Metamorphosis and Identity

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In Metamorphosis and Identity , award-winning historian Caroline Walker Bynum explores the Western obsession with the nature of change and personal identity. Focusing on the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, but concerned as well with Antiquity and the twentieth century, Bynum confronts the question of why intellectuals, religious leaders, and ordinary people alike exhibited a precise and persistent desire to understand how the individual both changes and remains the same.

Examining shifting conceptions of change itself in the years around 1200, Bynum situates the intense medieval curiosity about radical or substantial change in the context of specific cultural and social developments. Two images of change ― hybridity and metamorphosis ― were prominent in imaginative literature, theology, the visual arts, and natural philosophy; these sites of competing and shifting understandings each entailed different anthropological and psychological assumptions. As Bynum demonstrates in the four essays of Metamorphosis and Identity , the fascination with boundary crossing and alterity reveals an effort across different genres to delineate the regularity of nature and to establish a strong sense of personal identity, perduring even beyond the grave.

Included as the final chapter of Metamorphosis and Identity is Bynum’s 1999 NEH Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor given by the U.S. government to a scholar in the humanities.

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April 26,2025
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I read Caroline Walker Bynum's *Metamorphosis and Identity* as part of my research for a paper I'm about to give on identity in the medieval poem *Sir Orfeo*, so I read it with double perspective: first, for its usefulness for my research (yes, I'm willing to use a book and then just set it aside), and second, for its enjoyability. *M&I* was a joy on both counts. Bynum's discussions of identity and werewolves (*Buffy the Vampire Slayer* even gets a mention) provided me with new insights and approaches to take regarding my topic and even gave me the inspiration I needed for my title. Bynum manages a style that is both erudite and easy to read, and her scholarship is of course phenomenal.

Over the course of the text, Bynum uses werewolf tales to show how Medieval culture perceived the issue of identity, that identity was considered to persist through changes (such as becoming a werewolf) from hybridity and metamorphosis. She calls on Dante, Ovid, Marie de France, and Gerald of Wales to illustrate her argument, and concludes that

"Our concern with how we can change yet be the same thing — our fascination with the question of identity in all its varieties — is inherited from traditions. The identity we carry with us questions — and by questioning conforms — itself. In this sense, we are all Narcissus, as we are all also the werewolf, a constantly new thing that is nonetheless the same" (p. 189).

What surprized me about the book is that it comprises four lectures Bynum gave on various occasions and that those lectures are presented with no attempt to blend them into more cohesive book chapters. I'm not sure whether this omission matters, but it did recall for me an on-going discussion about expectations in the humanities about how books ought to be presented and whether the requirements for dissertations should be changed to allow collections of essays to make it more possible for students to complete their doctoral degrees.
April 26,2025
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Here lately, I’ve been reading a lot of texts about lycanthropy and identity and this collection of work is the least straightforward of them all. The author comments on certain aspects of the identity dynamic without asserting anything in regard to them. The topics themselves are acknowledged, but there is not much speculation. If you are wanting to begin research on identity, lycanthropy, and metamorphosis, then this is a good foundational text.
April 26,2025
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Geez louise! I love this book! I'm especially partial to all the stuff about Ovid in it, and the essay on Gerald of Wales.
April 26,2025
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the descriptions won’t tell you this, but this is a book about werewolves (among other things—but mostly werewolves)
April 26,2025
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I had come across this work many times whilst researching Sir Orfeo and now it was finallly time to read it myself. Sadly it wasn't quite what I was looking for but Caroline Walker Bynum does present some interesting thoughts and I hope to end up using them in my thesis.
April 26,2025
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Great book looking at the role of change of state within werewolf lore in the west. Accessible, enjoyable.
April 26,2025
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Literally the last one hundred pages of this book is notes. If I'd realised that, I would've finished it the other day.

Also, why do NONE of the books about werewolves I've read actually talk about the werewolves I need them to talk about? I have specific werewolf needs and I'm being failed by academia.
April 26,2025
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Medieval werewolves, monsters, gender transformations, and the ephemeral nature of one's physicality in general. These are a collection of the mighty Bynum's essays, and thus can be more fragmented than flowing, but really, isn't it more fitting that way?
I love it when a medievalist can transform the way I see myself.
And god, I wish there had been a chance to put Bynum in a cage with Angela Carter and make them fight. Oh, yes.
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