Alastair Minnis Explained

Alastair J. Minnis (born 1948) is a Northern Irish literary critic and historian of ideas who has written extensively about medieval literature, and contributed substantially to the study of late-medieval theology and philosophy. Having gained a first-class B.A. degree at the Queen's University of Belfast, he matriculated at Keble College, Oxford as a visiting graduate student, where he completed work on his Belfast Ph.D. (awarded 1975), having been mentored by M.B. Parkes and Beryl Smalley. Following appointments at the Queen's University of Belfast (Lecturer, 1972–81) and Bristol University (Lecturer, later Reader, 1981–87), he was appointed Professor of Medieval Literature at the University of York; also Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies and later Head of English & Related Literature. From 2003 to 2006, he was a Humanities Distinguished Professor at Ohio State University, Columbus, from where he moved to Yale University. In 2008, he was named Douglas Tracy Smith Professor of English at Yale.[1]

Minnis is a Fellow of the English Association (2000), a Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America (2001),[2] and an Honorary Member of the Royal Irish Academy (2016).[3] From 2012 to 2014, he served as president of the New Chaucer Society.[4] He was general editor of the Cambridge University Press series Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature from 1987 to 2018 and holds an honorary master's degree from Yale (2007) and an honorary doctorate from the University of York (2018). The University of York also bestowed on him the honorific title of Emeritus Professor of Medieval Literature (2018).[5] [6] He has long been involved in the activities of the John Gower Society and currently holds the post of vice president.[7] In 2023, he received a festschrift edited by Andrew Kraebel, Ardis Butterfield, and Ian Johnson.[8]

Selected publications

Major books and edited collections

["As a recreation of fourteenth-century historical awareness this book does something new and important. The argument throughout is reinforced by Minnis's thorough knowledge of late medieval thought and commentary... Minnis offers the best account I have read of the functions of Troilus's soliloquy on necessity and Theseus's First Mover speech ...'. ''Speculum'']

['No professional medievalist with a serious interest in literature can afford to leave this book unread'. ''British Book News'' ]

['Superbly executed, this is an extremely impressive and important book for medievalists, literary critics, theorists and cultural historians alike. It will be a standard work for a long time'. ''Times Higher Education Supplement'']

['Minnis is the best equipped of all British medievalists for this Borgesian task. His extraordinary wide reading in both critical and contextual materials is in evidence throughout the book. ... Minnis's open engagement with recent political criticism is to be commended ...'. ''Times Literary Supplement'']

['I have not seen an equally persuasive and textually supported account of this encyclopedic narrative. There is no better and more stimulating introduction to one of the most controversial and influential vernacular texts of the European Middle Ages'. ''Archiv'']

['a witty and immensely informative study'. ''Speculum'']

['Minnis slaloms down the steep slopes of scholastic theology with virtuosic ease and rapidity ... an impressive book that anyone interested in arguments about vernacular theology and English orthodoxy, or anyone interested in how Alastair Minnis continues to write so well and so much, will want to read'. ''Notes and Queries'']

['[this book] conveys a continuing enjoyment and delight in reading and interpreting Chaucer's writings. By mixing the experience of a lengthy teaching career with the authority of his widely admired scholarship, Minnis encourages us to pause, observe, take stock, and share the wonders and conundrums of Chaucer's achievement. We are in the hands of an expert guide who knows his own mind ...'. Speculum]

['Like all of Minnis's work, it is impressively learned and couched in fluent and charming prose. . . . To read the book through, moreover, is to receive not only a thorough review of medieval ideas about Paradise but an excellent introduction to medieval scholasticism. . . . In addition to his remarkable learning, Minnis is a fine literary critic, and I know no other medievalist capable of presenting work so learned with his deftness and subtlety'. ''The Journal of English and Germanic Philology'']

Contributions to books (since 2015)

Periodical articles (since 2010)

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Alastair Minnis Appointed the Douglas Tracy Smith Professor . 19 December 2023 . YaleNews . 18 July 2008.
  2. Web site: Fellows – The Medieval Academy of America . www.medievalacademy.org . 19 December 2023.
  3. Web site: Alastair Minnis: Honorary Member of the Royal Irish Academy. English . english.yale.edu . 19 December 2023.
  4. Web site: Past Officers – New Chaucer Society . newchaucersociety.org . 19 December 2023.
  5. Web site: Alastair Minnis . yale.edu . 15 April 2017.
  6. Web site: worldcat.org . 15 April 2017.
  7. Web site: A Brief History of the John Gower Society. 21 December 2023.
  8. Book: Butterfield . Ardis . Johnson . Ian . Kraebel . Andrew . Literary Theory and Criticism in the Later Middle Ages: Interpretation, Invention, Imagination . 20 April 2023 . Cambridge University Press . 978-1-108-49239-3 . 19 December 2023.