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Ruth Mazo Karras

American historian (born 1957) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ruth Mazo Karras
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Ruth Mazo Karras (born February 23, 1957) is an American historian and medievalist, whose academic research and publications are focused on the disciplines of sexuality, religion and marriage in the late Middle Ages. Her notable works include: From Boys to Men, Unmarriages: Women, Men, and Sexual Unions in the Middle Ages and Sexuality in Medieval Europe: Doing Unto Others.

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She is an author of the Middle Ages, whose interests are masculinity and sexuality in Christian and Jewish societies. Her book, Unmarriages: Women, Men, and Sexual Unions in the Middle Ages, was named co-winner of the American Historical Association's Joan Kelly Memorial Prize in Women's History in 2012.[1]

Since 2018, Ruth Mazo Karras has held an appointment as the Lecky Professor of History at Trinity College Dublin.[2] She was also the President of the Medieval Academy of America in 2019–20.[3] In spring 2018, she was a visiting fellow at the St. Andrews Institute for Medieval Studies.[4] Prior to taking up her post in Dublin, she served as Distinguished Teaching Professor of History at the University of Minnesota.[5][6][7][8] She earned a PhD and an MPhil in History from Yale University, an MPhil in European Archaeology from the University of Oxford, and a BA in History from Yale.[9]

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Education and career

Ruth Mazo Karras was born in Chicago, Illinois on February 23, 1957.[10] Karras attended Yale University, where she completed a Bachelor of Arts in 1979, Master of Philosophy in 1983 and Doctor of Philosophy in History in 1985.[11] She also completed a Master of Philosophy in European Archaeology at the University of Oxford in 1981.[12]

She was Assistant Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia from 1985 to 1993.[13] While teaching at Temple University, she was Associate Professor from 1993-1996, Professor of History from 1996-2000, Director of the Intellectual Heritage Program from 1999-2000 and Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts from 1999-2000.[14] Karras would later spend eighteen years (2000-2018) at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis as Professor of History and was named Distinguished Teaching Professor for her work with postgraduates.[15][16] Since 2018, she has been the Lecky Professor of History at Trinity College Dublin, teaching courses on medieval sources, marriages, and Christianity and Judaism during the Middle Ages.[17]

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Academic research

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Scholarly discipline and focus

In the field of medieval studies, Karras has dedicated her professional career on studying medieval masculinity, sexuality, gender roles and the history of women.[18] The research foundations of her work are focused on the intersections of social, legal and cultural history in medieval societies. As primary sources, Karras employs court records, hagiography, prescriptive texts, administrative documents, and Icelandic sagas to inform her analysis.[19] Her current research is focused on the masculine figure of King David in medieval Christian and Jewish cultures. She works with dissertation and thesis students, whose work is based on the central to late Middle Ages; Karras also works with postgraduates focusing on the cultural and social histories of women and sexuality.[20]

Notable works

Select publications from her research on masculinity include: the critically acclaimed book, From Boys to Men (2003), “Young Knights Under the Feminine Gaze” (2002), “Separating the Men from the Goats” (1999), “Sharing Wine, Women, and Song” (1997), and most recently, the fourth edition of her book, Sexuality in Medieval Europe (2005).[21][22][23][24][25] Select publications from her research on women and sexuality include: Common Women (1996), “Women’s Labors” (2004), Unmarriages (2012), and “Royal Masculinity in Kingless Societies (2016).[26][27][28][29][30] She also co-edited, with medieval scholar Judith Bennett, on The Oxford Handbook of Women and Gender in Medieval Europe (2013).[31] Karras also has published works focused on the institution of medieval marriage such as “Marriage” (2012), Law and the Illicit in Medieval Europe (2008) and “Marriage and the Creation of Kin in the Sagas” (2003).[32][33][34][35]

Reception from other Medieval Scholars

Karras has received praise for her innovative research approaches when considering medieval masculinities and analyzing the sexual unions of marriage and prostitution during the Middle Ages. Some medieval scholars have found From Boyz II Men to be a founding document in the study of men's history and a success in medieval scholarship for its development of social class expectations and experiences of socialization as being critical to how male masculinities formed separate from women.[36] Several other medieval scholars have praised Unmarriages for its fresh research complied with unpublished church court records and the intersectionality between legal, sexual and economic histories.[37]

However, other historians criticize Karras's reductive qualities during the interpretative process of analyzing the legal, religious and literary texts. Her discourse, according to some medieval scholars, places all individuals into one category and does not allow for the possibility of other explanations to be applied regarding definitional questions.[38] Some historians criticize the presentist agenda and generalizations made by Karras when she formulates conclusions on some primary sources.[39]

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Awards and fellowships

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Ruth Mazo Karras has received numerous awards and honors throughout her career, including: the Rhodes Scholarship from 1979-1981; the National Endowment for the Humanities grant in 1989; American Philosophical Society research grant in 1989; she was named Scholar of the College of Liberal Arts at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis in 2003; she was accepted as a member of the Institute for Advanced Studies at Princeton University in 2003-2004; she received the Distinguished Women Scholars Award in Humanities, Social Sciences and Arts at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis in 2008; she was honored with the Dean's Medal and Graduate-Professional Teaching Award at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis in 2010; in 2012, she was honored as "Feminist Foremother" by the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship and the Joan Kelly Prize in Women's History from the American Historical Association for her work in Unmarriages; and she was an invited member to the Israel Institute for Advanced Study in 2016-2017.[40][41][42]

Throughout her career as a scholar and professor, Karras has also received fellowships to advance her research such as the following: the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1993-1994; the American Philosophical Society sabbatical fellowship in 2004-2005; the Medieval Academy of America fellowship in 2009; the American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship in 2010; the Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies Fellowship at the University of Pennsylvania in 2012; the European Institutes for Advanced Study Fellowship in 2016-2017; and the Donald Bullough Fellowship from the St. Andrews Institute for Medieval Studies in 2018.[43][44]

Memberships and service

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Karras has been recognized with memberships into the Medieval Academy of America, American Historical Association, Women's History Association of Ireland, and Berkshire Conference of Women Historians.[45]

She served as assistant editor of Common Knowledge (published through Duke University) from 1993 to 1998 and since 2001; for Medieval Feminist Newsletter, she was editor from 1994 to 1999 and general editor from 1997 to 1998; general editor of the "Middle Ages Series" for the University of Pennsylvania Press since 1994; associate editor of Journal of British Studies since 2004; and has contributed to academic journals including Journal of Women's History, Scandinavian Studies, Early Medieval Europe, American Historical Review, and Journal of the History of Sexuality. Karras was also member of the advisory board for the Journal of the History of Sexuality from 1990 to 1993, Medieval Feminist Newsletter from 1991 to 1994, and History Compass since 2005.[46][47]

More recently, Karras was the North American Co-Editor for Gender and History from 2008 to 2013; President of the Berkshire Conference on the History of Women from 2005 to 2008; served on the Editorial Board for the American Historical Review; and the Medieval Academy of America Chair of the Ad Hoc Committee on Harassment in 2018, Second Vice-President from 2017 to 2018, First Vice-President from 2018 to 2019, and President from 2019 to 2020.[48]

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Selected publications

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References

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