Annette Volfing


Annette Marianne Volfing is a Danish literary scholar and poet. Since 2008, she has been Professor of Medieval German Literature at the University of Oxford.

Academic career

Volfing completed her undergraduate degree at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, graduating in 1985; she returned there to carry out her doctoral studies; her DPhil was awarded in 1993 for her thesis "A commentary on Der meide kranz by Heinrich von Mügeln". Her thesis was supervised by Nigel F. Palmer. She was elected to a fellowship at Oriel College, Oxford, the following year, alongside a lectureship at the University of Oxford.
According to her university profile, Volfing is a "medievalist with particular interest in later medieval religious, mysical, philosophical or allegorical writing"; her British Academy adds that her research focuses on "mysticism; allegory; learned discourse ; didacticism; courtly romance; orientalism; discourses of gender and violence" in medieval German literature.

Media work

Volfing has contributed reviews of books examining medieval literature and culture to the Times Literary Supplement.

Honours and awards

In 2015, Volfing was elected a Fellow of the British Academy, the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and social sciences.

Poetry

Alongside her academic career, Volfing has published two pamphlets of poetry: Ecliptic with Black Light Engine Room in 2016 and Learning Finnish with Paekakariki Press in 2021. Her poems have also appeared in magazines such as Magma Poetry.

Personal life

Originally from Copenhagen, Volfing has lived in the United Kingdom since 1982 and obtained British citizenship in 2017.

Publications

Heinrich von Mügeln: >Der meide kranz<. Münchener Texte und Untersuchungen zur deutschen Literatur des Mittelalters 111.John the Evangelist and Medieval German Writing: Imitating the Inimitable.Medieval Literacy and Textuality in Middle High German. Reading and Writing in Albrecht’s Jüngerer Titurel.Innenräume in der Literatur des deutschen Mittelalters. XIX. Anglo-German Colloquium Oxford 2005.Punishment and Penitential Practices in Medieval German Writing, King's College London Medieval Studies.