Magic and Language in Images from the Alexander Romance

image lectures

Image credit: Sergei Parajanov, Sayat-Nova (The Color of Pomegranates), 1969

 

Thursday 9 January 2025, 5pm

Online - Register via Eventbrite.

 

This event will be held online on Teams. To obtain the link, please register at the following Eventbrite link.

Registration closes 2 hours before the start of the event. You will be sent the joining link within 24 hours of the event, on the day and once again 15 minutes before the event starts.

For further information, you can contact Ugo Mondini at ugo.mondini@mod-langs.ox.ac.uk.

 

Speaker: Earnestine Qiu, PhD Student, Princeton University

 

The medieval period has left us no shortage of texts concerning Alexander the Great. One of the most popular sources—composed of embellished accounts of Alexander’s life—the Alexander Romance received translation from its original Greek into upwards of twenty languages. The prose text of the Alexander Romance developed from an amalgamation of prose, rhetorical, epistolary, and poetic texts and engendered a rich variety of visual and poetic content in illuminated manuscripts, enamels, architectural reliefs, and metalwork. In this talk, we will focus on Alexander Romance images from the Eastern Christian traditions. Special attention will be paid to depictions of talking birds, overgrown crabs, and shrinking trees to examine the recurring themes of magic speech. In Alexander’s meetings with the marvelous and mythical, what is the relationship between magic and language? The composite nature of the Alexander Romance manuscripts will also allow us to ask, how can image, prose, and poetry variously represent magical encounters?


Poetry in the Medieval World Network