Carolyn Marino Malone
Carolyn Marino Malone is an American medievalist and academic. She is professor of art history and history at
Education
Malone spent her childhood in Kansas, USA. In 1963 she went to Paris to study at the French Language Institute, followed by a Junior Year in Bordeaux in 1964. She took her first degree at the
Academic appointments
Her first academic appointment was as visiting lecturer in the Department of Art History,
Fellowships, awards and grants
Malone has received numerous fellowships and awards throughout her career, including two from the University of Kansas in the 1960s, three from the University of California, Berkeley, in the 1960s and 1970s, and two from the
She received three awards for research on her book on St Bénigne (1998 and 2002). While at Princeton, she received a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to support an archaeological investigation of Saint Benigne, Dijon, France, an 11th century church.[14]
She was awarded a grant while at USC by the Albert and Elaine Borchard Foundation Grant to organise a conference on "Medieval Customaries and Monastic Life" in 2007.[15]
She was awarded the Elliot Prize from the Medieval Academy of America in 1982.[16][17]
Malone was awarded the USC Phi Kappa Phi Faculty Recognition Award in 2010 for her book, Saint-Bénigne de Dijon en l’an mil.[18]
Publications
Books
Facade as Spectacle: Ritual and Ideology at Wells Cathedral (2004), in which she interprets the Gothic façade of Wells as part of political discourse and liturgical innovation in England around 1220.[19]
Two books on the pre-Romanesque church of Saint-Bénigne, built between 1001 and 1018 in Dijon, France: Saint-Bénigne et sa rotonde: archéologie d’une église bourguignonne de l’an mil (2008)[20] and Saint-Bénigne de Dijon en l’an mil, “totius Galliae basilicis mirabiliorem”: Interprétation politique, liturgique et théologique (2009,[21] digital version 2016). Malone is currently working on a Digital Archives Project documenting her 1970s excavations of the building.
In Twelfth-Century Sculptural Finds at Canterbury Cathedral and the Cult of Thomas Becket (2019)[22][23] Malone reconstructs finds from the restoration of the Perpendicular Cloister as architectural screens that were built around the time of Becket’s canonisation (1173) to manage pilgrimage to his tomb and the site of his assassination. In doing so, Malone was the first person to study the way in which the crowds of pilgrims to Canterbury were accommodated during the fifty years before Becket’s body was moved from the crypt to a shrine in the Trinity Chapel. Reconstruction of these screens provides new evidence about early pilgrimage in a monastic site, and also establishes unusual sculptural activity during a previously unknown building phase at Canterbury Cathedral.[24]
Malone was co-editor, with Clark Maines, of Consuetudines et Regulae: Sources for Monastic Life in the Middle Ages and Early Modern Period (2014).[25]
Book chapters
'Architecture as Evidence for Liturgical Performance' in Understanding Medieval Liturgy: Essays in Interpretation, London: Routledge, 2016.[26]
'Les implications sensorielles de l'architecture et de la liturgie au Moyen Âge' in Les Cinq Sens au Moyen Âge, Paris: Editions du Cerf, 2016.[27]
'Interprétation des pratiques liturgiques à Saint Bénigne de Dijon d’après ses coutumiers d’inspiration clunisienne' in Dead of Night and End of Day, Disciplina monastica, Turnhout: Brepols, 2005).[28]
'Cistercian Design in the Choir and Transept of Wells Cathedral' in Perspectives for an Architecture of Solitude, Essays on Cistercians, Art and Architecture in Honour of Peter Fergusson, Turnhout & Citeaux, 2004.[29]
'Saint-Bénigne in Dijon as Exemplum of Rodulfus Glaber’s Metaphoric ‘White Mantle’ in The White Mantle of Churches, Turnhout: Brepols, 2003.
'L'espace occidental et la contre abside de l'an mil de Saint Bénigne de Dijon' in Avant-nefs et espaces d’accueil dans l’Eglise entre le IVe et XIIe siècle, Auxerre, 2002.
'L'église de Guillaume de Volpiano et sa lien avec la rotonde' in Guillaume de Volpiano et l'architecture des rotondes: Actes du Colloque Europeen, Guillaume de Volpiano, Dijon, 1996.
'The Plan and its Effect on Later Monastic Planning' (with W. Horn) in Walter Horn, The Plan of St. Gall, A Study in the Architecture, Economy, and Life of a Paradigmatic Carolingian Monastery, Berkeley, California, 1979.
References
- ^ a b c d "Faculty Profile > USC Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences". dornsifelive.usc.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "Graduate Programs". International Center of Medieval Art. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ISSN 0038-7134.
- ^ "Southern California 2003 Annual Symposium | Art Historians of Southern California". Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "International Center of Medieval Art". International Center of Medieval Art. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "Medieval Association of the Pacific". Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "Scholarly presentations given by members" (PDF). Newsletter: The Society of Architectural Historians. 28 (5): 3. 1984.
- OCLC 920443971.
- OCLC 174550677.
- ^ a b "Faculty Profile > USC Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences". dornsifelive.usc.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ISBN 978-0-7689-3460-1.
- ISBN 978-90-04-13840-7.
- ^ "Who made the Conway Library?". Digital Media. 2020-06-30. Archived from the original on 2020-07-03. Retrieved 2020-08-02.
- ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the. Report. National Endowment for the Humanities. p. 139.
- ^ "Borchard Foundation Center on International Education - Current & Past Recipients". borchardcenter.org. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
- ^ "Carolyn Malone". Press Room. 2011-04-07. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "Recent Recipients of the Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize - The Medieval Academy of America". www.medievalacademy.org. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- ^ "AHIS Faculty Display > USC Department of Art History > USC Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences". dornsifelive.usc.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-23.
- OCLC 492107113.
- OCLC 227152997.
- OCLC 863351073.
- OCLC 1108249692.
- OCLC 8183704475.
- ^ Samuel, Mark (2020-05-18). "Review – Twelfth-century Sculptural Sculptural Finds at Canterbury Cathedral". Current Archaeology. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
- OCLC 947210532.
- )
- )
- )
- )