

Stokes Hall South 316
Email: dalisera@bc.edu
ORCID
caves and stone in premodern Britain; early medieval ritual and religion; Old English literature; Pictish stones; North Sea environmental history; the history of the museum; digital humanities
Alexander D鈥橝lisera is an environmental historian of premodern Europe, focusing on caves, stone, ritual, and religion in the early medieval North Sea milieu. He is currently the 2024-25 Charles W. Maus Graduate Research Fellow in Karst Studies at the Cave Conservancy Foundation. His dissertation, planned for completion in 2025, is entitled 鈥淩eal and Imagined Caves in Early Medieval Britain, c. 400-1000 CE.鈥 In this project, he applies an eco-critical lens to archaeological and literary sources in order to explore cave use and underground meaning in post-Roman and early medieval Britain.
D鈥橝lisera鈥檚 newest article, in press with postmedieval, is entitled 鈥淪peluncar Slumber and the Medieval Time Traveler: Unearthing the Imagined Cave of the Old English Seven Sleepers.鈥 His chapter on the Book of Durrow鈥檚 iconographic resonances with Pictish stonescapes is also forthcoming, in 脤 Chaluim Chille: Interdisciplinary Studies on Iona and Columba. In 2023, he was first author on a new translation of and introduction to 鈥淭he Dream of the Rood,鈥 which appeared in the third volume of Tony Burke鈥檚 New Testament Apocrypha book series. With colleagues from Queen鈥檚 University Belfast and Durham University, he is co-editing an international volume, provisionally titled Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Stone and Society from Prehistory to the Middle Ages. At Harvard University, he has advised and evaluated senior theses in the Department of the History of Science since 2023.
D鈥橝lisera previously attended Yale University as a Marquand Scholar, where he received an M.A. in religion from the Divinity School. He also holds a B.A. in history and classics from Bard College, where he attended as an Excellence and Equal Cost Scholar. From 成人快播 College, he holds a graduate certificate in digital humanities. His current CV may be downloaded from his Humanities Commons profile: https://hcommons.org/members/dalisera/.
鈥淪peluncar Slumber and the Medieval Time Traveler: Unearthing the Imagined Cave of the Old English Seven Sleepers,鈥 postmedieval, forthcoming.
鈥淒urrow鈥檚 Lion: Irenaeus, Pictish Stonescapes, and the Book of Durrow鈥檚 Non-Hieronymian Evangelical Symbols,鈥 in聽脤 Chaluim Chille: Interdisciplinary Studies on Iona and Columba on the 1500th Anniversary of the Birth of the Saint, ed. Sofia Evemalm-Graham (Cl貌 G脿idhlig Oilthigh Ghlaschu, 2024), in press.
鈥The Dream of the Rood: A New Translation and Introduction,鈥 in聽New Testament Apocrypha: More Noncanonical Scriptures, vol. 3, ed. Tony Burke (Eerdmans, 2023), 110-129 (with Samuel Osborn).
Review of David Ceri Jones et al., A History of Christianity in Wales (University of Wales, 2022), in Reading Religion 8, no. 9 (American Academy of Religion, 2023).
Translation of聽Beowulf, lines 151-165, in聽Beowulf by All, ed. Jean Abbott, Elaine Treharne, and Mateusz Fafinski (Arc Humanities, 2021).
Review of Jordan Zweck,聽Epistolary Acts: Anglo-Saxon Letters and Early English Media聽(University of Toronto, 2018), in聽Reading Religion聽5, no. 7 (American Academy of Religion, July 2020).
Translation of 鈥淐atullus V and VII,鈥 in聽Sui Generis聽(Bard College, Spring 2014), 66-69.