ABSTRACT

This volume brings together a series of papers at Kalamazoo as well as some contributed papers inspired by the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of Lynn White Jr.’s, Medieval Technology and Social Change (1962), a slim study which catalyzed the study of technology in the Middle Ages in the English-speaking world. While the initial reviews and decades-long fortune of the volume have been varied, it is still in print and remains a touchstone of an idea and a time. The contributors to the volume, therefore, both investigate the book itself and its fate, and look at new research furthering and inspired by White’s work. The book opens with an introduction surveying White’s career, with a bibliography of his work, as well as some opening thoughts on the study of medieval technology in the last fifty years. Three papers then deal explicitly with the reception and longevity of his work and its impact on medieval studies more generally. Then five papers look at new cast studies areas where White’s work and approach has had a particular impact, namely, medieval technology studies and medieval rural/ ecological studies.

chapter Chapter 1|29 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 3|20 pages

Lynn White’s “Roots” and Medieval Technology and Social Change

The view from outside medieval studies

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

Determined disjunction

Lynn White’s Medieval Technology and Social Change then and now

chapter Chapter 5|27 pages

Of cranks and crankshafts

Lynn White, Jr. and the curious question of mechanical power transmission

chapter Chapter 6|16 pages

A Romanesque box hoist in Liège

A possible precursor of medieval tower-clock frames?

chapter Chapter 9|11 pages

Cold, rain, and famine

Three subsistence crises in the Burgundian Low Countries during the fifteenth century