Birgittine Acts of Memory

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Birgittine Order
Bodies
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Category=QRAX
Category=QRM
Devotion
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forthcoming
Liturgy
Medieval history
Memory studies
Queer theory
Religion
Remembering
Visual culture

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032121079
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Birgittine Acts of Memory begins from a simple but insistent premise: memory is not something that is stored, but something that happens. Focusing on the Birgittine Order across late medieval Europe, modern Europe, and contemporary spaces, the volume explores how remembrance takes shape through gestures, materials, voices, and spaces. Moving beyond static notions of preservation, it approaches memory as an active, embodied, and relational process, entangled with questions of authority, devotion, and communal life, and unfolding across liturgy, objects, and affective practices.

Bringing together interdisciplinary contributions, the book moves across manuscripts, liturgical performance, visual culture, queer theory, and testamentary bequests, attending to the acts that sustain and transform memory. Birgittine communities emerge not as passive repositories but as dynamic sites where memory is continuously produced, negotiated, and reconfigured. What is at stake is not only what is remembered, but how memory circulates, how it attaches itself to bodies and objects, and how it opens different temporalities within enclosed and public life. Memory, in this sense, is not merely retrospective but generative, shaping identities, communities, and devotional experience across time and space.

This volume will be of interest to scholars and students of medieval studies, religious history, memory studies, art history, and manuscript studies, as well as to readers engaged with material religion, monastic culture, and interdisciplinary approaches to the premodern archive.

David Carrillo-Rangel (e/em/eir) is a researcher and PhD Fellow at the University of Bergen, working on medieval materiality, queer theory, and digital culture. Eir doctoral project examines visionary discourse and authority in Birgitta of Sweden. E has published on medieval spirituality, queer studies, and co-edited Sensual and Sensory Experiences in the Middle Ages and Touching: Devotional Practices and Visionary Experience in the Late Middle Ages.