Professor Piroska Nagy, ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions Public Lecture

“Birth of emotional communities, or the power of emotional communion in the medieval West”, Professor Piroska Nagy (Université du Québec à Montréal)

Date: Monday 27 October, 2014
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: The University of Western Australia, Arts Lecture Room 10 (Arts 1.62)
Further information: Pam Bond (pam.bond@uwa.edu.au)

Barbara Rosenwein elaborated the notion of emotional communities as a way of explaining the affective dimension of social and cultural groups. In this talk, Professor Nagy will reflect on the way one can bring change in the perspective of reasoning with emotional communities. After a few theoretical and methodological considerations, exploring a famous case from medieval religious history, she would like to test the hypothesis according to which shared emotional events or processes can induce the formation of an emotional or affective community. One of the best known episodes in the life of saint Francis of Assisi is his celebration of Christmas in 1223 in the little town of Greccio. The episode is told in detail by Thomas of Celano in his first biography written in 1228-29. Later sources on Francis report the episode differently, according to their particular agenda ; it is also included in the iconographic cycles that depict Francis’s life. Professor Nagy’s aim in this paper is firstly, to analyse the work of emotions in the creation of communal feeling, through the careful observation of what happened in Greccio according to the first sources, and how they can be understood within the context of Franciscan history ; secondly, to show how the transformation of the episode in later sources reveals what can be called a Franciscan politics of emotion. Finally, using also other cases, she would like to distinguish emotional and affective communities.


Piroska Nagy is a professor of medieval history at Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). From 2014 to 2017 she is also an International Partner Investigator with the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. Professor Nagy has previously taught at the Université Paris I, the Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, Université de Rouen and the Central European University. She is author of Le don des larmes au Moyen Age. Un instrument spirituel en quête d’institution, Ve-XIIIe siècle (Paris: Albin Michel, 2000) and co-author, with Damien Boquet, of Sensible Moyen Age. Une histoire culturelle des émotions et de la vie affective dans l’Occident médiéval, (Paris: Seuil, forthcoming in 2015). With Damien Boquet in 2006, Nagy launched the first French research project on the history of emotions, EMMA, EMotions in the Middle Ages: and coedited with D. Boquet Émotions médiévales (2007); Le sujet des émotions au Moyen Âge (2009); Politiques des émotions au Moyen Âge (2010); La chair des émotions au Moyen Âge (2011).

Her current research centres on the relation between collective religious emotions in the medieval West and historical change.