209. Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht, 2019.

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Calomino, Salvatore

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin

Clason, Christopher

  • Professor Emeritus, Oakland University

Classen, Albrecht

  • University Distinguished Professor, University of Arizona
  • Research interests: medieval and early modern literature and culture
  • Recent publications: 134 books and 840 articles. Most recently, or upcoming, Miracles and Wonders in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Age, 2025.

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Däumer, Matthias

  • Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter, Universität Wien

Dobozy, Maria

  • Professor Emerita of German and Medieval Studies, University of Utah.
  • Research interests: medieval German and Norse literature, law, and culture, particularly between the 12th and 15th centuries, including the intersection of legal texts and courtly literature, oral traditions in heroic poetry, and the political and aesthetic contexts of epic and saga narratives; the reception of medieval literature and myth by the Brothers Grimm, Tolkien, and C.S. Lewis
  • Recent  Publications:
    • “Two Cultural Perspectives on the Battle of Lippa, Transylvania, 1551.” Fifteenth Century Studies 38 (2013): 21–39.
    • “Das Schaffen des ungarischen Dichters Sebastian Tinódi und das europäische Lied.” Phoibos. Zeitschrift für Zupfmusik 1 (2014): 57-72.
    • “Political Poetry and Song during the Turkish Wars, 1521–1530: Jörg Daxpach.” In: Earthly and Spiritual Pleasures in Medieval Life, Literature, Art, and Music: In Memory of Ulrich Müller, ed. by Sibylle Jefferis. Göppingen: Kümmerle, 2014, pp. 379–400.
    • “German Single-leaf Prints as Multi-media Objects: Texts, Images, and Performance Potential, 1529–1530.”   In  Diz vliegende bîspel. Ambiguity in Medieval and Early Modern Literature. Essays in Honor of Arthur Groos, ed. by  Marian E. Polhill and Alexander Sager.  Göttingen: KV&R Unipress, 2020, pp. 185–200.

Dorninger, Maria

  • Ao. Professorin, Universität Salzburg

Dunphy, Graeme

  • Professor, Technische Hochschule Würzburg-Schweinfurt

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Ehrstine, Glenn

  • Associate Professor, University of Iowa
  • Research Interests: Medieval and Early Modern Theater, Transgression and the Carnivalesque, Reformation Polemics, Minnesang, Late Medieval Devotional Culture
  • Recent Publications:
    • “Das Geistliche Spiel als Ablassmedium. Überlegungen am Beispiel des Alsfelder Passionsspiels.” In Religiöses Wissen im mittelalterlichen und frühneuzeitlichen Schauspiel, ed. Klaus Ridder, Beatrice von Lüpke, Michael Neumaier, 259-297. Berlin: Schwabe, 2021.
    • “Geheimnis und Gattung: Zum Begriff des Mysterienspiels.” In Darstellung und Geheimnis in Mittelalter und Früher Neuzeit, ed. Jutta Eming and Volkhard Wels, 165-184. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2021.
    • “Raymond Peraudi in Zerbst: Corpus Christi Theater, Material Devotion, and the Indulgence Microeconomy on the Eve of the Reformation.” Speculum 93 (2018): 319-356.
    • Theater, Culture, and Community in Reformation Bern, 1523-1555. Studies in Medieval and Reformation Traditions, vol. 85. Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2002.

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Frakes, Jerold

  • Professor Emeritus, SUNY Buffalo

Frenzl, Peter †

  • Professor Emeritus, Wesleyan University

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Garber, Rebecca

  • Translator, CHEMAS group

Groepper, Emily

  • Lecturer, First-Year German Coordinator, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Research interests: second language acquisition, AI in the language classroom, history of emotions, medieval German mæren
  • Recent publications:
    • “The Value of Grief: An Emotional Community in a Medieval Compilation Manuscript” in Austrian Centers Edited VolumeEuropa Orientalis. (Forthcoming).
    • “Student Negotiation of Collaborative Dialogues: The Roles and Resources Used in Unsupervised Conversations.” Unterrichtspraxis 55.5 (2022): 170-190.
    • Groepper, Emily and Rüdiger Singer. “Let’s Talk about Lebensreform: Speaking Interventions in a Course on German Literature around 1900.” Developing Advanced Speaking Proficiency: Instructional and Curricular Models for Post-Secondary Language Program (2019): 79-109.

Grotans, Anna

  • Associate Professor, Ohio State University

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Hasty, Will

  • Professor of German and Medieval and Early Modern Studies at the University of Florida; Codirector of UF’s Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
  • Research interests: German and European Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Arthurian Studies, Digital Humanities and E-Learning, Global-Cultural Resource Analyses.
  • Recent publications:
    • “The Beginning of the End: Binary Dynamics and Initiative in Hartmann von Aue’s Gregorius.” Endtimes in Medieval German Literature. Ed. Ernst Ralf Hintz and Scott Pincikowski. Rochester, N.Y.: Camden House, 2019. 50-71.
    • The Medieval Risk-Reward Society. Courts, Adventure, and Love in the European Middle Ages. Columbus: The Ohio State University Press, 2016.
    • “Revolutions and Final Solutions: On Enlightenment and its Dialectic in Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.” Arthuriana: The Journal of Arthurian Studies. 24.2 (2014): 21-42.
    • “Bullish on Love and Adventure: Chivalry as Speculation in the German Arthurian Romances.” Arthuriana: The Journal of Arthurian Studies 20. 3 (2010): 65-80.

Heinen, Hubert

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Texas-Austin

Heintzelman, Matthew

  • Curator of Western European Manuscripts and Special Collections, Hill Museum and Manuscript Library

Horsfall, Walker

  • Assistant Professor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
  • Research interests: Sangspruchdichtung; Minnesang; Arthurian romance; the intersection between literature, religion, and science, especially astronomy, geology, and medicine
  • Recent publications:
    • “Astronomical (In)accuracy in Heinrich von Mügeln’s Der meide kranz,” in Writing the Heavens: Celestial Observation in Medieval and Early Modern Literature, eds. Aura Heydenreich et al., 51–68 (Boston/Berlin: De Gruyter, 2024). Permanent URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111610863-004.
    • “Die Klage der Kunst,” co-authored with Markus Stock, in Konrad von Würzburg: ein Handbuch, ed. Markus Stock, 108–117 (Boston/Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023).
    • “Frauenlob’s Catechetical Imperative: Form and Function in the Kreuzleich,” Zeitschrift für deutsche Philologie 138.1 (2019): 67–82.
    • “Konrad von Würzburg – A Bibliography. 2nd, revised and enlarged edition,” co-authored with Markus Stock, published on the TSpace Repository, University of Toronto Libraries. Permanent URL: https://hdl.handle.net/1807/127259.

Hunter-Parker, Hannah

  • Assistant Professor, Amherst College

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Jones, CJ

  • Professor of German Studies; Robert M. Conway Director of Medieval Studies, University of Notre Dame
  • Research interests: Late medieval religious culture; liturgy of religious orders; manuscript studies
  • Recent publications:
    • Fixing the Liturgy: Friars, Sisters, and the Dominican Rite, 1256-1516 (Penn Press, 2024).
    • Women’s History in the Age of Reformation: Johannes Meyer’s Chronicle of the Dominican Observance (Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2019).
    • Ruling the Spirit: Women, Liturgy, and Dominican Reform in Late Medieval Germany (Penn Press, 2018).

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Kalinke, Marriane

  • Professor Emerita, University of Illinois

Keller, Hildegard

  • Titularprofessorin, Universität Zürich

Kohnen, Rabea

  • Associate Professor, University of Vienna (Austria)
  • Research interests: narratology, cultural history, material philology
  • Recent publications:
    • “Der Kopf der Schlange. Text und Bild in Lutwins ›Eva und Adam‹.” In Abbrüche – Umbrüche – Aufbrüche. Deutschsprachige Literatur zwischen 1450 und 1520, hg. v. Bernd Bastert, Lina Herz. Wiesbaden 2023, 447–461.
    • “Voices Shifting and Voices Layered. The Song of Songs in Medieval German Literature.” In The Song of Songs through the Ages. Essays on the Song’s Reception History in Different Times, Contexts, and Genres, hg. v. Annette Schellenberg. Berlin 2023, S. 213-240.
    • “Ego sum illa Aethiopissa. Belakane im Kontext geistlicher Diskurse.” PBB 142,4 (2020), S. 515-547.

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Lazda-Cazers, Rasma

  • Associate Professor Emerita, University of Alabama

LeMaster, Jacob W.

  • MA student, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Columbia University
  • Research interests: Legal and intellectual history, historiography, early medieval learning and philology, medieval art and architecture, literary transmission and reception, medieval cultural networks, relics and the cult of saints, liturgy and church reform, monastic settlement and archaeology, Germanic languages and historical linguistics, 19th century medievalism(s)

Lorenz, Julia

  • DPhil (PhD) Candidate in Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford
  • Research interests: courtly texts and courtly ‘minne’, the construction of space, identity, and relationships, the use and application of Digital Humanities in Medieval Studies.
  • Recent publications:
    • “Kleidung und der mystische Körper: Von physischen Ankerpunkten unbeschreiblicher Erfahrungen.” Oxford German Studies 52.4 (2023): 416–435.

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Mertens, Volker

  • Professor emeritus Free University Berlin 
  • Research interests: medieval Literature and music, Richard Wagner, Thomas Mann
  • Recent publications:
    • Hartmann von Aue: Erec. Mittelhochdeutsch/Neuhochdeutsch. Reclam, Stuttgart 2008.
    • Der Gral. Mythos und Literatur. Reclam, Stuttgart 2003.
    • Groß ist das Geheimnis. Thomas Mann und die Musik. Militzke Verlag, Leipzig 2006.

von Merveldt, Nikola

  • Associate Professor, Université de Montreal

Meyer, Evelyn

  • Associate Professor of German, Dep. of Linguistics, Literatures, and Cultures, Saint Louis University
  • Research interests: Text-image relationships, Arthurian and courtly German literature, constructions of gender, race, and otherness, material culture
  • Recent publications:
    • Meyer, Evelyn and Melissa Ridley Elmes (eds). Ethics in the Arthurian Legend. Boydell & Brewer: Cambridge, UK. 2023. 400pp.
    • “Too Quickly or Not Quickly Enough, Too Rash and Too Harshly: The Arthurian Court’s Lack of Ethics in Hartmann von Aue’s Erec and Iwein and Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival.” Ethics in the Arthurian Legend. Edited by Evelyn Meyer and Melissa Ridely Elmes, Boydell & Brewer: Cambridge, UK. 2023. 35-64
    • “Engaging the Other More Favorably in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival.” Wiley Blackwell Abridged Companion to World Literature. Edited by Ken Seigneurie (general editor), Wiley Blackwell: Hoboken, USA, and Chichester, UK., forthcoming in 2025.
    • “‘Warum Mittelalter? Das interessiert mich nicht wirklich!’ Kreative Projekte im mediävistischen Literaturseminar im Ausland.” Mediävistische Perspektiven im 21. Jahrhundert. Festschrift für Ingrid Bennewitz zum 65. Geburtstag. Edited by Andrea Schindler. Reichert: Wiesbaden, Germany. 2021. 429–445
    • “Teaching a Daughter Sexual Desire and Love Lore: Herzeloyde’s Mentorship of Sigune in Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Titurel and Albrecht von Scharfenberg’s Jüngerer Titurel.” Gender Bonds, Gender Binds: Men, Women, and Family in Middle High German Literature, Essays in Honor of Ann Marie Rasmussen. Edited by Alison L. Beringer, Sara S. Poor, and Olga Trokhimenko. De Gruyter: Berlin, Germany. 2021. 117-136

Meyer, Matthias

  • Professor, Universität Wien

Miller, Christopher Liebtag

  • Associate Teaching Professor, University of Notre Dame

Morewedge, Rosemarie

  • Associate Professor Emerita, SUNY Binghamton

Müller, Jan-Dirk

  • Professor Emeritus, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Müller, Ulrich †

  • Professor Emeritus, Universität Salzburg

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Neidorf, Leonard

  • Distinguished Professor at Shenzhen University
  • Research interests: Medieval Germanic Literature (Old English, Old Norse, Middle High German)
  • Recent publications:
    • Waltharius: The Latin Epic of Walther of Aquitaine, ed. Leonard Neidorf, trans. Brian Murdoch (London: Uppsala Books, 2025).
    • Beowulf: Translation and Commentary, ed. Leonard Neidorf, trans. Tom Shippey (London: Uppsala Books, 2023) [2nd ed., 2024].
    • “Hrothgar and Etzel: Beowulf Analogues in Middle High German Literature,” English Studies 104 (2023): 1317-32.
    • “On Beowulf and the Nibelungenlied: Counselors, Queens, and Characterization,” Neohelicon 47 (2020): 655-72.

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Oberlin, Adam

  • Senior Lecturer, program coordinator, and director of Princeton in Vienna, Princeton University
  • Research interests: historical linguistics, corpus linguistics, phraseology, lexicology and lexicography, Germanic philology, language contact, language history and periodization, history and religion in literature; L2 language pedagogy and curriculum development
  • Recent publications:
    • “On Language History and Extralinguistic Periodization in Germanic.” In Germanic Philology. Perspectives on Linguistics and Literature, eds. Tina Boyer and Heiko Wiggers, 1-25. Wilmington, DE: Vernon Press, 2024.
    • “Technology, the Flipped Classroom, and Exigent Paradigm Shifts, or Being Forced into the Present.” Die Unterrichtspraxis 56 (2023): 45-48.
    • “Sprach- und literaturwissenschaftliche Periodisierungsschemata in der Germanistik.” Germanica 71 (2022): 21-32.
    • “Weather, Metaphor, and the Lexicon: A Corpus Study of Medieval German.” Mediävistik 33 (2020): 143-154.

Oehme, Annegret

  • Associate Professor, Department of German Studies, University of Washington; Associate Faculty: Stroum Center for Jewish Studies
  • Research interests: monsters, early modern prose novels, Old Yiddish literature, Arthurian literature, adaptation studies
  • Recent publications:
    • “Yiddish, Power, and Compassion: Emotive Language in Wagenseil’s Belehrung (1699).” Premodern Germanic Philology, edited by Tina Boyer and Heiko Wiggers, Vernon Press, 2024, pp. 91–109.
    • “The Writing Werewolf: Rabbinic Identity and Linguistic Understanding in the Old Yiddish Mayse-bukh (Book of Stories, 1602).” In Geveb, July 2024, https://ingeveb.org/articles/the-writing-werewolf-rabbinic-identity-and-linguistic-understanding.
    • Knight without Boundaries: Yiddish and German Arthurian Wigalois Adaptations. Brill, 2022.
    • “Lucifer’s Shadow: Race in Old Yiddish Adventure Novels.” Speculum, vol. 99, no. 2, 2024, pp. 358–80.

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Parente, James

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota

Pincikowski, Scott

  • Professor, Hood College

Poor, Sara

  • Associate Professor, Princeton University

Powell, Morgan

  • Lecturer, Zürcher Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften

Puff, Helmut

  • Professor, University of Michigan

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Rasmussen, Ann Marie

  • Professor of German emerita, Duke University
  • Former Rgt. Hon. John G. Diefenbacker Chair of German Literary Studies, University of Waterloo (2015–2024)
  • Research interests: medieval German literature and culture, 1170 to 1500; material culture and art history; gender studies.
  • Recent publications:
    • Writing with Research: A Practical Guide. With Kristen Neuschel. Routledge Press. 2025.
    • Medieval Badges: Their Wearers and their Worlds. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021. awarded Honorable Mention by the GSA/DAAD Book Prize Committee 2022.
  • Forthcoming:
    • “Drastic Images: The Visual Logic of Medieval Memory Technique and of Medieval Sexual Badges,” in Das abjekte Bild: Affektive Bildlichkeit zwischen den Medien in der Frühen Neuzeit ,eds. Sergius Kodera, Anita Traninger and Luca Lil Wirth. Fink Verlag/deGruyter-Brill.
    • “What is Reading?” in Women Read. Differently? Reading Practices in Medieval.
    • Women Convents from the 13th to the 15th Centuries, eds. Racha Kirakosian, Meret Wuethrich, Linus Möllenbrink, and Mareike Reisch (V&R Unipress).

Rowe, Nina

  • John Marion Professor of Art History at Fordham University.
  • Research interests: She is currently at work on book on late medieval conceptions of love in southern German images and texts.
  • Recent publications:
    • The Jew, the Cathedral, and the Medieval City: Synagoga and Ecclesia in the Thirteenth Century (Cambridge UP, 2011)
    • The Illuminated World Chronicle: Tales from the Late Medieval City (Yale UP, 2020)
    • “Devotion and Dissent in Late-Medieval Illuminated World Chronicles,” Art History 41, no. 1 (2018): 12-41.
    • Soon to appear is “Everybody Dance Now: Image, Text, and Social Order in the Long Fifteenth Century,” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 88 (2025).

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Sager, Alexander

  • Associate Professor, University of Georgia

Schneider, Christian

  • Professor, Universität Osnabrück

Siller, Max

  • Ao. Professor, Universität Innsbruck

Stock, Markus

  • Professor, University of Toronto

Stoop, Patricia

  • Postdoctoral fellow, Ruusbroec Institute, Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium
  • Research interests: women’s participation in the intellectual, religious, cultural and literary field of the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period;(collective) authorship, literacy, authority and autonomy of women; construction of book collections and (literary and intellectual) networks; memoria (both in the sense of memory techniques and the remembrance of persons); commercial manuscript production; sermon studies
  • Recent publications: 
    • ‘Bridging the Convent Wall: Female Monastic Book Producers and the Collaboration with Male Intermediaries’, Queeste: Journal of Medieval Literature in the Low Countries,28/2 (2021), 207–228 (Open Access: https://www.aup-online.com/content/journals/10.5117/QUE2021.2.002.STOO)
    • Circulating the Word of God in Medieval and Early Modern Catholic Europe: Preachers and Preaching Across Manuscript and Print (c. 1450 to c. 1550), ed. by Veronica O’Mara and Patricia Stoop. Turnhout: Brepols, 2022 (Sermo: Studies on Patristic, Medieval, and Reformation Sermons and Preaching, 17), 516 pp. Including: Patricia Stoop, ‘Strategies of Publishing: The Case of Franciscus Costerus’, pp. 473–496.
    • ‘Monastic Book Production in the Late Medieval Low Countries: The Sister Scribes of Jericho and the Building of their Manuscript Collection’. In Eike Grossmann, Female Agency in Manuscript Cultures (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2024), pp. 267–306 (Studies in Manuscript Cultures, 39) (Open Access: https://www.degruyter.com/document/isbn/9783111382715/html).
    • ‘Preaching the Observant Reform in Female Communities Related to the Devotio moderna’. In: Pietro Delcorno and Bert Roest (red.), Observant Reforms and Cultural Production in Europe: Learning, Liturgy and Spiritual Practice (Nijmegen: Radboud University Press, 2023), pp. 225–245 (Open Access: https://radbouduniversitypress.nl/site/books/e/10.54195/XFRB6134/).

Sullivan, Joseph M.

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Oklahoma
  • Research interests: the tradition of King Arthur
  • Recent publications:
    • German Romance VI: Wigamur, Arthurian Archives XXI (Woodbridge, UK: D.S. Brewer, 2015). 
    • German Romance VII: Ulrich Fuetrer, Iban, Arthurian Archives XXII (Woodbridge, UK: D.S. Brewer, 2022). 
    • “The Ending of Herr Ivan,” Arthur in Northern Translations: Material Culture, Characters, and Courtly Influence, ed. Virgile Reiter and Raphaëlle Jamet (Berlin: Lit Verlag, 2021): 115-27.
    • “Through a Woman’s Eyes: Liv Ullmann’s Kristin Lavransdatter,” Medieval Women on Film: Essays on Gender, Cinema and History, ed. Kevin J. Harty (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2020): 103-15.

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Thomas, Neil

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Durham

Trokhimenko, Olga

  • Professor, University of North Carolina-Wilmington

Turco, Jeffrey

  • Associate Professor, Purdue University

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Wakefield, Ray

  • Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota
  • Research interests: Second Language Acquisition, medieval German, medieval Dutch, Germanic prosody, Beguine mystics
  • Recent publications:
    • (with Kaaren Grimstad).  “Monstrous Mates:  The Leading Ladies of the Nibelungenlied and Völsunga Saga.  Women and Medieval Epic. 2007.
    • “The Nibelungen Verse and Walther’s ‘Elegie’ “.  Essays in Honor of Ernst S. Dick. 2009.
    • “Homeless Mystics: Exiled from God.”  New Orientations of World View in Exile.  2010.

Weber, Detlev

  • Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of German Studies at the University of Washington; Lecturer in the Department of Slavic, German, and Eurasian Studies at the University of Kansas
  • Research interests: Medieval and Cultural Studies; Animal Studies
  • Recent publications: 
    • “Saint Francis’s Brother Wolf.” focus on German Studies 29 (2023): 24-54.

Wegener, Dennis

  • Senior Scientist, Universität Wien

Winston-Allen, Anne

  • Emeritus Professor and Chair (retired 2012), Southern Illinois University
  • Research interests: German language, medieval literature and culture, women’s studies
  • Recent publications:
    • “Making Manuscripts as Political Engagement by Women in the Fifteenth-Century Observant Reform Movement.” Journal of Medieval Religious Cultures 42.2 (2016): 224-247. “Genre and Genre in Book Illustration?” Manuscripta 53 (2009): 213-237.
    • “The >Alexiuslegende< in Esslingen. The Bride of St Alexius in medieval Images and Texts.” In Württemberg als Kulturlandschaft. Literatur und Buchkultur an Klöstern und Höfen, Eds. Nigel Palmer, Peter Rückert, Sigrid Hirbodian (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2022), pp. 457-486.
    • “Women as Scribes and Illustrators in the Age of Reform: The Basel Connection.” In Raum und Medium. Literatur und Kultur in Basel in Spätmittelalter und Früher Neuzeit, edited by Johanna Thali and Nigel F. Palmer. Kulturtopographie des alemannischen Raums 9 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020), pp 177-200 and 534–539).

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