I have two major research interests: the history of the book in the medieval and early modern periods, and disability in medieval literature and culture. My first book, Mastering Aesop: Medieval Education, Chaucer, and His Followers, was an examination of the most common curricular collection of medieval Latin fables which was used as a teaching text from the thirteenth into the sixteenth centuries; it exists in over 150 manuscripts and was printed 50 times before 1500. Studying this text took me to 36 libraries across Europe and the United States, and the wide variety of forms in which it appeared and scholarly commentary associated with it sparked my on-going research in manuscript and early print history. My interest in disability studies grew out of the Aesop project, because medieval commentaries on the fables frequently used the anti-Semitic trope of the blindness of the Jews. While researching that trope I came to understand that figurative language of this kind can only have meaning if it is grounded in the ways that medieval cultures understood blindness as a disability. The project allowed me to examine representations of blindness in history, art history, religious discourse, drama, and literature, and this research resulted in Stumbling Blocks Before the Blind: Medieval Constructions of a Disability. I have taught book history at both the graduate and undergraduate levels and disability in medieval literature as a graduate seminar, and I am continuing to work in both fields.
Books:
Articles and Book Chapters: