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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life and career  





2 Selected books written or edited by Flanigan  





3 Literature about Flanigan  





4 Notes  














Clifford Flanigan






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Clifford Flanigan (August 2, 1941 – October 27, 1993) was an American professor of English, medievalist, and theatre historian.

Life and career

[edit]

Charles Clifford Flanigan grew up as an only child in Baltimore, Maryland, in a family descended from German and Irish immigrants. He graduated from Baltimore City College a year early, at the age of 16. Seeking to become a Lutheran pastor, he began theological studies at Concordia CollegeinBronxville, New York and then continued them at Concordia Senior CollegeinFort Wayne, Indiana. His master's degree was granted by Concordia Seminary near St. Louis, Missouri, in 1967. Although a Protestant, Flanigan followed the Catholic liturgical year with interest and observed many saints' days and feasts in a private manner and also by visiting Catholic churches.[1]

He began studying Comparative Literature and Medieval history at Washington University in St. Louis while still at seminary. After deciding against entering the ministry, he enrolled full-time in doctoral studies at Washington University. When, in 1973, he completed his dissertation on the origins of liturgical drama, he was already employed as a junior professor at Indiana University Bloomington's program in Comparative Literature. An article, excerpted from his dissertation, received a prize from the Medieval Academy of America in 1976.[2]

Flanigan was a gifted teacher.[3] After his unexpected and early death, his students and colleagues organized two symposia in his honor, 1994 in Bloomington and 1995 in Kalamazoo. Flanigan's research was considered by many medievalist colleagues of the time to be unconventional and progressive, because he applied ideas from recent Critical Theory to medieval topics.[4]

As a dramaturg, director, and actor, Flanigan was devoted to staging medieval dramas, for instance the Passion Play from the Carmina Burana, which was performed in Bloomington and New York City. He collaborated on a total of nine such performances.[5]

Selected books written or edited by Flanigan

[edit]

Literature about Flanigan

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Clüver, In Memoriam C. Clifford Flanigan (as cited above), p. 23.
  • ^ The Roman Rite and the Origins of the Liturgical Drama, in: University of Toronto Quarterly 43 (1974), p. 263-284.
  • ^ He was awarded the Frederick Lieberman Award for Distinguished Teaching in 1987.
  • ^ Clüver, In Memoriam C. Clifford Flanigan (as cited above), p. 24.
  • ^ Clüver, In Memoriam C. Clifford Flanigan (as cited above), p. 25.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Clifford_Flanigan&oldid=1210135613"

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