"An important and well-selected series of essay. They present to an English-only audience the central directions of a new kind of social history being pursued in Germany by some of the biggest names in contemporary German scholarship." (Patrick Geary, University of Notre Dame) "This collection of essays examines the cognitive categories used by medieval people and modern historians to organize and perceive medieval society. Drawing initially on the work of medievalist Karl Schmid and secondarily on the French sociologists, these essays challenge a once-dominant mode of German medieval studies, "constitutional history." In doing so, they reimage a more dynamic and less hierarchical Middle Ages." (The Medieval Review)