Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Chronicle Conditions

View through CrossRef
AbstractSociological research on chronic illness, and especially on the autobiographical writings of modern patients, has yielded insights into how chronic conditions alter fundamental relationships between notions of self, body, and time. The chronic part of “chronic illness” can disrupt perceptions of the linearity of time, yielding alternate temporalities grounded in bodily experience. In contemporary self-fiction, to chronicle a chronic condition is to juggle different kinds of time. But what about genres, like premodern historiography, that impose a linear, chronological framework? What is at stake when the narrative temporality of a medieval chronicle is filtered through the disrupted temporalities of a chronically impaired subject? This article interrogates these questions through the works of Gilles li Muisis (1272–1353). A Tournaisian abbot, Gilles authored both a Latin chronicle and of a set of vernacular poems situating his writerly activity within a very specific corporeal context: he writes both poetry and chronicle after cataracts have so impaired his vision that he can no longer carry out his administrative duties at the abbey of Saint-Martin—and, remarkably, he abandons his writing after a successful surgery restores his eyesight. The ways in which Gilles talks about his own bodily condition, in both the chronicle and the poems, constitute an elaborate metadiscursive frame whose ultimate effect is to construct the project of the chronicler as a kind of self-writing avant la lettre. With readings of both the Latin and the vernacular works, this essay shows that the chronicle is achieved through a series of subtle chronological and sensory displacements: Gilles’s chronic condition has enabled him to create an anachronic subject-position, outside of both linear historiographical time and the “body-time” of his impairment.
Duke University Press
Title: Chronicle Conditions
Description:
AbstractSociological research on chronic illness, and especially on the autobiographical writings of modern patients, has yielded insights into how chronic conditions alter fundamental relationships between notions of self, body, and time.
The chronic part of “chronic illness” can disrupt perceptions of the linearity of time, yielding alternate temporalities grounded in bodily experience.
In contemporary self-fiction, to chronicle a chronic condition is to juggle different kinds of time.
But what about genres, like premodern historiography, that impose a linear, chronological framework? What is at stake when the narrative temporality of a medieval chronicle is filtered through the disrupted temporalities of a chronically impaired subject? This article interrogates these questions through the works of Gilles li Muisis (1272–1353).
A Tournaisian abbot, Gilles authored both a Latin chronicle and of a set of vernacular poems situating his writerly activity within a very specific corporeal context: he writes both poetry and chronicle after cataracts have so impaired his vision that he can no longer carry out his administrative duties at the abbey of Saint-Martin—and, remarkably, he abandons his writing after a successful surgery restores his eyesight.
The ways in which Gilles talks about his own bodily condition, in both the chronicle and the poems, constitute an elaborate metadiscursive frame whose ultimate effect is to construct the project of the chronicler as a kind of self-writing avant la lettre.
With readings of both the Latin and the vernacular works, this essay shows that the chronicle is achieved through a series of subtle chronological and sensory displacements: Gilles’s chronic condition has enabled him to create an anachronic subject-position, outside of both linear historiographical time and the “body-time” of his impairment.

Related Results

The Latin American Chronicle
The Latin American Chronicle
The Latin American chronicle has a rich tradition, yet its status within the academic field remains variable across the continent. The term “Latin American chronicle” encompasses a...
Constructing the Chronicle
Constructing the Chronicle
Abstract The chronicle of Marcellinus, like any similar work, represents its author’s attempt to constitute a picture of the past which is meaningful for his contemp...
The Case of the Chronicle of Rivius
The Case of the Chronicle of Rivius
In his numerous works, in particular in Dzieje starozytne narodu litewskiego (Wilno, 1835-1841), Teodor Narbutt often referred to the Chronicle of Rivius, which he claimed to have ...
Primo tempore-krøniken. En meget gammel danmarkshistorie
Primo tempore-krøniken. En meget gammel danmarkshistorie
The Primo tempore Chronicle. A very old History of DenmarkThis study analyzes the three medieval manuscripts of the Annales Lundenses and the Chronicon Lethrense. These are Erfurt ...
Features of Djordje Branković’s “Slavo-Serbian Chronicle” and Its Russian Subjects
Features of Djordje Branković’s “Slavo-Serbian Chronicle” and Its Russian Subjects
The huge manuscript “Slavo-Serbian Chronicle”, amounting to about 3,000 pages, was written by Count Djordje Branković (1645—1711) under the conditions of imprisonment to which he w...
Dialectical features of I. Bazhansky's diary-chronicle “War”
Dialectical features of I. Bazhansky's diary-chronicle “War”
The article examines the linguistic features of the diary-chronicle “War” by  I. Bazhansky, in particular the dialect vocabulary. The language of I. Bazhansky's works is valuable b...
The Chronicle of Michael of Carynthia (Early Sixteenth Century)
The Chronicle of Michael of Carynthia (Early Sixteenth Century)
Abstract This article discusses the Chronicle of Michael of Carynthia, an early sixteenth-century text that tells the story of the origins and development of the Franciscan Ord...
Chronicle Writing in Late Antiquity
Chronicle Writing in Late Antiquity
Abstract No manuscript title for Marcellinus’ chronicle survives except those inserted by medieval scribes. In fact the chronicle may not have had its own title,just...

Back to Top