TY - GEN AU - Ellard,Donna-Beth TI - Anglo-Saxon(ist) Pasts, postSaxon Futures SN - P3.0262.1.00 PY - 2019/// CY - Brooklyn, NY PB - punctum books KW - Anglo-Saxon KW - bicssc KW - British & Irish history KW - Old English KW - Medieval studies KW - intellectual history KW - autoethnography KW - critical race studies KW - psychoanalysis N1 - Open Access N2 - Anglo-Saxon(ist) Pasts, postSaxon Futures traces the integral role that colonialism and racism play in the field formerly known as Anglo-Saxon studies by tracking the development of the “Anglo-Saxonist,” an overtly racialized term that describes a person whose affinities point towards white nationalism. That scholars continue to call themselves “Anglo-Saxonists,” despite urgent calls to combat racism within the field, suggests that this term is much more than just a professional appellative. It is, this book argues, a ghost in the machine of early medieval studies—a spectral figure created by a group of nineteenth-century historians, archaeologists, and philologists responsible for not only framing the interdisciplinary field of "Anglo-Saxon" studies but for also encoding ideologies of British colonialism and Anglo-American racism within the field’s methods and pedagogies.Anglo-Saxon(ist) pasts, postSaxon Futures is at once a historiography of Anglo-Saxon studies, a mourning of its Anglo-Saxonist “fathers,” and an exorcism of the colonial-racial ghosts that lurk within the field’s scholarly methods and pedagogies. Part intellectual history, part grief work, this book leverages the genres of literary criticism, auto-ethnography, and creative nonfiction in order to confront Anglo-Saxonist pasts in order to imagine speculative postSaxon futures inclusive of voices and bodies heretofore excluded from the field formerly known as Anglo-Saxon studies UR - https://library.oapen.org/bitstream/20.500.12657/37331/1/0262.1.00.pdf UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/29148 ER -