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                    The history of emotions
                     and emotional history
                                     Stuart Airlie
The appearance of Anger's Past, with the prospect of more work on the
history of the emotions from Barbara Rosenwein herself, is very
welcome. But that prospect is also problematic. It is in some ways a
response to Nietzsche's call for a `critique of moral values, [that] the
value of these values should itself be examined'.1 Values, to which
emotions are closely tied, turned out for Nietzsche to be contingent,
not constant: to have a genealogy. The master's epigones have gone on
to sweep away the notion of an unchanging human identity; the individ-
ual subject has turned out to be historically constructed and contingent
too and has thus dissolved; Man has vanished. Further, language was
to be understood as a master that constructed reality, not merely the
medium through which it could be perceived. Thus the good news for
historians, that a historical approach to all forms of social experience and
value is both appropriate and necessary, is balanced by the bad news that
the recapturing of that experience is bound up with all sorts of problems
of representation.2 In its concern with what seems to be such a personal
experience as emotion, and in its concern with a medieval past that,
particularly before the twelfth century, has left us sources encased in
exceptionally rigid conventions and in which individual identity is prob-
lematic, a history of the emotions raises in acute form key questions of
historical writing, as well as about the otherness of the past, authenticity,
experience and representation.3 Professor Rosenwein's project is, on every
level, the opposite of eccentric, and I hope to indicate here some of the
1
    F. Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morals, trans. C. Diethe and ed. K. Ansell-Pearson
    (Cambridge, 1994), p. 8.
2
    There is a helpful introduction to so-called theory in F. Lentricchia and T. McLaughlin (eds.),
    Critical Terms for Literary Study, 2nd edn (Chicago, 1995); see, for example, G. Harpham,
    `Ethics', ibid. pp. 387±405. Currently, historians are perhaps more likely to turn to Foucault or
    other Parisian masters than to Nietzsche; see J. Goldstein (ed.), Foucault and the Writing of
    History (Oxford, 1994). G. Spiegel, `History, Historians and the Social Logic of the Text',
    Speculum 65 (1990), pp. 59±86 remains valuable.
3
    K. Leyser, Rule and Conflict in an Early Medieval Society (London, 1979), p. 1; K. Leyser,
    Medieval Germany and its Neighbours 900±1250 (London, 1982), pp. 241±6. On the individual
    as historical subject, D.W. Sabean, Power in the Blood (Cambridge, 1984), pp. 30±6.
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   ways in which it relates to work already being done and the problems and
   opportunities for research posed by such work.
      A history of the emotions must be precisely that, namely, historical.
   We do not have unmediated access to the past, and our own emotional
   responses to what it has left us offer no short cut to its perception. Even
   his currently exalted status as guru of cultural studies does not mean that
   Walter Benjamin's response to the human ®gures in the Vienna Genesis
   need have much credibility with professional historians of the Middle
   Ages (`something very mysterious, not only in their wide-open eyes, _
   in the unfathomable folds of their garments, in their _ expression. As
   if falling sickness had overtaken them'). Benjamin was actually dis-
   cussing `the in¯uence of early medieval miniatures on the world of
   [the Expressionists'] imagination' and historical readings of such images
   were thus of little concern to him: this may remind us that not all
   responses to the past can or should be controlled and de®ned by the
   academy.4 Even professional historians, however, may not always be
   vigilant. In many modern accounts the Middle Ages appears as a period
   of great emotional scenes. More sober historians than Huizinga have
   seen it thus. R.W. Southern saw, in John of Salisbury's vivid story of
   how Pope Eugenius III grovelled in the dust at the feet of a count to
   beg him to reconsider divorcing his wife, `a touching illustration of
   the pope's personal involvement' in such cases.5 Gerd Althoff has
   recently argued that we should read such stories very differently.
   Such accounts of highly charged demonstrations of feeling actually
   reveal a structured form of communication at work. Thus, Conrad II's
   tears before his consecration as king in 1024 were a demonstration of
   his readiness to forgive wrongs done to him before his accession, while
   his ignoring the urging of his princes to hurry to his consecration and
   brush aside the petitions of a mere farmer, a widow and an orphan was
   a demonstration of his kingly qualities as defender of the vulnerable.
   Such actions had nothing involuntary about them and were not a sign
   of the anarchic naõÈvete and spontaneity of a medieval temperament.
   The nuns of Ganderseim's furious curses while throwing their offerings
   at the bishop of Hildesheim during mass were not a spontaneous over-
   ¯ow of emotion but a deliberate demonstration, carefully timed for
   maximum impact, of their rejection of the bishop's claims over their
    4
        W. Benjamin, `Karl Kraus', in W. Benjamin, Reflections, trans. E. Jephcott (New York, 1978),
        256; Benjamin's view of the emotional style of Late Antique art was influenced by A. Riegl, see
        C. Rosen, `The Ruins of Walter Benjamin', in G. Smith (ed.), On Walter Benjamin
        (Cambridge, MA and London, 1991), pp. 129±75 at pp. 134±5. Full weight is given to the role
        and expression of emotion in early medieval art in H. Mayr-Harting, Ottonian Book
        Illumination, 2 vols. (London, 1991), a highly relevant work in the present context.
    5
        R.W. Southern, Western Society and the Church in the Middle Ages (Harmondsworth, 1970),
        p. 136.
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abbey. As Althoff puts it, `their behaviour was not uncontrolled, but
goal-oriented'.6
   In its critique of Norbert Elias and its quest for the social meaning of
emotional displays, Althoff's work has much in common with Barbara
Rosenwein's project. Althoff's primary concern, however, is with sym-
bolic communication and ritual rather than with emotion per se, and this
means that, despite its value, that work has some limitations from our
point of view here. The actual nature of the emotions expressed does not
always interest him. He observes that the sadness of Liudolf, son of Otto I,
was a prelude to his revolt against his father, but sources on Liudolf's
attitude stress his sadness and grief rather than anger. The speci®c emotion
depicted is itself important, not simply its role as herald of rebellion.7 The
system recovered by Althoff is too tight to be entirely convincing as a
reconstruction, partly because the response of the audience to demon-
strations of emotion could not always be predicted. Henry II of England's
dumb-show of anger in the forest of Woodstock may have been carefully
worked out in order to overawe the formidable Hugh of Lincoln, but
Hugh, who dissolved the king's fury with a jest, cannot have been sure that
his joke would provoke laughter rather than more royal ira.8
   Further, there is a textual dimension that needs exploration. Althoff's
analysis of the actions of Otto III, for example, as `demonstrative-ritual
behaviour' casts much light on a ruler who can appear emotionally
overheated. But Stephan Waldhoff has recently argued that, while an
approach such as Althoff's is more satisfactory than the psychological
intuition deployed in, for example, Schramm's reading of Thietmar's
account of Otto's sighs and ¯oods of tears, `demonstrative-ritual behav-
iour' is not the key here. Rather, the key to understanding what seems to
be the private Angst of Otto III laid bare by Thietmar is chapter 6 of the
Gospel of St Matthew, which urges that the truly devout should pray
and fast in secret rather than court hypocrisy and vainglory by doing
so in front of an audience.9 What matters are the textual patterns and
6
    G. Althoff, Spielregeln der Politik im Mittelalter (Darmstadt, 1997), p. 264 with pp. 233±5 on
    Conrad II; in general, see pp. 229±304.
7
    Althoff, Spielregeln, p. 30; contrast J.L. Nelson, The Frankish World 750±900 (London and Rio
    Grande, 1996), pp. 187±8.
8
    K. Leyser, Communications and Power in Medieval Europe: The Gregorian Revolution and
    Beyond (London and Rio Grande, 1994), pp. 164±5; on Angevin ira, see P. Hyam, `What did
    Henry III of England Think in Bed and in French about Kingship and Anger?', in
    B. Rosenwein (ed.), Anger's Past (Ithaca and London, 1998), pp. 92±124, at pp. 100±3; the
    potential danger of reductionism in an approach such as Althoff's is well charted by
    S.D. White, `The Politics of Anger', ibid., pp. 127±52.
9
    Thietmar, Chronicon, IV, c. 48, ed. R. Holtzmann, MGH, SRG (Berlin, 1955), p. 186;
    S. Waldhoff, `Der Kaiser in der Krise? Zum VerstaÈndnis von Thietmar IV, 48', Deutsches
    Archiv fuÈr Erforschung des Mittelalters, 54 (1998), pp. 23±54. For a rather different view, Mayr-
    Harting, Ottonian Book Illumination, I, p. 160; for some valuable general reflections on sources
    and conventions of representation, T. Reuter, `Pre-Gregorian Mentalities', The Journal of
    Ecclesiastical History, 45 (1994), pp. 465±74, especially at pp. 471±4.
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   authorial concerns of Thietmar, just as Bruno of Querfurt's picture of
   Otto's ascetic drive suggests, in Waldhoff's striking phrase, that it is the
   hagiographer, not the emperor, who is spiritually disturbed.10 Waldhoff
   ranges sensitively across such topics as the problems caused for scholars
   by modern notions of a public-private dichotomy, the need to grasp
   the role of tears and compunctio cordis as necessary accompaniments to
   prayer, and the need to be sensitive to patterns of conventional piety and
   devotional practice as well as to the thematic structures of hagiographical
   and historical narratives. His article deserves a wider readership than
   those interested only in Otto III.
      Walking down the echoing corridors of intertextuality is, however, the
   start, not the end, of analysis. Conventional practices and texts certainly
   could evoke stereotypical reactions in stereotypical representations. An
   Arian bishop could be re-trained by Catholic personnel services: `Let him
   be exhorted to convert to the Catholic faith and _ be told to do penance
   and weep for his sins with a be®tting number of tears (satisfactione
   lacrimarum) so that when he had performed his penance and they knew
   him to be a good Catholic, they might ordain him bishop in some other
   town'.11 The sincerity or otherwise of this bishop is not the issue here,
   but the instrumentalist scheme of compunctio cordis is rather different
   from the tears that burst forth from the dying Bede when the phrase from
   the antiphon `do not abandon us as orphans' struck upon his ears. Again,
   the sincerity or otherwise of Bede's feelings are not the issue here; as
   Professor Rosenwein remarks above, we need not assume that intimate
   sources such as this account of Bede's death are, emotionally, authentic.
   But this episode matters. It is the spark that has helped a sensitive modern
   interpreter to illuminate Bede's determined efforts to abandon `earthly
   for heavenly kinship' and thus explore a central theme in Bede's work,
   uncovering not only Bede's difference from us but from the norms of
   his society.12 This returns us to Richard Southern's distraught pope,
   whose function in Western Society and the Church is not simply to be a
   peg for anecdote but to be a gateway into a discussion of indulgences and
   papal power. To adapt Barthes' terminology, these emotional episodes
   are examples of the punctum that can pierce and illuminate the general
   studium, and it is important to hold both in balance.13
   10
        Waldhoff, `Der Kaiser in der Krise?', p. 37.
   11
        Liber Vitas Sanctorum Patrum Emeretensium, V.xi, ed. A. Maya Sanchez, Corpus Christianorum,
        116 (Turnholt, 1992), p. 88; translation from A.T. Fear (ed. and trans.) Lives of the Visigothic
        Fathers (Liverpool, 1997), pp. 96±7. On penance in this text, see I. Wood, `Social Relations in
        the Visigothic Kingdom from the Fifth to the Seventh Century: The Example of MeÂrida', in
        P. Heather (ed.), The Visigoths from the Migration Period to the Seventh Century: An Ethno-
        graphic Perspective (Woodbridge, 1999), pp. 191±208 at pp. 202±3.
   12
        De Obitu Baedae, in Venerabilis Baedae Opera Historica, 2 vols, ed. C. Plummer (Oxford, 1896),
        I, p. clxi, with translation at pp. lxxiv±v; H. Mayr-Harting, The Venerable Bede, the Rule of
        St. Benedict and Social Class (Jarrow, 1976), p. 17.
   13
        R. Barthes, Camera Lucida, trans. R. Howard (London, 1993), pp. 25±7 and passim.
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    The penitent Arian bishop, the tearful Bede and the pleading pope all
appear to us in texts whose codes must be deciphered; they, and their
actions, do not speak to us directly but appear in historical contexts and
situations, and it is these that should be our focus. Representation is
primary but the world is not simply a text. In describing Charlemagne's
tears on the death of his children, Einhard was artfully weighing up
the king's virtues of magnanimitas, patientia and pietas and providing
a textual picture that other writers were to react against. But he was
surely also gesturing towards a real historical situation in the life of the
historical Charlemagne.14 Such a situation can only be perceived by us
and then rendered by us through signi®cation, rather than reproduction,
but it is the past situation and the past culture that concerns us. The
history of representations is only a part of the general ®eld of history.
Concern with emotion in history takes us directly to basic questions of
history writing.
    One might turn this round and say that the history of emotions is
thus already with us in some contemporary historical writing, though
the scale and theoretical self-consciousness of the contributors to Anger's
Past and of its editor mark an important new step, for early medievalists
at least. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that emotional history
is already with us; I conclude this piece with a brief look at examples of
it that repay study in this context.
    First, and most extreme, there is the vast survey of early medieval
German history by Johannes Fried, a book welcomed as an `anthropology
of the beginnings of Germany'.15 This may be so, but if it is anthropology
it is not anthropology as we know it. Fried is indeed concerned with the
rhythms of the human life-cycle and with the social environment, and he
roots his accounts of political history in them to dazzling effect. But his
analysis often takes the form of highly charged evocation designed to help
us imagine the early Middle Ages as a period whose everyday life was
dominated by Angst, and as such Fried's book is more likely to remind
the anglophone reader of the work of Huizinga than of modern anthro-
pological theory.16 This need not be a Bad Thing (especially when one
considers the dessicated nature of much contemporary academic dis-
course), but Fried's high-powered subjectivity and evocative approach
14
     Einhard, Vita Karoli, c. 19, Vie de Charlemagne, ed. L. Halphen (Paris, 1938), p. 60; contrast the
     Astronomer's Vita Hludowici imperatoris, c. 20, ed. E. Tremp, MGH, SRG (Hanover, 1995),
     pp. 340±2. I have learned much about Einhard and grief from an unpublished paper by David
     Ganz, to whom I am grateful.
15
     J. Fried, Der Weg in die Geschichte. Die UrspruÈnge Deutschlands bis 1024 (Berlin, 1994);
     M. Borgolte, `Eine Anthropologie der AnfaÈnge Deutschlands', GoÈttingische Gelehrte Anzeigen,
     247 (1995), pp. 88±102.
16
     `Angst durchsetzte alle Lebensformen und beherrschte den Alltag', Fried, Der Weg in die
     Geschichte, p. 106; this sentence is characteristic. For a hostile reaction to Fried's approach see
     the exchange between him and G. Althoff in Historische Zeitschrift, 260 (1995), pp. 107±30;
     compare S. Airlie in German Historical Institute London. Bulletin, 17 (1995), pp. 6±12.
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   mean that his book can hardly serve as a model for others. The nature of
   its aims and achievements do, however, deserve attention.
       At the opposite extreme from Fried, in its explicit grappling with
   contemporary theory, is Allen Frantzen's Before the Closet: Same-Sex Love
   from Beowulf to Angels in America. The subtitle gives some idea of the
   range of Frantzen's book, and not every reader of this journal will relish,
   say, his analysis of Der Rosenkavalier. In some ways this is also an
   intensely and explicitly personal book and that makes it dif®cult to see it
   as a model; nor is it for me to endorse it as such. It does, however, offer
   an immensely stimulating treatment of topics and issues that are relevant
   here and its importance deserves to be widely signalled. Frantzen com-
   bines a command of queer theory with a strong historical sense that
   means that his task is to challenge that `deconstruction of hegemonic
   heterosexuality _ [which] can endlessly manipulate historical condi-
   tions as rhetorical affects without approaching the reality of same-sex
   relations for the men and women who experienced them'.17 He thus
   stresses the need to work with medieval categories and the limits to the
   malleablity of texts and meditates on the nearness and otherness of
   Anglo-Saxon experience and its representation. The end results include
   a sensitive analysis of Hrothgar's tearful farewell to Beowulf as an
   expression of love, an analysis that in some ways offers unsurprising
   conclusions, but what matters is how they have been arrived at ± i.e. by a
   journey through and engagement with, theoretical perspectives.18 Some
   readers will shrug off that concern with theory while others will disagree
   with his conclusions on it, but it is precisely because Frantzen's concern
   is primarily historical that both sets of readers ought to grapple with it,
   and its relevance to work on the history of emotions is obvious.
       Learning from anthropology, literary theory and perhaps even from
   `emotionology' can help the historian in the ®eld of the history of the
   emotions, but historical questions remain at the centre of such a project.
   If a `civilising process' can be detected, we still need to pose the old `who
   whom?' questions, as for the Carolingian Renaissance where `the process
   of courtization _ was also a transmission, and imposition, of the cul-
   tural values of the clerici onto the lay nobility'.19 Universalising theories
   such as Freud's are of very limited usefulness, and material interests need
   to be given due weight in emotional schemes.20 If historical questions
   17
        A. Frantzen, Before the Closet: Same-sex Love from Beowulf to Angels in America (Chicago, 1998),
        p. 15.
   18
        Frantzen, Before the Closet, pp. 93±8.
   19
        J.L. Nelson, `History-writing at the Courts of Louis the German and Charles the Bald', in
        A. Scharer and G. Scheibelreiter (eds.), Historiographie im fruÈhen Mittelalter (Vienna and
        Munich, 1993), pp. 435±42, at p. 436.
   20
        H. Medick and D.W. Sabean, `Interest and Emotion in Family and Kinship Studies: a Critique
        of Social History and Anthropology', in H. Medick and D.W. Sabean (eds.), Interest and
        Emotion (Cambridge and Paris, 1984), pp. 9±27.
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                     The history of emotions and emotional history                            241
can be asked, that means that a history of the emotions is already with
us, to an extent.21 But investigation into the historical nature and experi-
ence of the emotions themselves, not simply their `social uses', now
needs to come centre stage. This is the peculiar challenge and attractive-
ness of a project which needs to avoid the crassness of functionalism
as well as the weightlessness of studies of representation. As such, it
brings contemporary questions on the writing of history into very sharp
focus indeed. At the very least, historians need no longer be teased by
Auden's song: `O tell me the truth about love./Our history books refer
to it/In cryptic little notes'.22
Department of History, University of Glasgow
21
     I am thinking here, for example, of how studies of the history of childhood have focused on the
     emotional bonds, or lack of them, between parents and children, see J.L. Nelson, `Parents,
     Children and the Church', in D. Wood (ed.), The Church and Childhood, Studies in Church
     History, 31 (Oxford, 1994), pp. 81±114. Many other works on family history are also relevant
     here. The political history of the patrimonial kingdoms of the early Middle Ages necessarily
     touches on emotional relationships and norms; see, for example, P. Stafford's discussion of
     motherhood in her Queen Emma and Queen Edith (Oxford, 1997), pp. 75±81.
22
     W.H. Auden, `Some say that love's a little boy', in Auden, Collected Shorter Poems 1927±1957
     (London, 1969), p. 94.
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