Christina Heckman, PhD
Professor of English, English Program Director Augusta University
- Augusta GA
Professor Heckman focuses on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien, history of English language and Anglo-Saxon and middle English literature.
Biography
Areas of Expertise
Education
Loyola University Chicago
Ph.D.
English
2002
Loyola University Chicago
M.A.
English
1997
University of Notre Dame
B.A.
Government and International Studies and English
1995
Links
Articles
Demonic Pedagogy and the Teaching Saint: Voice, Body, and Place in Cynewulf's Juliana
Medieval Feminist ForumChristina Heckman
2019-10-01
In Cynewulf’s Old English poem Juliana, the saint frames her encounters with her adversaries as pedagogical confrontations, refusing the lessons they attempt to “teach” her and ultimately adopting the identity of a teacher herself. These confrontations depend on three key tropes in the poem: Juliana’s voice, as a material manifestation of language deployed by the saint; her body, both as living body and as relic; and place, especially the place of the saint’s martyrdom and/or burial. Viewed through theories of material feminism, these tropes reveal diverse forms of agency in the poem, as both human and non-human agents make bodies and places newly intelligible as dynamic and interlinking phenomena
Things in doubt: Inventio, dialectic, and Jewish secrets in Cynewulf's Elene
Journal of English and Germanic PhilologyChristina M. Heckman
2009


