Leah Pope Parker
@parkerchronicle.bsky.social
120 followers 180 following 31 posts
Baker of hand pies. Scholar of medieval literature and disability: www.leahpopeparker.com Views my own. She/they. Cat: Æthelthryth. Book: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12571891 Banner: close-up of swirling shades of yellow in oil paint, vaguely floral.
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parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Look at this beautiful book cover. That shiny lady? That’s Saint Æthelthryth. Heck yes I named my cat after her.
A book cover depicting an illuminated manuscript miniature on parchment, predominantly using gold, blue, and peach. In a floriate rectangular frame, St. Æthelthryth stands wearing draped robes of peach and gold with a golden veil and aureole, holding two golden lilies and a golden book, and surrounded by golden Latin text announcing this as the image of St. Æthelthryth. The beige parchment background extends to the edges of the cover, bordered by pairs of ruled lines. At the top of the image is the title of the book, Light of the Everlasting Life: Disability and Crip Eschatology in Old English Literature, followed by the author’s name, Leah Pope Parker.
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
levostregc.bsky.social
Yf you are walkinge arounde and you see i) a squirrel or ii) a crowe or iii) a catte, you muste saye "hey buddy" these are the rules
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
ICYMI: CfP for ICMS Kalamazoo 2026
@kzooicms.bsky.social
May 14-16, 2026
Deadline: Sept. 15
#medievalsky #skystorians #disability
The Society for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages invites proposals for papers by emerging scholars in medieval disability studies. 1/
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
malentendre.bsky.social
With the organizers' permission, here's a great #icms2026 CFP on "Naturing Bodies, Embodying Nature." I'm not going this year but would def attend this session!

Apply: wmich.edu/medievalcong...
Contact: Hunter Phillips (hap48[at]cornell.edu), Asher Courtemanche (ac2457[at]cornell.edu)
#MedievalSky
Poster text is as follows:
Call for Papers: ICMS 2026, May 14–16, Western Michigan University. Naturing Bodies, Embodying Nature. This session seeks to explore the intersections of embodiment and environment in the Middle Ages, considering how bodies—organic and inorganic, human and non-human, material and immaterial—constitute, shape, and envelop one another. By “naturing” bodies, we seek to erode neat divisions between humans and the natural world to uncover the earthy entanglements linking humans to the environments they shape and are shaped by. Attuning to John Scotus Eriugena’s claim that nature is the name “for all things, for those that are, and those that are not,” we invite papers that reflect on the fundamentally relational ontology of humans, non-humans, and environments. Abstracts up to 300 words can be submitted to the ICMS proposal portal before September 15.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
I’m organizing this session, so feel free to DM questions or inquiries.

NB: This is a *hybrid* session, so you do not need to be able to get to Kalamazoo, MI next May to participate!

Guidelines and submission: wmich.edu/medievalcong... /end
Call for Papers | International Congress on Medieval Studies | Western Michigan University
standard
wmich.edu
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Paper proposals on any topic relating to disability, disease, health, and/or medicine and engaging with the methods of disability studies will be welcomed, on any period between c. 500–1500, on any geographical area, and in any scholarly field. 3/
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Presenters may be emerging in terms of their career (e.g., graduate students or early-career researchers) or emerging by bringing their research into a new direction (i.e., newly engaging with disability studies). Priority will be given to new scholars and approaches. 2/
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
ICYMI: CfP for ICMS Kalamazoo 2026
@kzooicms.bsky.social
May 14-16, 2026
Deadline: Sept. 15
#medievalsky #skystorians #disability
The Society for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages invites proposals for papers by emerging scholars in medieval disability studies. 1/
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
alexpartridge87.bsky.social
Fascinated that In Our Time is one of the BBC’s most popular podcasts among under 35s. The young people demand three academics and a peer discussing Demosthenes, apparently. And they’re right to do so.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
I was fortunate to have some surprise funding that covered the very reasonable cost of my index, but I would absolutely have found it worthwhile to pay out-of-pocket and will budget accordingly for the next book.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
You can see Shannon’s work on my index in the #OpenAccess ebook (doi.org/10.3998/mpub...) and pictured here. Seriously, how do you make a useful index entry on “disability” in a book that’s entirely about disability?? I highly recommend hiring a professional to figure that out for your book.
Index page of Light of the Everlasting Life from “Christus medicus trope” to “dumbness/muteness (see speech, impaired).” The entry under “disability” reads “disability: defined, 10–11, 13; intersections with gender, 7–8, 193–94, 195; intersections with queerness, 8–9; intersections with race and ethnicity, 7–8, 148–49, 183–84; as marker of identity, 20, 21–23, 31, 126, 128; medieval conceptualization of, overview, 11, 14–15; scholarship on medieval, 15–17; social/cultural vs. medical model for, 10, 86n44. See also embodied difference; entries at crip.”
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
I’ve heard that you should write your own #index, so you can advance your argument. But an excellent indexer will see your argument and support it, with an index that also works properly like an index. I respect that expertise! Shannon’s also great with medieval names, languages, and manuscripts!
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Looking for an indexer for your book? I benefitted immensely from working with Shannon Li (www.li-indexing.com), not just because she took indexing off my plate while I checked proofs, but also because she crafted an index that helped me make my argument.
#BookSky #SkyStorians #MedievalSky
Li Indexing
Dedicated to writing thorough, accurate, and elegant indexes that are delivered on time.
www.li-indexing.com
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
aspencerhall.bsky.social
Cannot wait to read @parkerchronicle.bsky.social's new book, "Light of the Everlasting Life: Disability and Crip Eschatology in Old English Literature"

👉 Open Access here press.umich.edu/Books/L/Ligh...

#MedievalSky #CripSky
Front cover of Leah Pope Parker's "Light of the Everlasting Life: Disability and Crip Eschatology in Old English Literature", with a saint with a golden halo nestled within a beautiful gilded border on a pale manuscript background From disability metaphors to narratives structured around bodies presented as aberrant, early medieval English thoughtworlds conveyed the promise of resurrection and the hope of salvation through crip and disabled bodies. Light of the Everlasting Life argues that early medieval Christian eschatology, as manifested in Old English literary texts, was a crip eschatology: a theology of the afterlife that relied upon disabled bodies and concepts related to disability in order to convey promises of resurrection and salvation. In addition to demonstrating how literature manifested theological approaches to the afterlife, Leah Pope Parker articulates the ways of thinking about bodies and disability that were available to ordinary early medieval people, many of whom experienced their bodies in ways that resonate with what we call disability today, but who rarely appear in the historical record.
By analyzing Old English texts, including Alfredian translations, Ælfric’s saints’ lives, and poetry from the Exeter and Vercelli Books, Parker introduces novel ways of characterizing disability’s effects in literature. “Spiritual prosthesis” reveals rhetorical, narrative, and theological reliance upon disability to convey the promise of a Christian afterlife. “Systems of aberrance” emerge as a result, in which bodies marked as deviant—including disabled, monstrous, heroic, saintly, and dead bodies—form a network of embodiments that reinforce the narratives they inhabit and that of Christian salvation history. Locating crip eschatology in early medieval literature, Light of the Everlasting Life rewrites standard histories of disability, of the body, and of medieval Christian eschatology.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Thank you!! The trick to the cat jokes is they might only be funny to me. I’m a medievalist, not a comedian.

What wonderful synchronicity to have our books out in the same year. I’m looking forward to reading yours!
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Officially published today!

There are exactly two (2) intentional cat jokes in this book. I make no guarantees about the number of additional unintentional cat jokes.
uofmpress.bsky.social
"Light of the Everlasting Life" by @parkerchronicle.bsky.social is now available! This new addition to the Corporealities series explores disability representations and the afterlife in Old English literature. Start reading: buff.ly/SgNgGOx
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
uofmpress.bsky.social
"Light of the Everlasting Life" by @parkerchronicle.bsky.social is now available! This new addition to the Corporealities series explores disability representations and the afterlife in Old English literature. Start reading: buff.ly/SgNgGOx
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
sonjadrimmer.bsky.social
This is fantastic. Share widely.
annakornbluh.bsky.social
teachers!

excited to share a new website at this late date of Aug 15 to try to help us collectively prepare for back to school in the interpretative humanities classroom assaulted by the AI grift, so we don't have to go it alone.

take a look, share, + most importantly: CONTRIBUTE
against-a-i.com
AGAINST AI
against-a-i.com
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Remember how parents used to take pictures of kids with newspapers when History™️ was on the front page? Very proof-of-life vibes?

Here’s proof of how alive and thrilled Æthelthryth is on the day a box of my book arrived! Happy birthday to me!

doi.org/10.3998/mpub... #MedievalSky #DisabilitySky
An open box of neatly stacked copies of Light of the Everlasting Life. A brown tabby cat sits next to the box, looking at the camera, thoroughly unimpressed.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Took my early copy of the book on a walkabout to Winchester Cathedral, built partly on top of the Old Minster, home of St Swithun’s crutch-covered shrine from ch 2. Also where the cover portrait of St Æthelthryth was made! doi.org/10.3998/mpub... #MedievalSky #DisabilitySky @uofmpress.bsky.social
The top half of the cover of Light of the Everlasting Life, showing part of the portrait of Æthelthryth, with Winchester Cathedral in the blurry background. It is a very hot, sunny day, and people are enjoying the cathedral grounds. Part of the first page of chapter two in Light of the Everlasting Life, held open in front of the stone outline marking the Winchester Old Minster’s foundations in grass. The text reads: 
Two
St. Swithun’s Crutches
Healing Miracle Narratives and the Relics of Disability
Near the end of his late-tenth-century homily on St. Swithun, Ælfric of Eynsham (ca. 955-ca. 1010) describes a practice that does not appear in any of his Latin sources: cure seekers leaving crutches as votive offerings at the shrine of St. Swithun at Winchester.
[Look, the picture also includes most of the subsequent block quotation, but the AC is out on this train back to London and I have been in this forced sauna situation too long to be able to handle figuring out eths and thorns on my phone. It’s the line about the Old Minster being all bedecked in crutches and stools of people who’ve been healed and they couldn’t even hang half of them up.]
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
It’s a real physical book! Æthelthryth seems to enjoy seeing her patron saint adorning the advance copy. Cats and saints front and center! doi.org/10.3998/mpub...
#MedievalSky #SkyStorians #DisabilitySky
A brown tabby cat curls belly up on carpet next to a physical copy of Light of the Everlasting Life. A light-skinned person with curled light  brown hair that is just entering the awkward stage of growing out an undercut smiles and excitedly scrunches up their shoulders while looking at the back of Light of the Everlasting Life.
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
aboyarin.bsky.social
A spec. iss. of EARLY MIDDLE ENGLISH, ed. S Fein and T Goodmann, in honour of late Osage poet & medievalist Carter Revard, is now live!: muse.jhu.edu/issue/54946. (A stand-alone book version is forthcoming from @archumanities.bsky.social—but u can reach out if you need access.) So proud of this one.
Project MUSE - Early Middle English-Volume 7, Number 1-2, 2025
muse.jhu.edu
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Look at this beautiful book cover. That shiny lady? That’s Saint Æthelthryth. Heck yes I named my cat after her.
A book cover depicting an illuminated manuscript miniature on parchment, predominantly using gold, blue, and peach. In a floriate rectangular frame, St. Æthelthryth stands wearing draped robes of peach and gold with a golden veil and aureole, holding two golden lilies and a golden book, and surrounded by golden Latin text announcing this as the image of St. Æthelthryth. The beige parchment background extends to the edges of the cover, bordered by pairs of ruled lines. At the top of the image is the title of the book, Light of the Everlasting Life: Disability and Crip Eschatology in Old English Literature, followed by the author’s name, Leah Pope Parker.
parkerchronicle.bsky.social
Only two days left in @UofMPress.bsky.social’s Spring Sale—you can read my book in August as a free #OpenAccess ebook, but if you want this beautiful cover sitting on your bookshelf, you can preorder it for 50% off through May 31!
doi.org/10.3998/mpub...
#DisabilitySky #SkyStorians #MedievalSky
Light of the Everlasting Life
From disability metaphors to narratives structured around bodies presented as aberrant, early medieval English thoughtworlds conveyed the promise of resurrection and the hope of salvation through crip...
doi.org
Reposted by Leah Pope Parker
jonathanhsy.bsky.social
I’ve signed the book contract! Disabled Storytellers in the Global Middle Ages (Cambridge UP), coming soon! #DisabilitySky #SkyStorians #MedievalSky #GlobalMiddleAges
Photo with black text: “I’ve signed the book contract!” Pink text: “Disabled Storytellers in the Global Middle Ages (Cambridge UP), coming soon!” Background: paper contract showing the Cambridge University Press logo and insignia, on top of some partially obscured disability related books.