Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2015
While the historical turn in IR has produced significant advances in historicising both international relations and the discipline itself, the way in which the Middle Ages have been approached, studied, and referenced even in this historically-informed scholarship unwittingly works to reinforce two myths that these scholars challenge: Eurocentrism and Orientalism. The main goal of this article is to problematise the uses of the medieval that reinforce these narratives by unpacking the linguistic and conceptual constructions that underpinned the interactions between Latin Christendom and rest of the world. In doing so, it makes two closely-connected arguments: first, drawing from the abundant literature on historical sociology and Eurocentrism, it argues that we cannot understand medieval Europe, and particularly European identity-formation, without paying attention to its relations with the non-Christian world. Secondly, and most crucially, it shows that these interactions never rested on the unified idea of an ‘infidel enemy’ that seems to emanate from the IR crusading literature. Rather, an examination of the constructions of Jews and Muslims in canon law shows an extremely nuanced and varied conceptual apparatus that creates several dynamics of Othering – and consequently allows for a variety of ways of relating ranging from toleration and coexistence to conquest.
Research for this article was supported by La Caixa Foundation and the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Oxford. A previous version of this article was presented at the 2015 ISA Annual Convention. I am grateful to Xavier Guillaume and Amélie Barras, as well as to the other attendants to the panel for their helpful feedback. Special thanks to Quentin Bruneau, Oscar Costa, Edward Keene, Nivi Manchanda, Katharine Millar, Ellen Jenny Ravndal, Michael Sampson, and Claire Vergerio for their generous readings, and helpful comments and suggestions on earlier versions. Thanks also to three anonymous RIS reviewers whose insightful engagement greatly improved this piece.
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38 Henricus de Segusio (Hostiensis), Summa aurea to X 5.6 (Venice, 1574) Also in Ramon de Penyafort, Summa de Poenitentia 1.4.1 (Farnborough: Gregg Press, 1967) and in Bernardus Papiensis, Summa decretalium, 5.5, ed. Ernst Adolph Theodor Laspeyres (Graz: Akademische Druck-u. Verlagsanstalt, 1956 [orig. pub. 1860]).
39 Said, Orientalism; Doty, Imperial, p. 7.
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42 Hostiensis, Summa aurea 5.5 v. Qui sunt.
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57 See Freidenreich, ‘Sharing meals’ for more examples.
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77 See Sapir Abulafia, Christians and Jews.
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79 Raimon de Penyafort, Summa de poenitentia, 1.4.1
80 Innocent III, Constitutio pro Judeis in Grayzel, The Church, fn. 5, emphasis added.
81 Zacour, Jews and Saracens, number 72, pp. 47–53.
82 Ibid., pp. 50–1.
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