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Ayoush Lazikani, "The Medieval Moon: A History of Haunting and Blessing" (Yale UP, 2025)

Dec 6, 2025
Join Ayoush Lazikani, a lecturer at Oxford and expert in medieval literature, as she takes listeners on a captivating journey through the moon's multifaceted role in the medieval world. She explores enchanting themes, from Old English riddles that see the moon as a cosmic enigma to its personifications as deities like Selene. Delve into tales of lunar adventures, the moon's influence on medicine and popular beliefs, and the poignant ways the moon symbolizes love and loss in poetry across cultures. Discover why this celestial body still resonates today.
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INSIGHT

Moon As A Global Literary Mirror

  • Ayoush Lazikani noticed the moon recurs across Christian and Islamic contemplative literature and East Asian cultures, prompting a global study.
  • The moon functions as a cross-cultural symbol revealing core religious and literary practices in the medieval world.
INSIGHT

The Moon As A Riddle

  • Medieval riddles treated the moon itself as a riddle because it changes form and disappears by day.
  • The riddle form let writers probe the moon's knowable aspects and its deeper unknowability.
INSIGHT

Lunar Personifications Shape Faith

  • The moon appears as deity or personified figure across cultures, from Selene and Artemis to Shanggi and Mayan myths.
  • These personifications shape religious identity by linking local theology and poetic imagery to lunar figures.
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