Dr Lydia Schumacher wins a 'Starting' Research Grant from the European Research Council

Dr Lydia Schumacher, Chancellor's Fellow in the School of Divinity, has recently obtained a 'Starting' Research Grant from the European Research Council for a project entitled 'Authority and Innovation in Early Franciscan Thought (1220-56)'.

Starting Grants of up to €1.5 million are awarded to outstanding young researchers and provide the opportunity to pursue a major research agenda for up to 5 years, together with a staff of their own choosing. As the ERC operates the most competitive funding scheme in the world, grant-holders undergo a highly competitive selection process, in which a proposal of around 50 pages is scrutinized by 10 world-leading scholars in their immediate field as well as a selection panel of up to 20 world-leading scholars in the broader field. 

More information about the scheme is available here:

https://erc.europa.eu/funding-and-grants/funding-schemes/starting-grants

The abstract of Dr Schumacher's project (short-titled 'Innovation') is as follows:

 INNOVATION anticipates a breakthrough in scholarly understanding of the medieval origins of modern Western philosophy. This breakthrough will be achieved by exposing the pioneering nature of early thirteenth-century Franciscan thought and its pivotal significance for the subsequent formation of the Western philosophical identity. The work of early Franciscans has largely been neglected in scholarly circles, on the assumption that they merely codified the work of past authorities, where later Franciscans developed innovative ideas that laid the foundation for the development of modern philosophy. INNOVATION will contest this assumption by producing the first comprehensive study of the sources, method, content, and later medieval reception of early Franciscan thought. In conducting this study, I will implement a groundbreaking method of reading scholastic texts, which is attentive to the way that practice informed theory in the high Middle Ages. This ‘practice-led’ hermeneutic will provide a resource for re-envisaging the entire state of the art in the study of scholasticism. As regards early Franciscans, it will allow me to identify novelty, often due to the use of Islamic sources, where past scholars have perceived unoriginality. On this basis, I will highlight previously unnoticed connections between the early and late Franciscan schools. By these means, I will illustrate how Western thought has been nourished by the ethos of a particular religious order and by Islamic thought, pointing up a shared Muslim-Western philosophical identity that is often overlooked but urgently needed to overcome severe fractures in today’s society. At the same time, I will emphasize that Franciscan ideas only became modern once removed from their practice-led context. In juxtaposing the cultural paradigms of philosophy and religious practice, consequently, I will advance knowledge by producing the first nuanced scholarly account of the Franciscan origins of modern Western thought.