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Introduction
C. Stephen Jaeger, University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
"The State of Medieval Studies" was the slightly overconfident title of
a conference held at the University of Illinois, Urbana, in late 2003.
In that title "state of the union" met "state of the art" (the latter
the name of a program that funds "cutting-edge" conferences—more
hubris—in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Urbana). Fourteen
speakers were asked to deliver papers that survey their fields or disciplines.
The question put to them was, "What are the most significant projects,
questions, methodologies, areas of study, trends currently of interest
in your discipline, and what are your views on future directions in medieval
studies?" The participants were all in a position to answer that question,
either because they directed programs, institutes, or funding agencies
that put them broadly in touch with current work through applications
or because of their recognized mastery and distinction in their own field—or
both. Many resisted the call to prophecy, but all of them produced surveys
of their discipline that are deeply informing.
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