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All the City’s a Stage? Performance and Ritual in Late Medieval Europe - MST00097M

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  • Department: Centre for Medieval Studies
  • Credit value: 20 credits
  • Credit level: M
  • Academic year of delivery: 2024-25
    • See module specification for other years: 2023-24

Module summary

In an age before television, radio, or print, cities were the main sites of storytelling. Late medieval towns hosted Robin Hood plays, Biblical re-enactments, royal entries, oath-taking ceremonies, and public punishments: all events that combined popular entertainment with more serious messages about power, morality, and sin.

Western Europe saw a surge in urban performance in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, with plays and processions often staged at particular times of year and following a set script. Why did post-Black Death urban society invest so much money in putting on a show? How did participants and audiences feel about these performances? Did rituals and pageantry always bolster the power of existing elites, or could they subvert social and political hierarchies?

Ranging across England, Ireland, France, the Low Countries, and Iberia, this module considers the ways in which performance was used to articulate and contest social values within urban communities. We adopt a ‘bottom-up’ approach, using surviving play texts, chronicles, financial accounts, legal records, and the urban built environment itself to imagine how individuals experienced the sights and sounds of civic ritual. More broadly, we shall also use late medieval sources to engage with debates in the humanities and social sciences about the relationship between performance, identity, and social order.

Module will run

Occurrence Teaching period
A Semester 1 2024-25

Module aims

The aims of this module are to:

  • Develop skills of source analysis and interpretation
  • Assess a range of source material and relevant secondary works; and
  • Develop students’ powers of evidence-based historical argument, both orally and in writing

Module learning outcomes

Students who complete this module successfully will:

  • Demonstrate a knowledge of a specialist historiographical literature;
  • Present findings in an analytical framework derived from a specialist field;
  • Solve a well-defined historiographical problem using insights drawn from secondary and, where appropriate, primary sources.
  • Set out written findings using a professional scholarly apparatus.

Module content

Students will attend a 1-hour briefing in week 1. Students will then attend a 2-hour seminar in weeks 2-4, 6-8 and 10-11. Weeks 5 & 9 are Reading and Writing (RAW) weeks during which there are no seminars, and during which students research and write a formative essay, consulting with the module tutor. Students prepare for eight seminars in all.

Seminar topics are subject to variation, but are likely to include the following:

  1. The City as a Holy Body? The York Corpus Christi Plays
  2. Playing Around: Theatre, Games, and Ritual Inversion
  3. Whose Show is this, Anyway? Royal Pageantry in Urban Settings
  4. Making Promises: Oath-Taking, Inauguration Rituals, and Rites of Passage
  5. Setting Boundaries: Riding the Franchise
  6. Shame on You! Rituals of Penance and Punishment
  7. Disrupting the Routine: Rebellion, Resistance, and Ritual
  8. What’s Missing? Confining Performance to Text

Indicative assessment

Task % of module mark
Essay/coursework 100

Special assessment rules

None

Indicative reassessment

Task % of module mark
Essay/coursework 100

Module feedback

Students have the opportunity to submit a formative essay of up to 2,000 words and receive written or oral feedback, as appropriate, from a tutor. For the summative essay (3500-4000 words), students will receive their provisional mark and written feedback in line with the University's turnaround policy. The tutor will then be available during student hours for follow-up guidance if required.

Indicative reading

For reading during the module, please refer to the module VLE site. Before the course starts, we encourage you to look at the following items of preliminary reading:

  • Abigail Agresta, The Keys to Bread and Wine: Faith, Nature, and Infrastructure in Late Medieval Valencia (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2022)
  • Sarah Beckwith, ‘Ritual, Theatre and Social Space in York’s Play of Corpus Christi’, in Barbara Hanawalt and David Wallace (eds), Bodies and Disciplines: Intersections of Literature and History in Fifteenth-Century England (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995)
  • Barbara A. Hanawalt, Ceremony and Civility: Civic Culture in Late Medieval London (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017)



The information on this page is indicative of the module that is currently on offer. The University constantly explores ways to enhance and improve its degree programmes and therefore reserves the right to make variations to the content and method of delivery of modules, and to discontinue modules, if such action is reasonably considered to be necessary. In some instances it may be appropriate for the University to notify and consult with affected students about module changes in accordance with the University's policy on the Approval of Modifications to Existing Taught Programmes of Study.