Tracy Adams

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Occupations
  • Author
  • professor
Education
ThesisMotus and Permutatio: An Anthropology of Love in the Twelfth Century Romance (1998)
DisciplineHistorian
Tracy Adams
Occupations
  • Author
  • professor
Academic background
Education
ThesisMotus and Permutatio: An Anthropology of Love in the Twelfth Century Romance (1998)
Academic work
DisciplineHistorian
Sub-disciplineMedieval History
Institutions
Main interestsIsabeau of Bavaria
Notable worksThe Life and Afterlife of Isabeau of Bavaria

Tracy Adams is a medieval historian who teaches in New Zealand. A scholar of Medieval French and English literature and feminist theory, she is best known for her work on Isabeau of Bavaria.

Adams received her BA in English (minoring in French) from the University of Minnesota (1981), followed by an MA in English from the University of Texas (1984). From 1995 to 1996 she studied French and Latin medieval literature at the University of Geneva, and returned to the US for a PhD in French at Johns Hopkins University, which she earned in 1998 with a dissertation on love in romance, "Motus and Permutatio: An Anthropology of Love in the Twelfth Century Romance". She taught at the University of Maryland, University College, on the Schwäbisch Gmünd campus (1997–2001), and in 2001 was hired by the University of Auckland, New Zealand, as a lecturer in French. As of 2011 she is an associate professor in the School of Culture, Languages and Linguistics, and has served a number of times as head of French.

Research

References

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