February is dark and cold and hard. It feels like it’s been a long winter, in all senses: literally, professionally, politically, personally, collectively, all of it. The Götterdämmerung that began in late 2016 is reaching a crescendo, if we can even believe that this is a bad as it gets. Maybe this is just the beginning of Act 2, when shit really hits the fan: Brexit is in the past tense; we have exited Europe. Don’t worry, the Tories will see us through (emphatic /s, in case that wasn’t crystal clear). Sources of joy and WINNING-ness are thin on the ground right now. The point of all this grimdark scene-setting is to throw into relief just how incandescently good some good news I just received feels, like a beacon of light for which I am viscerally grateful. (Spoiler alert: if you haven’t got a clue what I’m talking about already, then I may need to increase the font-size for post titles.) The glad tidings hit my inbox, leaving me all a-twitter, so I - of course - took to Twitter to talk it through.
Don't have £$€100+ to shell out on a book-length homage to medieval saints, modern media, & pop culture forever? (Me neither) But! Good news! Medieval Saints & Modern Screens is now officially free as a bird & available #OpenAccess #OA #MedievalTwitter https://t.co/cGh7NY11w0 /1 pic.twitter.com/ckIEB3NoLj
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
This magical liberation of my book baby is all down to @KUnlatched & a panel of librarians. Medieval Saints & Modern Screens has been picked to be released into the internet wild as part of the KU Select 2019 Collection. Big, big thanks! /2 https://t.co/Zz2LY9AfYN pic.twitter.com/UpbIALxk8v
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
Big thanks also to my publisher @AmsterdamUPress & my editor @smariecunning for putting Medieval Saints & Modern Screens forward for the @KUnlatched scheme & supporting the book & my scholarship to the moon & back /3 pic.twitter.com/hRfUAKZdN1
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
#OpenAccess is expensive & frankly put, I could not afford to make it happen out of my own pocket. Medieval Saints & Modern Screens has an agenda: dismantling academic gatekeeping, in part by treating pop culture, media artefacts & online stuff "seriously", worthy of critique. /4 pic.twitter.com/2ut1wFFbKs
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
So it has always perturbed me, to put it mildly, that the book itself is fundamentally inaccessible to the majority of people. It's priced in line with industry norms for specialist works - in other words, it's fucking expensive. /5 pic.twitter.com/AGNqc0Yr68
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
Not everyone has access to academic libraries, the reliable-ish purchasers of pricey academic monographs. Not every library has enough budget to spend on books which do things differently, are a bit weird, don't fit neatly into disciplinary categories. /6 pic.twitter.com/nAm8tKOANq
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
All that to say, I am so very happy that Medieval Saints and Modern Screens can now return to the online streams of its birth, the fertile digital soup which engendered it & upon which it depends for its very lifeblood. Fly free my bounteous book baby! Fly free! /7 pic.twitter.com/Vde4Dq1yXe
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
— Dr Alicia Spencer-Hall #Remain (@aspencerhall) February 4, 2020
Logistical note: Unlatching is ongoing, and so Medieval Saints and Modern Screens apparently doesn’t yet appear fully Open Access on some platforms (e.g. JSTOR). Whilst whatever behind-the-scenes magic needs to happen across platforms takes its time, the OAPEN catalogue entry is live and in full-colour right this second. You literally just have to click on the “download book” button, and hey presto. You can also download the full .pdf through the Amsterdam University Press website, by “buying” the eBook edition for the princely sum of €0.00.
If you’d like a flavour of Medieval Saints and Modern Screens (to try before you don’t buy, so to speak), take a look at the various reviews online: Medievally Speaking, The Medieval Review, H-France, The English Historical Review, MEDIENWissenschaften, Film & History, and Screen.
If you want more of a Pinterest-y moodboard for the book - or at least the thrust of Chapter 3, with a soupçon of the Introduction - then check out this post right here. This is the keynote I gave at the 2018 Gender and Medieval Society conference, using the bones of Chapter 3 on Margery Kempe and/as Kim Kardashian West, and vice versa. Replete with images and a fair few gifs, it’s basically the visual album counterpart to the published text. There’s new stuff there too, feeding into and from the book’s critique of the politics of visibility for women, but (re)situated within the context of academic precarity.
Prefer your content in audio? I got you. Listen to me talk about the book - and more generally, feminist approaches to the Middle Ages - in conversation with Hetta Howes, Elizabeth Robertson and host Shahidha Bari on an episode of the BBC’s Arts and Ideas show (full transcript and embedded audio at link).
If you want to talk about the book, snag a review (hard)copy, or just have a natter, then drop me a note on Twitter or through the contact form.