Contact Information
Literatures, Cultures & Linguistics Building
707 S Mathews Ave
Urbana, IL 61801
Office Hours Spring 2024:
Tuesdays 10:30am – 12:30pm
Biography
Walker Horsfall is from Toronto, Canada, and received his PhD from the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto.
His research, broadly conceived, is on the intersection between medieval literature and natural philosophy. His main focus is on Middle High German religious and love poetry from the twelfth to the fourteenth centuries, with additional attention to Arthurian courtly romances and mystical texts. His work examines what these medieval texts can contribute to our understanding of the histories of gender, sexuality, religion, and science. Currently, he is investigating the existence of "communities of pleasure" in the High Medieval period, as well as the use of rhetorical and narratological strategies in medieval German and Scandinavian texts as a way of encoding contemporary scientific information, particularly astronomical information.
Education
PhD, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Toronto
Courses Taught
GER 211 - Conversation and Writing I
GER 212 - Conversation and Writing II
GER 270 - Sexuality and Literature
GER 470 / 571 - Medieval German Studies
SCAN 251 - Viking Mythology
SCAN 252 - Viking Sagas in Translation
Additional Campus Affiliations
Assistant Professor, Germanic Languages and Literatures
Recent Publications
Horsfall, W. J. M., & Stock, M. (2023). Die Klage der Kunst. In M. Stock (Ed.), Konrad von Würzburg: Ein Handbuch (De Gruyter Reference). de Gruyter.
Horsfall, W. J. M. (2021). Review: C. Lauer, U. Störmer-Caysa and A.S. Lahr's Handbuch Frauenlob. Seminar - A Journal of Germanic Studies, 57(4), 424-426. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/50/article/840091
Horsfall, W. (2019). Frauenlob’s Catechetical Imperative: Form and Function in the “Kreuzleich”. Zeitschrift für deutsche Philologie, 2019(1). https://doi.org/10.37307/j.1868-7806.2019.01.05
Horsfall, W. J. M., & Stock, M. (2017, Apr). Konrad von Wuerzburg - A Bibliography. https://hdl.handle.net/1807/76860