"The last few years have witnessed a growing interest, largely on the part of medievalists, in examining the divide between the medieval and early modern periods.1 The essay collection reviewed here does an excellent job of showing how rich and complex these cross-period investigations can be— when the medieval period is not merely a backdrop to the early modern period but, rather, when these two periods are set in conversation." -Katherine Little, Fordham University
"The fruits of a cross-period approach are quite apparent in the number of essays that demonstrate how medieval ways of thinking continued to haunt early modern writers, shaping their perception of what is new in their own period." -Katherine Little, Fordham University
"These essays ultimately read the divide between medieval and early modern as an immensely generative struggle rather than a rejection or clean break." -Katherine Little, Fordham University
"Scanlon, Simpson, and the essays in the first group discussed above are all clearly attuned to recent debates, whereas the essays by Matthews and Trigg, among others in the second and third groups described here, seem to adhere to an older version of ‘‘medievalism,’’ in which the focus is less on an interchange of modes of thinking than the early modern period’s use of the medieval for its own ends. Nevertheless, the essays here offer much material for reflection and chart some new lines of inquiry." -Katherine Little, Fordham University