Carreto, Carlos2020-03-202020-03-202019-05-302184-4097PURE: 16663263PURE UUID: d97cccd1-db9f-4001-bd6e-dab6760f5c8fORCID: /0000-0002-9931-0476/work/86283506http://hdl.handle.net/10362/94695UID/ELT/00657/2019Has the Middle Ages invented glo-balization or revealed a clear consciousness of globality? On the other hand, may this anachronistic notion prove to be an appro-priate and productive operative and analyti-cal concept for rethinking medieval literature beyond its territorial and linguistic bounda-ries and the epistemological view of the wor-ld imposed by a (neo)positivist conception of the history of literature? Mapping the medie-val literature in a global perspective implies a methodological repositioning and a pro-cess of deterritorialization of the concepts themselves that leads us to reinvest motives, forms, structuring notions (from the chivalric queste to the concept of romance as transla-tio, passing through the status of the marve-lous) with new meanings and, consequently, new cultural and poetic implications.31959268porConcept of MarvellousMedieval LiteratureWorld Literature and French Global StudiesMedieval PoeticsTravel LiteratureGlobal Middle Ages ou as virtudes do anacronismoGlobal Middle Ages or the virtues of anachronismThe lesson of the medieval textjournal articleA lição do texto medievalhttps://e-lcv.online/index.php/revista/article/view/66