IMC 2006: Keywords
IMC 2006: Sessions tagged with Rhetoric
- Anglo-Saxons on Display: Functionality, Legibility, Ideology (801)
- Cloistered Emotions: Navigating the Performance and Practice of Monastic Affectivity (515)
- Constructing the Papacy: Views of the Pope from Centre and Periphery (319)
- Continuity and Change: Writers in 15th-Century Italy and Spain (1322)
- Ecclesiastical Advertising (1019)
- Emotion, Gesture, and Forms of Codification (1503)
- Emotions and Gesture in Early Medieval Latin Literature (613)
- Expressions of Friendship in Writing of the Early and Central Middle Ages (722)
- Food and Body Discourses in 11th- and 12th-Century Monastic Reform Texts (1523)
- Grief, Guilt, and Hypocrisy: The Inner Life of Women in Medieval Romance Literature (209)
- Inciting Emotions on the Brink of Battle: Examples from the Crusades and Reconquista (1217)
- In Your Face: Confrontational Rhetoric and the Poetics of Aggression (1122)
- Lamenting as a Cultural Practice (1611)
- Late Medieval Spirituality: Texts and Contexts (816)
- Latin Letters and Letter Collections, III: Abelard, Heloise, and Pier della Vigna (1022)
- Literature and Music in Monastic Contexts: Eugippius, Abelard, and Altmann of St Florian (822)
- Lollards and Emotions (316)
- Medieval Communication between Ritual and the Written Word (810)
- Medieval Latin Translations of Vernacular Texts (322)
- Passion, Power, Persuasion: Emotion in Medieval Didactic Discourse (1613)
- Place, Politics, and Affect in Later Medieval Literature (1506)
- Reading Meaning in Art and Architecture, I: New Approaches to Church Architecture (502)
- Rulership in the Latin West, the Byzantine Commonwealth, and the Islamic World: Counsel and Advice, II (625)
- Rulership in the Latin West, the Byzantine Commonwealth, and the Islamic World: Counsel and Advice, III (725)
- Rulership in the Latin West, the Byzantine Commonwealth, and the Islamic World: Counsel and Advice, IV (825)
- The Canterbury Tales Revisited (506)
- Theories of Emotion, II (1115)
- The Pleasure of Reading and Writing (818)
- Vincent of Beauvais' Speculum maius as a Bridge between Times and Cultures (1222)