52nd
International
Congress
on Medieval Studies
May 11–14, 2017
Medieval Institute
College of Arts and Sciences
Western Michigan University
1903 W. Michigan Ave.
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5432
wmich.edu/medieval
2017
i
Table of Contents
Welcome Letter iii
Registration iv-v
On-Campus Housing vi
Off-Campus Accommodations vii
Travel viii
Driving and Parking ix
Food x-xi
Logistics and Amenities xii-xiii
Varia xiv
Mailings xv
Hotel Shuttle Routes xvi
Hotel Shuttle Schedules xvii
Campus Shuttles xviii
Motown the Musical xix
Exhibits Hall xx
Exhibitors xxi
Guide to Acronyms xxii
Plenary Lectures xxiii
Mostly Medieval Theatre Festival xxiv-xxv
Advance Notice—2018 Congress xxvi
The Congress: How It Works xxvii
Travel Awards xxviii
Medieval Institute Research Centers xxix
M.A. Program in Medieval Studies xxx
Medieval Institute Afiliated Faculty xxxi
Careers xxxii
Loew Lectures in Medieval Studies xxxiii
Medieval Institute Publications xxxiv-xxxv
About Western Michigan University xxxvi
The Otto Gründler Book Prize xxxvii
Endowment and Gift Funds xxxviii
2017 Congress Schedule of Events 1–184
Index of Sponsoring Organizations 185–190
Index of Participants 191–211
Index of Honorees 212
Maps M-1 – M-9
List of Advertisers
Advertising A-1 – A-42
ii
Dear colleagues,
It’s a rainy January evening as I write this year’s welcome to Kalamazoo, so it’s rather
diicult to imagine the coming of spring. Yet I take heart—even though my oice is
cold—because I do know that spring will come and so too the International Congress
on Medieval Studies. Some things do not change.
Having said that, though, change is coming to the 52nd International Congress on
Medieval Studies. A return to the status quo means that the wine hours will return to
Valley III; a new pair of trumpeter swans should be on the pond by May 2017; and
more itted sheets will be available this year. Some change is new and exciting: Western
Michigan University’s new dining hall, the Valley Dining Center, will be open for us
during the Congress. Check out the view of the pond, the new and exciting menu
options, and the opportunity to buy interchangeable meal tickets during pre-registration. Running concurrently with the Congress, also for the irst time, is the Mostly
Medieval heatre Festival, presenting four diferent programs. Finally, Motown the
Musical will be playing at Miller Auditorium, and discounted tickets are being ofered
for the Wednesday evening performance to those who pre-register online for the
Congress.
he erstwhile Valley III cafeteria and adjoining rooms will host booksellers and
vendors. he downtown Radisson Plaza hotel is our principal of site venue; please
consult the website for other of-campus lodging opportunities at Congress rates.
Registration for on-campus housing remains part of the Congress registration process.
We are pleased to welcome Leor Halevi and Chris Wickham as our plenary speakers.
On Friday, Leor Halevi will present “Artifacts of the Inidel: Medieval and Modern
Interpretations of the Sacred Law of Islam.” On Saturday, Chris Wickham will ofer
“he Donkey and the Boat: Rethinking Mediterranean Economic Expansion in the
Eleventh Century.” We are grateful to the Medieval Academy of America for its support
of the Friday plenary.
Finally, let me thank the many people on campus and of who contribute to the
Congress. Special thanks go to the Medieval Institute’s staf and students, especially Liz
Teviotdale (Assistant Director), Lisa Carnell (Congress Coordinator), heresa Whitaker
(Managing Editor), and Tom Krol (Production Editor).
I look forward to seeing you in May 2017.
Yours,
Jana K. Schulman
iii
Registration
Everyone attending the Congress—including participants, exhibitors, and accompanying family members—must register for the Congress.
he Medieval Institute encourages the use of the online registration system for
clarity, expediency, and convenience. Attendees may also register by mail or by fax
using the paper Registration Form, which is available as a PDF ile on the Congress
website, but those registering by mail or fax pay a $25.00 handling fee.
Questions regarding registration should be directed to
[email protected].
Registration fees are $145.00 (regular), $95.00 (student), and $90.00 (each accompanying family member).
Pre-registration closes on April 26.
Registration fees are not refundable after April 26.
All attendees registering after April 26, including all on-site registrants,
pay a $50.00 late fee.
PRE-REGISTRATION
Online: A link to the secure server can be found on the Congress website. hose
using online registration must pay by credit card (Visa, MasterCard, or Discover).
he system emails you a conirmation that your registration request was received. If
you do not receive the expected conirmation email message, you probably are not
registered for the Congress. Please direct questions to
[email protected]. Please
be sure that all information is complete and correct.
By mail ($25.00 handling fee): Fill out the Registration Form, using the PDF ile
available on the Congress website. Mail it, together with your check, money order,
or credit card information, before April 27 to:
Congress Registration
c/o Miller Auditorium
Western Michigan University
1903 W. Michigan Avenue
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5344
If you would like conirmation of registration, please include a self-addressed,
stamped postcard in your mailing.
By fax ($25.00 handling fee): Fill out the Registration Form, using the PDF ile
available on the Congress website. Fax it, including your credit card information,
before April 27 to Miller Auditorium at 269-387-2362.
iv
PAYMENT
We can accept Visa, MasterCard, and Discover for credit card payments, but we
cannot process American Express or electronic transfer of funds.
Only checks or money orders in U.S. dollars made payable to the Medieval Institute
are accepted. Any checks or money orders sent in currencies other than U.S. dollars
will be returned. All charges are due at the time of registration. Receipts are issued at
the Congress.
Checks and money orders made out in an incorrect amount and illegible and incorrect credit card numbers hold up the registration process. Please sign your check and
write in the current date. Post-dated checks cannot be accepted.
All who attend sessions, give papers or preside over sessions, take part in panels, visit
the exhibits, or otherwise attend the Congress and participate in its activities must
register. he Congress Committee reserves the right to deny future participation in
the Congress to those who do not register properly and further reserves the right to
refer to the university’s collection services any unpaid bills.
PRE-REGISTRATION PACKETS
Pre-registered attendees will ind their packet of conference materials, including a
receipt, available for pickup at Congress registration in the Eldridge-Fox lobby of the
Goldsworth Valley III residence halls upon arrival. On-campus housing assignments
are given at that time. Packets may be picked up around the clock from noon on
Wednesday until the end of the Congress.
ON-SITE REGISTRATION
Congress attendees may register upon arrival but are assessed a $50.00 late registration fee. Registration is available in the Eldridge-Fox lobby of the Goldsworth Valley
III residence halls. Please note that on-campus housing may no longer be available to
on-site registrants.
he hours of on-site registration are:
Wednesday, noon–midnight
hursday, 8:00 a.m.–midnight
Friday, 8:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
Saturday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
REFUNDS
Refunds for registration fees, housing, and meals are made only if Miller Auditorium
has received notiication of cancellation by April 26. No refunds are made after that
date.
v
On-Campus Housing
On-campus housing is provided in the co-ed residence halls of the Goldsworth Valley I, II,
and III complexes. Registration for on-campus housing is a part of the Congress registration process.
Rates are $38.00 per night for a single room and $32.25 per person per night for a double
for those who pre-register for the Congress. Any rooms booked to on-site registrants will
be billed at the single rate, although two attendees who want to share a room may do so.
All on-campus rooms will be singles unless speciic requests are received for double rooms,
with roommate speciied at the time of registration. Please indicate special housing
requests at the time of registration. Every efort is made to accommodate timely housing
requests, but keep in mind that not every request can be fulilled. If you and a colleague
request sharing a double room, the room assignment will be made only after both registrations have been received. If you and a colleague or colleagues request sharing an adjoining
bathroom (i.e., ask to be suitemates), room assignments will be made only after all registrations have been received.
Room assignments are indicated on the pre-registration packet, and keys are picked up at
registration in the Eldridge-Fox lobby of the Goldsworth Valley III residence halls. Rooms
may be reserved for Wednesday, hursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights of the
Congress, but neither earlier nor later.
Western Michigan University is a tobacco free campus, indoors and out. he campus
housing ofered through the Congress is designed for undergraduates, i.e., for individuals
17–22 years of age, and bathrooms are usually shared. hose who require hotel amenities
such as air-conditioning, refrigerators, and private bathrooms will ind them at area hotels.
BED LINENS
Each attendee staying in on-campus housing is issued a pillow, two lat sheets, a towel, a washcloth, a bar of soap, and a plastic drinking cup. Fitted bottom sheets are
available for $1.50 in limited quantities to those who pre-register for the Congress.
hose who choose this option will ind in the pre-registration packet a ticket to be
redeemed at their residence hall desk for the itted sheet.
CHECK IN
Pre-registered attendees may check in around the clock between noon on Wednesday
and the end of the Congress. On-site registration and check in is limited to Wednesday, noon–midnight; hursday, 8:00 a.m.–midnight; Friday, 8:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m.;
and Saturday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
REFUNDS
Refunds for housing are made only if Miller Auditorium has received notiication of
cancellation by April 26. No refunds are made after that date.
vi
Of-Campus Accommodations
Congress attendees may choose to stay of campus in local hotels, for which they
make their own arrangements. See the Congress website for contact information.
2017 HOTEL RATES
Radisson Plaza Hotel and Suites — $143.00–$233
Baymont Inn — $94.00
Best Western PLUS Suites — $119.00
Comfort Inn — $109.00
Courtyard by Marriott — $149.00
Fairield Inn–West — $109.00
Four Points by Sheraton — $115.00
Hampton Inn–Kalamazoo-Oshtemo — $129.00
Holiday Inn–West — $108.00
Homewood Suites by Hilton — $149.00
Red Roof Inn–West — $79.99
Staybridge Suites — $129.95
TownePlace Suites — $109.00
Room rates do not include 11% state and local taxes.
No hotel on this list ofers smoking rooms.
SHUTTLE SERVICE
he Radisson Plaza Hotel, the main of-campus site, the Four Points by Sheraton,
and the Holiday Inn–West provide shuttle service to and from the Kalamazoo/Battle
Creek International Airport.
he Medieval Institute provides shuttle service to campus and back from the Radisson Plaza Hotel on Wednesday from 7:00 p.m. until 11:00 p.m.; on hursday, Friday, and Saturday from 7:00 a.m. until 11:00 p.m. and on Sunday until 12:40 p.m.,
with buses departing every 40 minutes.
Shuttle service is ofered during the Congress to and from the Baymont Inn, Best
Western Suites, the Holiday Inn–West, the Red Roof Inn–West, and Staybridge
Suites on hursday, Friday, and Saturday from 7:00 a.m. until 11:00 p.m. and on
Sunday until 12:45 p.m., with buses departing every 60 minutes.
he Medieval Institute thanks Discover Kalamazoo for its support of our hotel shuttle
service.
vii
Travel
AIR
Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport is served by Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, and United Airlines. Detroit and Minneapolis (Delta) and Chicago
(American and United) are the major hubs ofering air connections.
Some Congress attendees ind it convenient to ly to Grand Rapids, South Bend,
Detroit, or Chicago and rent a car. Driving time from Gerald R. Ford International Airport (Grand Rapids) and from South Bend Regional Airport is less than two
hours. Driving time from Detroit Metro Airport is about two-and-a-half hours, from
O’Hare (Chicago) at least three hours. Kalamazoo (Eastern Time) is always one hour
ahead of Chicago (Central Time). Metro Cars (1-800-456-1701) ofers taxis from
Detroit Metro Airport to Kalamazoo (ca. $335.00; advance reservation strongly
recommended).
GROUND TRANSPORTATION FROM THE AIRPORT
Medieval Institute buses meet all incoming lights at Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport on Wednesday and hursday and transport passengers to Congress
registration (Eldridge-Fox lobby of the Goldsworth Valley III residence halls). On
Sunday, bus transportation to the airport is provided from 4:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m.
he Radisson Plaza Hotel, the main of-campus site, the Four Points by Sheraton,
and the Holiday Inn–West provide shuttle service to and from the Kalamazoo/Battle
Creek International Airport.
Taxi service is also available at the Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport.
TRAIN AND BUS
Amtrak trains (Chicago–Detroit–Pontiac and Chicago–East Lansing–Port Huron
routes), as well as Greyhound and Indian Trails buses, serve Kalamazoo daily, arriving at the Kalamazoo Downtown Transportation Center.
On Wednesday from 7:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m.; on hursday, Friday, and Saturday
from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.; and Sunday from 7:00 a.m. until 12:40 p.m., Medieval Institute shuttle buses travel between selected Congress locations on the Western
Michigan University campus and the Radisson Plaza Hotel, a three-block walk on
Rose Street from the Downtown Transportation Center (483 meters, 6 minutes).
Kalamazoo Metro Transit bus #16 (departing from the transportation center) stops
near Congress registration (limited Sunday service), and taxi service is also available
at the transportation center.
viii
Driving and Parking
Kalamazoo is located at the crossroads of Interstate-94 and US Route 131 in Southwest Michigan, a two-and-a-half hour drive from Chicago or Detroit.
Driving from I-94 to Congress registration:
Take exit 74B onto US-131 north. Travel 2.8 miles on US-131 to exit 36 (Stadium
Drive). Take Stadium Drive east (right) 2.2 miles to Howard Street. Turn left onto
Howard Street and travel one mile to Valley Drive. Turn right onto Valley Drive into
the WMU campus and follow the signs to Congress registration.
PARKING
Parking for Congress attendees is available in selected parking lots near Congress
venues on campus. Parking permits ($10.00) are available at registration in the Eldridge-Fox lobby of the Goldsworth Valley III residence halls. Please do not park at
meters or in prohibited areas.
ix
Food
VALLEY DINING CENTER MEALS
he Valley Dining Center ofers all you care to eat meals with a variety of fresh food
options in a restaurant style environment. he irst on-campus meal is Wednesday
evening dinner, and the last meal is Sunday at noon. Meal times are:
Breakfast: 7:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m.
Lunch: 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. (Sunday: noon–1:00 p.m.)
Dinner: 6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m.
Meal tickets (all you care to eat) purchased through Congress pre-registration are
priced at $13.00 and may be used for any meal served in the Valley Dining Center
during the Congress.
Meal tickets (all you care to eat) may also be purchased at the door (cash, MasterCard, Visa, or Discover) at these rates:
Breakfast: $12.00
Lunch: $15.00
Dinner: $17.00
CAFÉ 1903
Café 1903 is a retail café located within the Valley Dining Center that serves beverages, specialty cofee drinks, grab-n-go and light meal options. Miscellaneous items
such as toilet paper, shampoo, and cleaning supplies are also sold (cash, MasterCard,
Visa, or Discover).
For the Congress, the café is open:
Wednesday: 3:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
hursday–Saturday: 7:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
Sunday: 7:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
GATEHOUSE CAFÉ
he Gatehouse Café in the Exhibits Hall in Valley III provides sandwiches, soup,
salad, fruit, bagels, muins, chips, beverages, and assorted snacks. he hours are:
hursday–Saturday: 7:45 a.m.–3:30 p.m.
Sunday: 7:45 a.m.–11:00 a.m.
x
BERNHARD CAFÉ
he Bernhard Café serves an array of deli sandwiches, bagels, fresh fruits, salads, nachos,
soft pretzels, and snack foods and candy. Health and beauty items and sundries are also
available. For the Congress, the café is open:
hursday–Friday: 7:30 a.m. –5:00 p.m.
Saturday: 7:30 a.m. –2:00 p.m.
During the Congress, a complete breakfast and lunch menu is also served:
hursday–Saturday: 7:30–10:00 a.m. (breakfast)
hursday–Saturday: 11:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m. (lunch)
SCHNEIDER CAFÉ
he Schneider Café serves grab-n-go sandwiches, soft pretzels, and a wide selection of
chips, candy, and snacks. Salads and fresh fruits are also available. For the Congress,
the café is open:
hursday–Friday: 8:00 a.m.–3:45 p.m.
Saturday: 9:00 a.m. –3:30 p.m.
FLOSSIE’S CAFÉ
Located on the second loor of Sangren Hall, Flossie’s serves an array of grab-n-go
sandwiches, bagels, fresh fruits, salads, nachos, soft pretzels, frozen meals, and other
various snack foods. Flossie’s is open during the Congress:
hursday–Friday: 8:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
BRONCO MALL
he Bronco Mall on the ground loor of the Bernhard Center is home to Biggby
Cofee, Santorini Island Grill, and Subway. Hours during the Congress are:
Biggby
hursday–Friday: 8:00 a.m.–3:45 p.m.
Saturday–Sunday: 9:00 a.m. –3:30 p.m.
Santorini
hursday–Friday: 8:00 a.m.–3:45 p.m.
Saturday–Sunday: 9:00 a.m. –3:30 p.m.
Subway
hursday–Friday: 8:00 a.m.–3:45 p.m.
Saturday–Sunday: 9:00 a.m. –3:30 p.m.
CASH BARS
here are shared cash bars in the lobbies of the Bernhard Center (2nd loor) and the
Fetzer Center on hursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings.
xi
Logistics and Amenities
LOCATIONS
Congress locations—which include a conference facility, the student union, two
classroom buildings, and student residence halls—are spread around the Western
Michigan University campus. Medieval Institute shuttle buses provide transportation among Congress locations, with buses running continuously from 7:00 a.m.
to 11:00 p.m. on hursday, Friday, and Saturday, and until 1:00 p.m. on Sunday.
Walking is often the faster option, though, and many veteran Congress attendees
recommend wearing comfortable shoes.
COMPUTING SERVICES
Congress registrants have access to the computer labs in the Bernhard Center and
at the University Computing Center (UCC) upon presentation of their Congress
badges and picture ID.
he lab in the UCC is open 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Monday–Friday.
he lab in the Bernhard Center is open:
Monday–Friday: 8:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m.
Saturday–Sunday: 8:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m. (weekend of the Congress)
Congress registrants may print in reasonable quantities in the computer labs for free.
Printouts from the public computers in the Fetzer Center are 10¢ per page. Boarding
passes, but not longer documents, may be printed at Congress registration (Eldridge
308) when on-site registration is open (Wednesday, noon–midnight; hursday, 8:00
a.m.–midnight; Friday, 8:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m.; and Saturday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.), as
well as Sunday morning, 8:00 a.m.–noon.
FITNESS AND RECREATION
he itness rooms in Valley II and Valley III are available for Congress registrants’
use at their own risk around the clock throughout the Congress. Congress registrants
may, upon presentation of a Congress badge and a picture ID, use the facilities of
the Student Recreation Center, at the rate of $8.00 per visit or $20.00 for the duration of the Congress. Cash, check, Visa, MasterCard, and Discover are accepted.
LACTATION ROOMS
he Medieval Institute provides designated lactation rooms in the Bernhard Center
(Bernhard 207) and the Fetzer Center (Fetzer 2052 and 2054). he key to the room
in the Bernhard Center can be checked out from the Information Desk. he rooms in
the Fetzer Center are accessible without a key through an outer door (Fetzer 2050) and
can be locked from the inside. he Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship joins the
Medieval Institute in sponsoring a pair of lactation rooms near Congress registration
and the Exhibits Hall. he keys can be checked out from the Eldridge-Fox desk.
xii
AUDIO-VISUAL ASSISTANCE
Audio-visual equipment assistance is available in the Fetzer Center, the Bernhard
Center, Schneider Hall, and Sangren Hall when sessions are running.
BADGES
Each registrant receives a Congress badge; it should be worn throughout the Congress. You must wear your badge to attend sessions, visit the Exhibits Hall, attend
the Saturday Night Dance, use the Student Recreation Center (for a fee), and use
campus computer labs. he facilities and services of the Congress are available only
to registered attendees.
WIRELESS INTERNET ACCESS
Congress registrants with wireless-equipped laptops may obtain access to WMU’s
wireless network by following the instructions contained in their registration packets. hose planning to use the Internet during their presentations will need to establish a User ID in WMU’s wireless system on their laptops in advance of the session.
Wireless access is available throughout the campus, indoors and out.
CELL PHONE CHARGING STATIONS
here are three cell phone charging stations in the Bernhard Center.
CHILD CARE
Arrangements for child care are the responsibility of the parent(s). Your job posting
can be made through WMU’s Career and Student Employment Services at 269387-2745 or
[email protected]. Please provide a description of the work, the
general location, pay, hours, and anything else you would like the hoped-for child
care provider to know, as well as your contact information.
HOMELAND SECURITY
he address of on-campus housing for Homeland Security purposes is:
1903 W. Michigan Ave.
Kalamazoo, MI 49008
PHONES
Telephones for use in residence hall sleeping rooms are available from the Eldridge-Fox desk throughout the Congress. hose telephones may be used for
campus and local calls. A long distance calling card, available for purchase at the
Eldridge-Fox desk, must be used for long distance calls. A bank of telephones is set
up near Congress registration in Valley III (Fox 307). hese telephones accept long
distance calling cards. hey are available around the clock throughout the Congress.
xiii
Varia
SATURDAY NIGHT DANCE
he Saturday Night Dance takes place in the East Ballroom of the Bernhard Center
from 10:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. You should be ready to prove that you are 21 before
you approach the cash bar. You must have photo ID with you. You may not bring
your own drinks to the dance. All other beverages and snacks are free. he Dance
is a social occasion for registered attendees of the Congress only. Please bring your
registration badge to the Bernhard Center: it is your ticket of entry.
MEDIEVALIST SLOW TV EXPERIENCE
Saturday, May 13, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Schneider 2335
Need a break for your mind, eyes, and ears? Come experience the beauty of medieval
manuscripts in a soothing atmosphere and let your soul rest from the hectic world
of conferencing. Inspired by Norwegian TV’s real-time broadcasts (starting with a
seven-hour train journey across Southern Norway that millions tuned in to watch
in 2009), we are bringing you the Medievalist Slow TV Experience. Images of both
familiar and little-known manuscripts will be projected in an enhanced, digital slideshow while relaxing music plays. Don’t worry—if you see an image that interests you,
you can identify it in our print catalog of images to explore further at a later time.
Organizers Mae Kilker (Univ. of Notre Dame) and Hilary E. Fox (Wayne State
Univ.) ask that participants respect others in maintaining the Medievalist Slow TV
Experience as a conversation-free zone. Laptops and cellphones are permitted as long
as the sound is turned of. Adult coloring books or other quiet activities are welcome.
Drop in for ive minutes or ive hours, whatever you need to restore and revitalize
before returning to the stimulating, fast-paced world of the Congress.
BERNHARD CENTER REFLECTION ROOM
Bernhard 206 is a quiet place available to Congress attendees.
WORSHIP SERVICES
Daily Vespers
Roman Catholic
Daily Mass
Sunday Mass
hursday–Saturday 5:15 p.m. Fetzer 1040
hursday–Saturday 7:00 a.m. Fetzer 1040
Saturday 7:00 p.m. Fetzer 1040
Sunday 7:00 a.m. Fetzer 1005
Anglican (Episcopal)-Lutheran
Sunday Eucharist Sunday 7:00 a.m. Fetzer 1040
xiv
Mailings
PROGRAMS
he Medieval Institute sends Congress programs to all U.S. addresses on its mailing
list but limits international mailing of programs (including Canada) to individuals
whose names appear in the program for that year. he information contained in the
printed program is available on the Congress website in the months preceding the
congress. hose attending the Congress from abroad whose names do not appear
in that year’s program and those with U.S. addresses not on the Medieval Institute
mailing list at the time the programs are mailed receive their gratis copies upon arrival
at the Congress in May.
In the United States, the Congress program is dispatched beginning in mid-February
and extending to early March via the United States Postal Service either bulk mail
or, for those who have paid the premium charge, Priority Mail. If you would like to
receive Priority Mail service for the 53rd Congress (2018), please add $7.50 to your
schedule of charges when you register for the 52nd Congress.
For delivery outside of the United States, the institute uses a mail service that carries
the program air mail to the country of delivery and then deposits the mail in the
country system.
Second copies of the printed program are available at the Congress at a cost of
$15.00. If you have forgotten to bring your program to the Congress, you will need
to purchase a second copy.
CALL FOR PAPERS
We will no longer print a paper Call for Papers for the 53rd and subsequent Congresses. A postcard announcing the call for papers on the Congress website for the
following year’s congress will be mailed in July to everyone on the Medieval Institute
mailing list.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Please email us at
[email protected] if you change your postal or email
address.
xv
Hotel Shuttle Routes
Valley III
Bernhard / Sangren
1
Radisson Plaza
Red Roof
Inn
Valley III
Baymont Inn
Fetzer / Schneider
Best Western Suites
Staybridge Suites
2
Holiday Inn-West
xvi
Hotel Shuttle Schedules
RADISSON SHUTTLE (Route 1)
Beginning at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday and ending at 12:40 p.m. on Sunday.
Departing Radisson
7:00 a.m.
7:40 a.m.
8:20 a.m.
9:00 a.m.
9:40 a.m.
10:20 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
11:40 a.m.
12:20 p.m.**
1:00 p.m.
1:40 p.m.
2:20 p.m.
3:00 p.m.
Departing Valley III
7:20 a.m.
8:00 a.m.
8:40 a.m.
9:20 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
10:40 a.m.
11:20 a.m.
12:00 noon
12:40 p.m.**
1:20 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
2:40 p.m.
3:20 p.m.
Departing Radisson
3:40 p.m.
4:20 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
5:40 p.m.
6:20 p.m.
7:00 p.m.*
7:40 p.m.
8:20 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
9:40 p.m.
10:20 p.m.
11:00 p.m.
Departing Valley III
4:00 p.m.
4:40 p.m.
5:20 p.m.
6:00 p.m.
6:40 p.m.
7:20 p.m.*
8:00 p.m.
8:40 p.m.
9:20 p.m.
10:00 p.m.
10:40 p.m.
11:20 p.m.
* irst departure on Wednesday
** inal departure on Sunday
WEST SIDE HOTELS SHUTTLE (Route 2)
Beginning at 7:00 a.m. on hursday and ending at 12:40 p.m. on Sunday
(Staybridge Suites, Holiday Inn–West, Best Western Suites, Baymont Inn, Red Roof
Inn–West)
Buses depart Staybridge Suites on the hour, starting at 7:00 a.m., with the last trip to
campus at 10:00 p.m. on hursday, Friday, and Saturday and at noon on Sunday.
Buses depart Valley III at 45 minutes after the hour, starting at 7:45 a.m., with the
last trip from Valley III at 10:45 p.m. on hursday, Friday, and Saturday and at
12:45 p.m. on Sunday.
*** Saturday Night Dance: inal departure from the Bernhard Center for all hotels at
12:30 a.m.
xvii
Campus Shuttles
Valley
II
Valley
III
Valley
I
Goldsworth Dr.
Fetzer / Schneider
3
Bernhard / Sangren
Goldsworth
Drive
Fetzer /
Schneider
Bernhard /
Sangren
Bernhard-Fetzer Express
CAMPUS SHUTTLE (Route 3)
he campus shuttle stops at Congress locations on campus on hursday, Friday,
and Saturday from 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m. and from 7:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. on
Sunday.
BERNHARD-FETZER EXPRESS
he express runs from 8:00 a.m. until 9:30 p.m. on hursday, Friday, and Saturday
and from 8:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m. on Sunday.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Shuttles to Miller Auditorium leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) for Motown the Musical
beginning at 6:45 p.m. on Wednesday. Shuttles to the Gilmore heatre Complex
leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) for performances of the Mostly Medieval heatre
Festival beginning at 7:15 p.m. on Wednesday, hursday, Friday, and Saturday.
xviii
Motown the Musical
Wednesday, May 10, 7:30 p.m.
Miller Auditorium
“More than a Broadway show, a celebration of music that transformed America!”
—CBS Sunday Morning
Group discount prices:
$81.50, $63.50, $54.50, $45.50, and $36.50, depending on seating
(for those purchasing tickets through online Congress registration)*
Shuttles to Miller Auditorium leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) for Motown the Musical
beginning at 6:45 p.m. on Wednesday.
It began as one man’s story . . . became everyone’s music . . . and is now Broadway’s
musical. MOTOWN THE MUSICAL is the true American dream story of Motown
founder Berry Gordy’s journey from featherweight boxer to the heavyweight music
mogul who launched the careers of Diana Ross, Michael Jackson, Smokey Robinson,
and many more. Motown shattered barriers, shaped our lives and made us all move
to the same beat. Featuring classic songs such as “My Girl” and “Ain’t No Mountain
High Enough,” experience the story behind the music in the record-breaking smash
hit MOTOWN THE MUSICAL!
*hose registering for the Congress using the paper Registration Form and those
interested in tickets for another performance may purchase tickets at full price at
millerauditorium.com.
xix
Exhibits Hall
Goldsworth Valley III
Open Hours:
hursday: 8:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m.
Friday: 8:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m.
Saturday: 8:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m.
Sunday: 8:00 a.m.–12:00 noon
Adjacent:
Gatehouse Café
hursday–Saturday: 7:45 a.m.–3:30 p.m.
Sunday: 7:45 a.m.–11:00 a.m.
Wine Hours
hursday–Friday: 5:00–6:00 p.m.
Ale and Mead Tasting
Saturday: 5:00–6:00 p.m.
he Mail Room
&
Goliard T-shirts, stadium blankets, and sundry items
xx
Exhibitors
ACMRS
Alan Scafuri Design
Allen G. Berman, Professional Numismatist
Amber Elegance
Arthuriana
Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers
Boydell & Brewer
Brepols Publishers
Brill
Broadview
Cambridge University Press
Capsa Ars Scriptoria
Carved Strings
Catholic University of America Press
Centre for the Study of Christianity &
Culture
Chancery Hill Books & Antiques
Chaucer Studio/Press
Cistercian Publications
Compleat Scholar
Consortium for the Teaching of the
Middle Ages (TEAMS)
Cornell University Press
D-Art Francisca
Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library
Elfworks Studio
Facsimile Finder SRL
Four Courts Press
Franciscan Institute Publications
Garrylee McCormick
Goliardic Society
Griinstone
Hackenberg Booksellers ABAA
Hackett Publishing Company
ISD
Kazoo Books
Kubik Fine Books
Lexington Books
Liverpool University Press
Mackus Co. Illuminated Manuscripts
Mail Room
Manchester University Press
McFarland
Medieval Academy of America
Medieval Institute Publications
Oxford University Press
Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study
Palgrave Macmillan
Pen to Press
Penguin
Penn State University Press
Phillip J. Pirages Fine Books &
Manuscripts
PIMS
Powell’s Bookstores, Chicago
Routledge
Rowman and Littleield
SALVI: Septentrionale Americanum
Latinitatis Vivae Institutum
Scholar’s Choice
Sixteenth Century Journal Book Review
Oice
SMART
University of Chicago Press
University of Michigan Press
University of Notre Dame Press
University of Pennsylvania Press
University of Toronto Press
Viking Language Jules William Press
Wareham Forge
xxi
Guide to Acronyms
ASHA: Anglo-Saxon Hagiography Society
ASIMS: American Society of Irish Medieval Studies
AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study of
Medieval Technology, Science, and Art
CARA: Committee on Centers and Regional Associations, Medieval Academy of
America
CESCM: Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale
CeSMA: Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages, Univ. of Birmingham
DEMMR/F: Digital Editing and the Medieval Manuscript: Rolls and Fragments
DISTAFF: Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics, and Fashion
FLAME: Framing the Late Antique and Early Medieval Economy
HMML: Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
HSMS: Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies
IAS/NAB: International Arthurian Society, North American Branch
IARHS: International Association for Robin Hood Studies
ICMA: International Center of Medieval Art
ICLS: International Courtly Literature Society
IIIF: International Image Interoperability Framework
IMAGMA: Imagines Maiestatis
IMANA: Ibero-Medieval Association of North America
IRHT: Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes
KBAC: Kalamazoo Book Arts Center
MAM: Medieval Association of the Midwest
MAPS: Medieval Association of Place and Space
MARS: Medieval Association for Rural Studies
MEARCSTAPA: Monsters: he Experimental Association for the Research of
Cryptozoology through Scholarly heory and Practical Application
MECERN: Medieval Central Europe Research Network
MEMSI: Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute, George Washington Univ.
MESA: Medieval Electronic Scholarly Alliance
MRDS: Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society
NESS: New England Saga Society
SALVI: Septentrionale Americanum Latinitatis Vivae Institutum
SEENET: Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts
SEIFMAR: Société d’Études Interdisciplinaires sur les Femmes au Moyen Âge et à la
Renaissance
SMFS: Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship
SMGS: Society for Medieval Germanic Studies
SSBMA: Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages
SSHMA: Society for the Study of Homosexuality in the Middle Ages
TACMRS: Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies
TEAMS: Teaching Association for Medieval Studies
TEMA: Texas Medieval Association
VISCOM: SFB Visions of Community
WIFIT: Women in the Franciscan Intellectual Tradition
xxii
Plenary Lectures
Artifacts of the Inidel
Medieval and Modern Interpretations
of the Sacred Law of Islam
Leor Halevi
Vanderbilt University
Friday, May 12
8:30 a.m.
East Ballroom, Bernhard Center
sponsored by the Medieval Academy of America
he Donkey and the Boat
Rethinking Mediterranean Economic Expansion
in the Eleventh Century
Chris Wickham
University of Oxford
Saturday, May 13
8:30 a.m.
East Ballroom, Bernhard Center
xxiii
xxiv
The Mostly Medieval Theatre Festival
Mostly medieval. Mostly theatre.
he Mostly Medieval heatre Festival is a biennial performance festival showcasing
and invigorating the global heritage of drama, music, dance, and performance styles
from late antiquity through the Renaissance.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 8:00 p.m.
Cosmic Dance (Early Music Michigan)
A music and dance performance based on the life and music of the twelfth-century
mystic and visionary Hildegard of Bingen.
THURSDAY, MAY 11, 8:00 p.m.
Leaf-by-Niggle (Univ. of Maryland)
It’s a Miracle! (he Harlotry Players, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor)
Cooch E. Whippet (Farce of Martin of Cambray) (Radford Univ.)
his triple bill features a Tolkien fairy tale staged in a medieval style, a lorilegium of
fakery from the Harlotry Players, and a ilthy French farce.
FRIDAY, MAY 12, 8:00 p.m.
Esmoreit & Lippijn (Western Michigan Univ.)
A contemporary reimagining of a pair of plays in Middle Dutch. In Esmoreit, an evil
villain and a dreadful prophecy lead to a baby’s kidnap and a happy ending. In Lippijn,
someone gets a happy ending, but it’s not the husband. Additional performance at 3:30
p.m. on Saturday, May 13.
SATURDAY, MAY 13, 8:00 p.m.
Floris and Blanchelour (Pneuma Ensemble)
Dulcitius, or Sex in the Kitchen (Poculi Ludique Societas)
A period musical presentation of the irst extant romance in English and a performance
of a new translation of Hrosvit’s tenth-century tragicomedy about a Roman emperor
lured into carnal embrace with cookware.
Evening performances: $10.00 presale with online Congress registration
General admission for all performances: $15.00
Performances, all at the Gilmore heatre Complex on the WMU campus, range in
duration from 60 to 90 minutes.
Shuttles leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) for evening performances beginning at 7:15 p.m.
xxv
Advance Notice—2018 Congress
53rd International Congress on Medieval Studies
May 10–13, 2018
YOUR ACTION
If you want to organize a session or sessions: work through the appropriate organization and its representatives for a place as a Sponsored Session, OR propose a Special
Session or Sessions. he deadline for session proposals—including sessions of papers,
demonstrations, panel discussions, performances, poster sessions, practica, roundtables, and workshops—is June 1. By the end of June the Committee will have chosen
its slate for inclusion in the call for papers posted on the Congress website in July.
If you want to give a paper: consult the call for papers and determine whether
a Sponsored or a Special Session may be hospitable to a proposal. Send a paper
proposal to the contact person as soon as you can, but no later than September 15,
OR submit your proposal directly to the Congress Committee for consideration for
inclusion in a General Session.
TIMING, EFFICIENCY, FAIRNESS
Planning for sessions at the next year’s Congress should be well under way at each
Congress as attendees interact and exchange ideas. he eicient organizer generally
tries to line up speakers as soon as possible. Sessions that are “open” on June 2 may
be closing or closed at any point along the timeline to the September 15 deadline.
he organizer or the person proposing a paper who waits until the last minute may
be very disappointed, failing to build a promising session or to place a paper, respectively.
ABSOLUTE DEADLINES
For organizers of Sponsored and Special Sessions:
June 1, 2017: organizers propose sessions—including sessions of papers, panel discussions, roundtables, poster sessions, workshops, demonstrations, and performances
—to the Congress Committee
October 1, 2017: organizers submit session information online through WMU’s
Digital Commons (ScholarWorks at WMU), with revisions permitted until October
15
For General Sessions:
September 15, 2017: individuals who wish to present papers send proposals to the
Congress Committee at the Medieval Institute
xxvi
The Congress: How It Works
THE ACADEMIC PROGRAM
he core of the Congress is the academic program, which consists of three broad
types of sessions:
Sponsored Sessions are organized by learned societies, associations, and institutions.
he organizers set predetermined topics, usually relecting the considered aims and
interests of the organizing group.
Special Sessions are organized by individual scholars and ad hoc groups. he organizers set predetermined topics, which are often narrowly focused.
General Sessions are organized by the Congress Committee at the Medieval Institute. Topics include all areas of medieval studies, with individual session topics determined by the topics of abstracts submitted and accepted.
SOME POLICIES
All Congress papers are expected to present unpublished original research never
before ofered at a national or international conference.
Paper Presenter Eligibility. All those working in the ield of medieval studies,
including graduate students and independent scholars and artists, are eligible to give
a paper, if accepted, in any session. Enrolled undergraduate students, however, may
give a paper, if accepted, only in the “Papers by Undergraduates” Special Sessions.
Agreement to Deliver Papers in Person. Submission of a paper proposal is considered agreement by the author to attend the Congress and to deliver the paper in
person if it is accepted. It is a matter of Congress policy that papers are not read in
absentia.
Multiple Submissions. You are invited to propose one paper for one session. he
Congress Committee reserves the right to disallow all participation to those who
breach professional courtesy by making multiple submissions.
Diversity and Inclusion. Diversity at Western Michigan University encompasses
inclusion, acceptance, respect, and empowerment. his means understanding that
each individual is unique and that our commonalities and diferences make the
contributions we have to ofer all the more valuable. Diversity includes the dimensions of race, ethnicity, and, national and regional origins; sex, gender identity, and
sexual orientation; socioeconomic status, age, physical attributes, and abilities; and
religious, political, cultural, and intellectual ideologies and practices.
xxvii
Travel Awards
CONGRESS TRAVEL AWARDS
he Congress Travel Awards are available to participants giving papers on any aspect
of medieval studies in Sponsored and Special Sessions. he intention of these awards is
to draw scholars from regions of the world underrepresented at past Congresses. hese
include countries of the former Eastern Bloc, Latin America, Asia, and Africa. here
are three awards for each Congress: one award of $500, which is presented at the Congress, plus waiver of registration and room and board fees, and two awards that waive
registration and room and board fees.
EDWARDS MEMORIAL TRAVEL AWARDS
he Archibald Cason Edwards, Senior, and Sarah Stanley Gordon Edwards Memorial Travel Awards are available to emerging scholars who are presenting papers on
European medieval art in Sponsored and Special Sessions. here are two awards for
each Congress: $250, which will be presented at the Congress, plus waiver of registration and room and board fees.
GRÜNDLER TRAVEL AWARD
he Otto Gründler Travel Award is available to participants giving papers on any aspect
of medieval studies in Sponsored and Special Sessions. Preference is given to Congress
participants from central European nations. here is one award for each Congress: $500,
which is presented at the Congress, plus waiver of registration and room and board fees.
KARRER TRAVEL AWARDS
he Kathryn M. Karrer Travel Awards are available to students enrolled in a graduate
program in any ield at the time of application who are presenting papers in Sponsored and Special Sessions. here are two awards for each Congress: $250, which will
be presented at the Congress, plus waiver of registration and room and board fees.
TASHJIAN TRAVEL AWARDS
he Richard Rawlinson Center ofers the David R. Tashjian Travel Awards to participants giving papers on topics in Anglo-Saxon studies in Sponsored and Special Sessions. here are two awards for Anglo-Saxonists from outside of North America for
each Congress. Both awards ofer a waiver of registration and room and board fees.
One of these awards also carries a $500 stipend, which is presented at the Congress.
APPLICATION
he deadline for applications is November 1. See the Congress website for application requirements and procedures.
wmich.edu/medievalcongress/awards
xxviii
Medieval Institute Research Centers
RICHARD RAWLINSON CENTER
he Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research
fosters teaching and research in the history and culture of Anglo-Saxon England
and in the broader ield of manuscript studies. Named in memory of the founder of
the Professorship of Anglo-Saxon at the University of Oxford, Richard Rawlinson
(1690–1755), the Center opened in May 1994, and in 2005 it received the endowment established by Georgian Rawlinson Tashjian and David Reitler Tashjian to
support its mission. A separate fund, also endowed by the Tashjian family, supports
a study fellowship, awarded in 2016 to Julie Polcrack to participate in the Bamburgh
Research Project’s archaeological ield school.
he Center is sponsoring four sessions at the 2017 Congress, including “Dwelling
in the Anglo-Saxon Landscape I,” featuring the Richard Rawlinson Center Congress
speaker, Sarah J. Semple (Durham Univ.). Tashjian Travel Awards were made to Sian
Mui (Durham Univ.) and Jeremy Piercy (Univ. of Edinburgh) for their papers to be
delivered at the 2017 Congress.
wmich.edu/medieval/research/anglo-saxon
CENTER FOR CISTERCIAN AND MONASTIC STUDIES
he Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies encourages and facilitates research
on all aspects of the Cistercian tradition and in the broader ield of religious traditions. hrough the Center, the Medieval Institute ofers a Graduate Certiicate in the
History of Monastic Movements, which is open to students enrolled in a graduate
degree program at Western Michigan University. he Center’s Interim Director is
Susan Steuer, Professor, University Libraries.
he Center is currently developing two digital projects. he Monastic Gazetteer
is planned as a dataset and interactive map on the geographic scope of monastic
movements (beginning with Western monasticism) over time and provide tools for
analysis and scholarly communication. he Janauschek Portal is a collaboration with
the Transkribus Project at the University of Innsbruck, the Verein zur Gründung
und Förderung der “Europäischen Akademie für Cistercienserforschung” im ehemaligen Kloster Lehnin and the compilers of Cistopedia: Encyclopedia Cisterciensis.
he portal will provide access to unpublished manuscripts by Leopold Janauschek
(1827–1898).
he Center is sponsoring six sessions at the 52nd Congress on a variety of topics pertaining to the medieval history of the Cistercian order, including one sited at the Lee
Honors College. he Center is also ofering an additional ive panels on hursday
and Friday, May 11–12, at the Honors College.
wmich.edu/medieval/research/cistercian
xxix
M.A. Program in Medieval Studies
While allowing students to pursue specialized interests, the Master of Arts in medieval
studies is intended to provide them with a broad interdisciplinary background in
medieval history, languages, literature, philosophy, and religion.
COURSEWORK
A total of 32 hours of coursework, or 35 hours for thesis writers, including 14 hours of
required core courses, a 6000-level theory or method course; 12 hours, or 9 hours for
thesis writers, of electives at the 6000-level or above; and MDVL 6900, Medieval Studies
Capstone Writing Seminar. hesis writers take 6 hours of thesis credit (MDVL 7000).
Demonstrated proiciency in Latin and a second medieval or a modern language is required.
CORE COURSES
ENGL 5300, Medieval Literature (3 credit hours)
HIST 5501, Medieval History Proseminar (3 credit hours)
LAT 5600, Medieval Latin (4 credit hours)
MDVL 5300, Introduction to Medieval Studies (1 credit hour)
REL 5000, Historical Studies in Religion: Medieval Christianity (3 credit hours)
ORAL EXAMINATION
he hour-long oral examination is an opportunity for faculty and the student to
explore content in medieval studies based on the student’s coursework and written
work completed in MDVL 6900. he examination committee will be composed of
three members named by the Director in consultation with the student. he student
will submit the two Capstone Writing Seminar papers to the committee no less than
two weeks prior to the examination date. Students will receive an assessment of High
Pass, Pass, Low Pass, or Fail. If a student fails the examination, the examining faculty
will determine whether the student is ofered a one-time re-examination to be
completed within 12 months of the irst examination date.
THESIS (optional)
With the thesis advisor’s approval of a prospectus, a student may complete the degree
by producing a master’s thesis under the direction of a thesis committee. he committee will be composed by the Director in consultation with the student.
APPLICATION
he deadline for complete applications is January 15 for fall (September) admission. he
deadline for international admissions may vary from those for domestic admissions.
See the Medieval Institute website for application procedures.
wmich.edu/medieval/ academics/graduate/apply
xxx
Medieval Institute Afiliated Faculty
Jefrey Angles — Japanese
Robert F. Berkhofer III — History
Luigi Andrea Berto — History
Elizabeth Bradburn — English
Lofton L. Durham III — heatre
Robert W. Felkel — Spanish
Rand H. Johnson — Classics
Paul A. Johnston Jr. — English
Joyce Kubiski — Art
David Kutzko — Classics
Molly Lynde-Recchia — French
Mustafa Mirzeler — English
Natalio Ohanna — Spanish
James Palmitessa — History
Pablo Pastrana-Pérez — Spanish
Eve Salisbury — English
Jana K. Schulman — English
Larry J. Simon — History
Matthew Steel — Music
Susan Steuer — University Libraries
Anise K. Strong — History
Grace Tifany — English
Kevin J. Wanner — Comparative Religion
Victor C. Xiong—History
Emeritus Faculty
George T. Beech — History
Cliford Davidson — English
E. Rozanne Elder — History
Stephanie Gauper — English
C. J. Gianakaris — English
Peter Krawutschke — German
homas H. Seiler — English
Paul E. Szarmach — English
xxxi
Careers
What do graduates of the Medieval Institute at Western Michigan University
pursue as careers?
RECENT ALUMNI EMPLOYMENT SECTORS
Health Care
Higher Education
Libraries
Politics and Education
Publishing
Secondary Education
RECENT ALUMNI JOB TITLES
Assistant Director, Dean’s Oice
Client Services Manager
Commissioning Editor
Community Engagement Manager
Curator of Digital Research Services
Freelance Editor
Freelance Writer
Instructional Design Consultant
Legislative Afairs Manager
Managing Editor
Research and IT Specialist
School Teacher (English, history, Latin)
Special Collections Catalog Librarian
Speech Language Pathologist
University Professor (English, history)
MAJOR SKILLS
Critical evaluation/analytical skills
Foreign language skills
Oral communication skills
Pedagogical skills
Research skills
Written communication skills
xxxii
Loew Lectures in Medieval Studies
he Cornelius Loew Lectures in Medieval Studies were established by the Board
of the Medieval Institute at Western Michigan University in April 1986 to honor
a distinguished colleague on his retirement after thirty years of service to the
University. During those years “Cornie,” as he was known to his friends, served
as founding chair of the Department of Philosophy and Religion (1958–64), as
Associate Dean followed by Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences (1964–68,
1968–77), and as Vice President for Academic Afairs (1977–79). He returned to
the faculty as a Distinguished University Professor in 1980 and taught until his
retirement in 1986. He passed away on October 24, 1998 at the age of 82.
Oices and dates do not reveal the crucial role Loew played during his career in
the promotion and support of early studies at the University. He was present at
the creation of both the Medieval Institute and the Institute of Cistercian Studies.
He was a strong supporter of what has become the International Congress on
Medieval Studies, and his eforts as Dean and as Vice President for Academic
Afairs enabled Medieval Institute Publications to develop into the vital enterprise
it has become.
It is safe to say that were it not for Loew’s wisdom and counsel at crucial stages
in its growth, medieval studies at WMU would not have become the vital and
distinguished academic enterprise that it is. His commitment was unlagging. His
enthusiasm was infectious. His guidance was irm, generous, and kind. For all his
services we thank him, and we remember him by continuing this series of lectures
in his name.
RECENT LOEW LECTURES
“he Genealogical Imagination in the Old English Genesis A”
Andrew Scheil, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
October 13, 2016
“Metamorphosed Bodies and Dead Letters: Ovid in Chaucer’s Troilus and the
Legend of Good Women”
Suzanne Conklin Akbari, University of Toronto
March 29, 2016
in connection with English 5550 (Chaucer) taught by Eve Salisbury
“Christmas Revels at Hertford, 1427”
Claire Sponsler, University of Iowa
Dec. 3, 2015
in connection with heatre 3700 (heatre History I) taught by Lofton L. Durham
“Illuminare: he Uses and Embellishment of Gold and Other Metallic Leaf and
Inks in Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Painting”
Nancy Turner, J. Paul Getty Museum
March 19, 2015
in connection with Medieval 6000 (Codicology and Latin Paleography) taught by
E. C. Teviotdale
xxxiii
Medieval Institute Publications
Medieval Institute Publications (MIP) is a university press based at Western Michigan
University and publishes in late antique, medieval, and early modern interdisciplinary
ields. MIP was established in 1978 and now also houses Arc Humanities Press, which
specializes in global premodern history, reference books, and public understanding of the
past. Arc is the publishing arm of the learned society CARMEN Worldwide Medieval
Network. Both MIP and Arc collaborate, in acquisitions and marketing, with Amsterdam
University Press.
As a consortium of three publishers MIP, Arc, and AUP currently contract 200 scholarly
titles a year in late antique, medieval, and early modern studies, and in related humanities
research such as digital humanities and cultural heritage.
Our mission: Humanities research plays a vital role in contemporary civic life and ofers
human and humane insights into today’s greatest challenges. Even so, the place of the
humanities in education, in popular discourse, in politics, and in business is increasingly
in question. Our consortium of presses is proud to take a stand for the humanities. We are
committed to the expansion of humanistic study, inquiry, and discourse inside and outside of the university. We believe that humanities research should progress boldly, keeping
pace with technological innovation, globalization, and democratization. We value a variety
of established, new, and diverse voices in humanities research. We provide a platform
for high-quality research that explores what it means and has meant to be human across
cultures, continents, and eras.
he research that we publish: Research into the
premodern world ofers complex understandings of how
cultural ideas, traditions, and practices are constructed,
transferred, and disseminated among diferent agents
and regions. Knowledge of the premodern past, in
particular, helps us to contextualize contemporary
debates about identity, integration, political legitimacy,
creativity, and cultural dynamics. Understanding what it meant to be human in the
premodern world is essential to understanding our present moment and our future
trajectories. Current innovations in humanities research, employing digital tools for
preservation, representation, and analysis, require us to return again to the earliest sources
of our shared past, in the media and mentalities of the premodern world.
xxxiv
Medieval Institute Publications
MIP’s publication series provide a space for exploring what it has meant to be human
through the ages, using literary, historical, and material sources and by employing
innovative, popular, or interdisciplinary approaches. Our publications explore themes
in the late antique, medieval, and early modern periods on:
• Popular life – mundane, everyday, non-elite, vernacular, democratic
• Human emotions – love and hatred, beauty and disgust, etc.
• Human experience; deinitions of “humanity” – strife and struggle, self-expression,
personal achievement; living in community; survival in “natural” and built /
engineered environments
• New bodies, forms, and media – the translation of human works / texts / artifacts
into digital forms; the creation and survival of networks of human and non-human
agents in premodern and modern cultures
MIP publications are typically interdisciplinary and “edgy”, in the sense of being
cutting edge, or crossing disciplinary, geographical, or chronological boundaries.
Arc Humanities Press publishes research that
fosters better public engagement in, and
understanding of, the past and of the ways in
which the contemporary world is linked to
the premodern world. Many publications focus on late antique, medieval, and early
modern periods, especially from a global perspective, while others explore modern
applied research. Arc Humanities Press is the publishing arm of the CARMEN
Worldwide Medieval Network, and relects this learned society’s particular interest in
international collaborative research, global history, cross-faculty research, and applied
research. All Arc’s publications are overseen by CARMEN’s Publications Committee
that meets at the society’s annual meeting.
Amsterdam University Press is the largest
university press in continental Europe. Over
more than twenty years, AUP has built up a
catalogue of more than 1,600 English- and
Dutch-language titles. It has an active
program of trade publications in Dutch,
and a larger program of new academic monographs in English in the areas of European
History, Asian Studies, Media and Communication Studies, Social and Political Sciences,
and STEM. he History list is dominated by medieval and early modern studies and
publications on the Dutch Golden Age.
To discuss any current research project please
contact the director and editor-in-chief:
Dr. Simon Forde
E:
[email protected]
W: https://mip-archumanitiespress.org/
xxxv
Medieval Institute Publications
Western Michigan University
1903 W. Michigan Avenue
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5432, USA
Tel: +1 (269) 387-8755
About Western Michigan University
Nationally and internationally recognized, Western Michigan University aspires to
distinguish itself as learner centered, discovery driven, and globally engaged.
LEARNER CENTERED
Western Michigan University is a university where every member of our community is responsive to and responsible for the education of our students. We challenge
and engage all members of our community with a university experience that creates
skilled, life-long learners.
DISCOVERY DRIVEN
Western Michigan University ofers experiences that enable discovery and promote creativity and research. We are committed to pursuing inquiry, disseminating
knowledge, and fostering critical thinking that encourages life-long learning. Our
scholarship creates new knowledge, forms a basis for innovative solutions, leads to
economic development, and makes substantial contributions to society.
GLOBALLY ENGAGED
Western Michigan University impacts the globe positively. We are a community of
learners committed to human dignity, sustainability, social responsibility, and justice.
Our campus embraces a diverse population of students, faculty, and staf, who develop learners and leaders who are locally oriented and globally competent, culturally
aware, and ready to contribute to world knowledge and discovery.
he synergy of these three pillars enables WMU to be a premier and distinctive
university of choice. Western Michigan University ofers all students a learning community designed for and dedicated to their success. We are committed to access and
afordability and sustaining an environment in which every student can meet the
world head-on and triumph.
xxxvi
The Otto Gründler Book Prize
Western Michigan University announces the twenty-second Otto Gründler Book
Prize to be awarded in May 2018 at the 53rd International Congress on Medieval
Studies.
he Prize, instituted by Dr. Diether H. Haenicke, then President of Western Michigan University, honored and now memorializes Professor Gründler for his distinguished service to the University and his lifelong dedication to the international
community of medievalists. It consists of an award of $1,000.00 to the author of a
book or monograph in any area of medieval studies that is judged by the selection
committee to be an outstanding contribution to its ield.
ELIGIBILITY
Authors from any country are eligible. he book or monograph may be in any of the
standard scholarly languages. To be eligible for the 2018 prize the book or monograph must have been published in 2016.
NOMINATIONS
Readers or publishers may nominate books. Letters of nomination, 2–4 pages in
length, should include suicient detail and rationale so as to assist the committee in
its deliberations. Supporting materials should make the case for the award. Readers’
reports, if appropriate, and other letters attesting to the signiicance of the work
would be helpful.
SUBMISSION
Send letters of nomination and any supporting material by November 1, 2017, to:
Secretary, Gründler Book Prize Committee
he Medieval Institute
Western Michigan University
1903 W. Michigan Avenue
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5432
See the Institute’s website for further information about eligibility and nominations.
wmich.edu/medieval/research/book-prize
xxxvii
Endowment and Git Funds
Western Michigan University and its Medieval Institute appreciate your coming to
the International Congress on Medieval Studies. Your presence, whether as a plenarist, presenter, presider, or auditor contributes to the vitality of the gathering.
Another way you can contribute to the mission of the Medieval Institute is by donating to one of the Institute’s three endowments.
•
•
•
•
Your donation to the Cistercian and Monastic Studies Endowment will
support research on all aspects of the Cistercian tradition and in the broader
ield of religious traditions.
Your donation to the Otto Gründler Fund will help emerging scholars,
primarily from central European countries, attend the Congress by providing travel awards.
Your donation to the Georgian and David Tashjian Endowment will be
used to support the Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and
Manuscript Research: by keeping the library current, sponsoring an annual
Congress speaker, and aiding students in our M.A. program.
Your donation to the Medieval Institute Endowment provides general
inancial support for all activities of the Institute.
GIVING
If you would like to contribute to any of these funds, the easiest way to do so is
online through our direct giving site:
MyWMU.com/givetomedieval
If you would like to send a check, please make your check payable to the Western
Michigan University Foundation, indicating your choice of fund, and mail it to:
he Medieval Institute
Western Michigan University
1903 W Michigan Ave
Kalamazoo MI 49008–5432
wmich.edu/medieval/giving
xxxviii
Wednesday
Medieval institute
Fity-Second
International Congress
on Medieval Studies
May 11–14, 2017
Wednesday, May 10
Noon
Registration
(begins and continues daily)
Valley III
Eldridge-Fox Lobby
Pre-registered Congress attendees may pick up their registration
packets and check into pre-booked on-campus housing at any time
until the end of the Congress.
On-site registration
(for those not pre-registered)
Valley III
Eldridge 308
Wednesday, noon–midnight
hursday, 8:00 a.m.–midnight
Friday, 8:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
Saturday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
2:00 p.m.
TEAMS (Teaching Association
for Medieval Studies)
Board of Directors Meeting
Bernhard
Faculty Lounge
5:00–6:00 p.m.
Director’s Reception for Early Arrivals
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Eldridge 310
6:00–7:30 p.m.
DINNER
Valley Dining Center
7:30 p.m.
Motown the Musical
Discounted tickets through
online Congress registration
Shuttles leave Valley III (EldridgeFox) beginning at 6:45 p.m.
Miller Auditorium
8:00 p.m.
Cosmic Dance
Early Music Michigan
Gilmore heatre
Complex
$15.00 General Admission
$10.00 presale through online Congress registration
Shuttles leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) beginning at 7:15 p.m.
A music and dance performance based on the life and music of the
twelfth-century mystic and visionary Hildegard of Bingen.
Combines ancient music with contemporary dance interpreting
Hildegard’s vision for a new age. Ann Marie Boyle of Early Music
Michigan and choreographer Becky Straple join forces for this
innovative and engaging theatrical event.
1
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
Thursday, May 11
Morning Events
7:00–9:00 a.m.
BREAKFAST
Valley Dining Center
8:30 a.m.
Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture
(SASLC)
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson Lounge
9:00–10:30 a.m. COFFEE SERVICE
Fetzer Center
Bernhard Center
Thursday, May 11
10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m.
Sessions 1–47
1 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Hermeneutics through a Glass Darkly: Occlusion and Interpretation in the Age
of Gerson
Sponsor: Jean Gerson Society
Organizer: Matthew Vanderpoel, Univ. of Chicago
Presider: Wendy Love Anderson, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Monica’s Visionary Hermeneutics: Augustine and Gerson on the Uncertainty of
Dreams
Sean Hannan, MacEwan Univ.
he Hermeneutics of Desire: Denis the Carthusian on 1 Corinthians 13:12 and
the Elicited Love for God
Daniel W. Houck, Southern Methodist Univ.
“Super Hanc Petram”: Pierre d’Ailly’s Reading of Matthew 16:18
Daniel Owings, Univ. of Chicago
2 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Hope and Despair in Malory’s Morte Darthur
Organizer: Felicia Nimue Ackerman, Brown Univ.
Presider: Louis J. Boyle, Carlow Univ.
he Knight-Prisoner, Denying Despair through Hopeful Narration
Kevin T. Grimm, Oakland Univ.
“han may a presonere say all welth ys hym beraufte”: Cycles of Hope and Despair
in Malory’s World
Felicia Nimue Ackerman
Finding Hope in Despair: A Possible Source for Malory’s Boethian Consolation
Leigh Smith, East Stroudsburg Univ.
Post-Grail Stress Disorder: Lancelot’s Response to Trauma
Sarah B. Rude, Baylor Univ.
Hope from Despair: Malory’s Political Optimism in Le Morte Darthur
Lisa Robeson, Ohio Northern Univ.
2
he Griselda Story: Feminist Perspectives
Organizer: Stephanie Amsel, Southern Methodist Univ.
Presider: Amy Goodwin, Randolph-Macon College
Chaucer’s Clerk’s Tale, Dux Moraud, and Domestic Tyranny
KellyAnn Fitzpatrick, Georgia Institute of Technology
In werk ne thought: Griselde’s Ethics
Daniel T. Kline, Univ. of Alaska–Anchorage
Griselda-2, Walter-0: Marital Jealousy and Role Reversal in Chaucer’s Clerk’s Tale
Carol Pulham, Cedar Crest College
4 VALLEY II HARVEY 204
Building (Draw)bridges: How to Keep Medieval Studies Alive in the K-8 Classroom:
A Hands-On Workshop (A Poster Session)
Sponsor: TEAMS (Teaching Association for Medieval Studies)
Organizer: Sarah Layman, Independent Scholar
Presider: homas Goodmann, Univ. of Miami
“Oh, the (medieval) places you’ll go”: Children’s Literature as a Gateway Course
Moira Fitzgibbons, Marist College
For Young Ladies and Lords: Medieval Matters for hird Graders
Victoria Holtz Wodzak, Viterbo Univ.; Michael Wodzak, Viterbo Univ.
Medieval Board Games: Bringing the Entertainment of Medieval Children to the
Modern Classroom
Sarah Layman
How the Imperial Knights of Norco Charge into the Classroom
Danielle Trynoski, Medievalists.net; Tom Montgomery, Imperial Knights Production
Company; Andrea Montgomery, Imperial Knights Production Company
5
VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
How Global Were the Middle Ages? (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Interdisciplinary Graduate Medieval Colloquium, Univ. of Virginia
Organizer: DeVan Ard, Univ. of Virginia
Presider: Zachary E. Stone, Univ. of Virginia
A roundtabel discussion with Christina Normore, Northwestern Univ.; Erica Machulak, Univ. of Notre Dame (“Arabic’s Gutenberg: Cultural Diference through the Lens
of Print’); Dorothy Wong, Univ. of Virginia; Aman Nadhiri, Johnson C. Smith Univ.
(“he Role of Political Memory in the Assessment of Historical Periods”); and Raihan
Ahmed, Univ. of Virginia.
6 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
Philosophy of Saint homas Aquinas I: Philosophy, Logic, and Consolation
Sponsor: Center for homistic Studies, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Organizer: Steven J. Jensen, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Presider: Steven J. Jensen
Do Causal Actions Inhere in heir Agents? Aquinas’s Reception of Aristotle’s
“Actio est in passo” Doctrine
Francis E. Feingold, Ave Maria Univ.
One or Many Rationes: Interpreting Summa theologiae 1.13.5–6
Domenic D’Ettore, Marian Univ.
Aquinas and the Consolation of Philosophy
Kevin White, Catholic Univ. of America
3
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
3 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
7 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Natura in the Twelfth Century
Sponsor: Divinity School, Univ. of Chicago
Organizer: Robert J. Porwoll, Univ. of Chicago
Presider: Bernard McGinn, Univ. of Chicago
Rupert of Deutz on Nature, Sin, and the Mutability of Creation in Genesis 1 to 3
Wanda Zemler-Cizewski, Marquette Univ.
Where Nature Indulges Herself in Secret and Distant Freaks: Creation Viewed
from the Edges of the Twelfth-Century Cosmos
Daniel Yingst, Univ. of Chicago
he Invention of Natura: Poetry, Ecology, and Ecolinguistics in Bernard Silvestris,
Alan of Lille, and Johannes de Hauvilla
David Allison Orsbon, Univ. of Chicago
Respondent: Willemien Otten, Univ. of Chicago
8 FETZER 1005
Introduction to vHMML Reading Room: Manuscript Cataloging and Images in
One Online Resource (A Workshop)
Sponsor: Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML)
Organizer: Matthew Z. Heintzelman, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
Presider: Eileen Smith, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
his workshop—led by Matthew Z. Heintzelman and Anton Pritula, Hill Museum
& Manuscript Library—provides an overview of the theory behind vHMML Reading
Room, which replaces HMML’s previous on-line manuscript catalog and image server;
an introduction to its use and search functions; and a discussion of plans for the
future development of this completely new resource.
9 FETZER 1010
Elite Identities and the Birth of Europe: Germanic Coins and Barbarian Medallions
and Bracteates
Sponsor: Imagines Maiestatis (IMAGMA)
Organizer: David Wigg-Wolf, Römisch-Germanische Kommission des
Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts
Presider: Alan Stahl, Princeton Univ.
he Technology of Early Barbarian Imitations
Aleksander Bursche, Univ. Warszawski; Kiril Myzgin, Univ. Warszawski
Barbaric versus Barbarous: Some Methodological Remarks on Imitations of
Ancient Coins
Tomasz Wiecek, Univ. Warszawski
Barbarian Imitations, Networks, and the Formation of Germanic Elites
David Wigg-Wolf and Holger Komnick, Römisch-Germansiche Kommission des
Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts
Imitation and Transformation: From Roman Medallions to Scandinavian Bracteate
Nancy L. Wicker, Univ. of Mississippi
10
FETZER 1040
Medicine and Medieval Italian Lyric
Organizer: Matteo Pace, Columbia Univ.
Presider: Akash Kumar, Univ. of California–Santa Cruz
On Fluid Memory: Aristotle’s Heart in the Scuola Siciliana
Matteo Pace
4
11 FETZER 1045
he Government of England and the Continent in the Later Middle Ages
Sponsor: Society of the White Hart
Organizer: Mark Arvanigian, California State Univ.–Fresno
Presider: Joel T. Rosenthal, Stony Brook Univ.
Parliament’s Secret Members in Fourteenth-Century England
Alison McHardy, Univ. of Nottingham
Venetian Water Entries: Diplomacy at the Dockside
Kathleen Kennedy, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Brandywine
A Bastion of Lancastrian Power in Europe? Yorkshire and Henry IV
Douglas L. Biggs, Univ. of Nebraska–Kearney
12 FETZER 1060
Church, Mission, Enculturation, and Conversion in Late Antiquity and the Early
Middle Ages
Organizer: Darius O. Makuja, Le Moyne College
Presider: James H. Dahlinger, SJ, Le Moyne College
he Roman, Germanic, and Celtic (Irish) Sources and the Conversion of the West
to Catholic Christianity.
Darius O. Makuja
he Pagan-Christian Iconography of Yggdrasil and the Magi on the Baptismal
Font of the Aakirke
Ronald G. Murphy, SJ, Georgetown Univ.
he Use of Oral Information in Preparing for Missions, 596–1176
William Schmidt, Independent Scholar
Ad Aediicatione Plebis: Lay Piety and Pastoral Care in Venantius Fortunatus’s
Prose Hagiography
Kent E. Navalesi, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
5
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
Medieval Medical hought and Dante’s Poetry
Paola Ureni, College of Staten Island and Graduate Center, CUNY
Formando Filosoiche Ragioni: Cecco d’Ascoli, Dante, and the Medical Foundation
of Ethics
Seth Fabian, Holy Family High School
Health Beliefs and Doctor-Patient Communication in Francesco Petrarca’s Rerum
vulgarium fragmenta
Caterina Agostini, Rutgers Univ.
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
13 FETZER 2016
Language Anxiety in the Iberian Peninsula
Sponsor: Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies
Organizer: Gregory S. Hutcheson, Univ. of Louisville
Presider: Gregory S. Hutcheson
“Nor Have I hought to Learn More from the Jews by Any Means. . .”: Anxiety
about Hebrew Language and Learning in the Religious and Medical Writings of
Arnau de Vilanova
John August Bollweg, College of DuPage
Speaking “en Algaravia”: Anxiety over Arabic in the Conde Lucanor and the Libro
de buen amor
Anita Savo, Colby College
Language’s Exiles: Language Anxiety in Ramon Vidal’s Razos de trobar and the
Disinheriting of the Occitan Troubadours
Courtney Joseph Wells, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Limousine or Catalan? A Glottopolitical Reading of Ausìs March’s Poems for the
Construction of the Spanish Empire
Vicente Lled́-Guillem, Hofstra Univ.
14 FETZER 2020
Exploring Power: Saint Cuthbert, Durham Cathedral, and the Prince Bishops
Sponsor: Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture, Univ. of York
Organizer: Dee Dyas, Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture,
Univ. of York
Presider: Dee Dyas
Power in the Palatinate: he Competing Roles of Saint Cuthbert, the Prince Bishops, and the Prior away from Durham Cathedral
Christopher Ferguson, Auckland Castle Trust
he Misogyny of Saint Cuthbert? Bishops, Monks, and Women at Durham’s
Shrine
Lauren L. Whitnah, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
“A Man of Such Strange Composition”: Bishop Richard Neile and the Durham
House Group
Louise Hampson, Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture, Univ. of York
15 FETZER 2030
Archaeology of the Countryside
Sponsor: Medieval Association for Rural Studies (MARS)
Organizer: Adam Franklin-Lyons, Marlboro College
Presider: Michelle Ziegler, Independent Scholar
Peasant Settlement and Agricultural Activities at Late Medieval Irish Tower
House Castles
Vicky McAlister, Southeast Missouri State Univ.
Archaeological, Palaeo-Pathological, and Palaeo-Environmental Relections of
Food Crisis in the Early Fourteenth-Century British Isles
Philip Slavin, Univ. of Kent
6
Medievalism and Don Quixote
Sponsor: Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM)
Organizer: Carlos Hawley, North Dakota State Univ.
Presider: Paul E. Larson, Baylor Univ.
Between Babieca and Rocinante: Equine Performativity in the Spanish Chivalric Tradition
Bruce R. Burningham, Illinois State Univ.
Modernism versus Medievalism in Interpretation of Don Quijote
Wendell P. Smith, Wilson College
Relections on Knights and Mirrors: El Caballero del Verde Gabán
Robert S. Stone, United States Naval Academy
Medievalism: Mio Cid’s Golden Age as the Cradle for Cervantes’s Decrepit Present
Jaime Leaños, Univ. of Nevada–Reno
17 SCHNEIDER 1120
Medieval Mediterranean Cities
Sponsor: Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of New Mexico
Organizer: Michael A. Ryan, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider: Sarah Davis-Secord, Univ. of New Mexico
he Image of Venice-Gulansharo in Shota Rustaveli’s he Man in the Panther Skin
Bert Beynen, Temple Univ.
Rocking Gibraltar: Chivalry, Violence, and Tuna in the Fifteenth Century
Samuel A. Claussen, California Lutheran Univ.
A Tale of Two (Magical) Cities: Barcelona and Venice
Michael A. Ryan
18 SCHNEIDER 1220
Authoring the Self: Autobiography and Auctoritas
Sponsor: Medieval Studies Association, Florida State Univ.
Organizer: Christopher Jensen, Florida State Univ.
Presider: Kimberly Tate Anderson, Florida State Univ.
Exercising Paratextual Authority: Autobiographical Acts in Ælfric of Eynsham’s
Latin and Old English Prefaces
Meg Gregory, Illinois State Univ.
Gower’s Self-Establishment as a Vernacular Author in the Confessio amantis
Paulo Eduardo Castilho Ribeiro Santos, Univ. of Ottawa
Autobiographical Notes in Alfonso X’s Cantigas de Santa Maria
Joseph T. Snow, Michigan State Univ.
“Eythyr thu art a Ryth Good Woman er ellys a Ryth Wikked Woman”: Problems
of Authority in the Book of Margery Kempe
Katherine Ridgway, Notre Dame of Maryland Univ.
19 SCHNEIDER 1280
Textual Scholarship of Medieval Iberian Literature (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Albert Lloret, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst; Nancy F. Marino,
Michigan State Univ.
Presider: Albert Lloret and Nancy F. Marino
A roundtable discussion with Charles B. Faulhaber, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Heather
Bamford, George Washington Univ.; Susanna Allés, Univ. of Miami; Aengus Ward, Univ.
of Birmingham; Francisco Gago-Jover, College of the Holy Cross; and Jesús R. Velasco,
Columbia Univ.
7
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
16 FETZER 2040
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
20 SCHNEIDER 1320
he Winter’s Tale: Pretexts, Texts, and Aftertexts
Sponsor: Shakespeare at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Nora L. Corrigan, Mississippi Univ. for Women
Presider: Liberty S. Stanavage, SUNY–Potsdam
“It is required you do awake your faith”: Redemptive Gender in the Digby Mary
Magdalene and he Winter’s Tale
Christina Hildebrandt, St. Louis Univ.
“A Gallimaufry of Gambols”: he Winter’s Tale at the 1613 Palatine Wedding
Rachel Horrocks, Univ. of St. Andrews
Artistry, Artiice, and the Environment in he Winter’s Tale and he Tempest
Jan Stirm, Univ. of Wisconsin–Eau Claire
Dreams, Sleeplessness, and Nightmares in he Winter’s Tale
Carole Levin, Univ. of Nebraska–Lincoln
21 SCHNEIDER 1325
“Liturgical Drama” and Representational Liturgy
Sponsor: Musicology at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider: Margot E. Fassler, Univ. of Notre Dame
Relections on a Spectral Genre: Liturgical Drama in the Cabinet of Curiosities
Michael L. Norton, James Madison Univ.
Local Practice and the German Visitatio Sepulchri
Melanie Batof, Luther College
he Type II Visitatio Sepulchri in the View of a Medieval Aesthetic of Order
Irene Holzer, Univ. Basel
22 SCHNEIDER 1330
New Models of Presentation of Medieval Texts
Sponsor: Canterbury Tales Project
Organizer: Peter Robinson, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Presider: Adam Alberto Vázquez Cruz, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Digital Tools for Manuscript Study: Collation and he Canterbury Tales
Alexandra Gillespie, Univ. of Toronto
Adapting Chaucer for Modern Media
Kyle Dase, Univ. of Saskatchewan
New Media, New Editions, New Readers
Barbara Bordalejo, KU Leuven
23 SCHNEIDER 1335
Archaeology of Medieval Europe I: History and Politics in Medieval Archaeology
Sponsor: Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Florida
Organizer: Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida
Presider: Andrew Holt, Florida State College at Jacksonville
Byzantine Archaeology at a Crossroads
Michael Decker, Univ. of South Florida
Politics, Identity, and Archaeology in the Border Region: (Re-)imagining the
Early Medieval Past in the Southeastern Alps
K. Patrick Fazioli, Mercy College
8
24 SCHNEIDER 1340
Medieval Architecture
Presider: Susan Solway, DePaul Univ.
Layers of Time: he Architectural Evolution of Santi Quattro Coronati in Rome
Franchesca Fee, Rutgers Univ.
“Bastions of the Cross”: Medieval Rock-Cut Cruciform Churches of Tigray,
Ethiopia
Mikael Muehlbauer, Columbia Univ.
Tironensian Houses: A GIS Approach to the Architectural Domain of a Reformed
Benedictine Order
Clark Maines, Wesleyan Univ.; Sheila Bonde, Brown Univ.
Relecting the Light of God: Citation and the Twelfth-Century Integrated Chevet
Kristin Barry, Ball State Univ.
25 SCHNEIDER 1345
Localism, Regionalism, and Centralism in Early Medieval Iberia
Organizer: Molly Lester, Princeton Univ.
Presider: Scott de Brestian, Central Michigan Univ.
Monasteries and the Exploitation of Territory in Late Antique Iberia
Jamie Wood, Univ. of Lincoln
Competing Networks and Alliances and the Emergence of Episcopal Authority in
the Early Suevic Kingdom
Rebecca Devlin, Univ. of Louisville
Diversity Statements: Local Liturgies and Religious Reform in Early Medieval Iberia
Molly Lester
Embedded Law: State Administration and Landholding in the Visigothic Kingdom
of Toledo
Damián Fernández, Northern Illinois Univ.
26 SCHNEIDER 1350
Medieval Lives and Afterlives of the Classical Poets
Sponsor: Center for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities;
Societas Ovidiana
Organizer: Mary Franklin-Brown, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Morris
Tichenor, Univ. of Toronto
Presider: Morris Tichenor
Renaissance Reconsidered: Ovid’s Fasti in the Hands of Arnulf of Orléans and
Poliziano
Mary Franklin-Brown
Corinna Who? (Ps.-)Arnulf of Orléans’s Accessus to Ovid’s Tristia
David T. Gura, Univ. of Notre Dame
Horace’s Satires II and a Previously Unattributed Latin Floscule in Piers Plowman
Justin Hastings, Loyola Univ. Chicago
9
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
Medieval Slavs in Moldavian Soviet Archaeology
Iurie Stamati, Univ. of Florida
Strongholds of the Rus’
Matthew Smith, Univ. of Florida
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
27 SCHNEIDER 1355
Middle English Devotional Literature
Presider: Amber Dunai, Texas A&M Univ.–Central Texas
he Atomic Rubrication of Cambridge, University Library, Kk.6.26
Bernardo S. Hinojosa, Univ. of California–Berkeley
“Wrastlyng wiþ þat blynde nou3t”: Binding and Blinding in he Cloud of Unknowing
Amanda Wetmore, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
“Cleanness” as Response and Transformation
Gianmarco E. Saretto, Columbia Univ.
A Coincidence of Form: Manuscript Formalisms and the Tyranny of the Text
homas Sawyer, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
28 SCHNEIDER 1360
Deep Mapping and the Middle Ages
Organizer: Joey McMullen, Centenary Univ.; Helen Davies, Univ. of Rochester
Presider: Brian Cook, Univ. of Mississippi
Medieval Overlay Landscapes, Deep Mapping, and the Spatial Humanities
Joey McMullen
Conduits of Faith: Deep Mapping Spiritual Interactions with Water in England’s
Northeast
James L. Smith, Univ. of York
Mappa Mundi: Deep Maps of the Middle Ages
Helen Davies
29 BERNHARD 106
Nature versus Ecology (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Exemplaria: A Journal of heory in Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Organizer: Shannon Gayk, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider: Shannon Gayk
Why Not Nature?
Kellie Robertson, Univ. of Maryland
Playing Nature on the Early English Stage
Robert W. Barrett, Jr., Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
“hus seyth the Bok of Kendys”: Ecological hinking in the Castle of Perseverance
Rebecca Davis, Univ. of California–Irvine
“Dwell” . . . “Magyk Natureel”: he Possibilities of Middle English Terminologies
Emily Houlik-Ritchey, Rice Univ.
Spirited Ecology in the Treatyse of Fysshynge with an Angle
Myra E. Wright, Bates College
Unnatural
Jefrey Jerome Cohen, George Washington Univ.
30 BERNHARD 158
Ihesu Dulcis: Devotion to the Holy Name in Medieval Europe
Organizer: B. S. W. Barootes, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Presider: Robert Rouse, Univ. of British Columbia
Chivalry, Piety, and Devotion to the Name of Christ in Marie de France’s Saint
Patrick’s Purgatory
Stephen G. Moore, Univ. of Regina
“Et in Calculo Nomen Novum Scriptum”: Pearl and the Holy Name of Jesus
B. S. W. Barootes
10
31 BERNHARD 204
Sara Lipton, Dark Mirror: Medieval Origins of Anti-Jewish Iconography (A Panel
Discussion)
Sponsor: Academy of Jewish-Christian Studies
Organizer: Lawrence Frizzell, Seton Hall Univ.
Presider: Lawrence Frizzell
Sara Lipton’s Dark Mirror: Relections
Deeana Copeland Klepper, Boston Univ.
Sara Lipton’s Dark Mirror: An Art History Perspective
Elizabeth Carson Pastan, Emory Univ.
Respondent: Sara Lipton, Stony Brook Univ.
32 BERNHARD 205
Medieval Sermon Studies I: Preaching to Women
Sponsor: International Medieval Sermon Studies Society
Organizer: Holly Johnson, Mississippi State Univ.
Presider: Alberto Ferreiro, Seattle Paciic Univ.
“Let fearless Susanna speak for you . . .”: Peter Abelard’s Sermon Celebrating
Susanna
Eileen F. Kearney, St. Xavier Univ.
Images of Women, Men, and Marriage in Islamic Nuptial Orations
Linda G. Jones, Univ. Pompeu Fabra
Question and Answer “Sessions” in Medieval Preaching to Women
Laura Gafuri, Univ. degli Studi di Torino
33 BERNHARD 208
Matters of Literary Genre
Presider: Christopher Flavin, Northeastern State Univ.–Tahlequah
Duce Materia: Gilo’s Peculiar Narrative through the First Crusade
Joseph Rudolph, Fordham Univ.
Laughing at the Peasant in the Old French Fabliaux: On the Genesis and Signiication of the Derisive Laugh
Jef Fuller, New York Univ.
Behavior Unbecoming a Monk: Diference, Identity, and Humor in the Moniage
Guillaume
Geneviève Young, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
A Soothing Song: Truth and Comfort in “Lullay lullay little child”
Margo Kolenda, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
11
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
Action and Interpretation in the Late Medieval English Cult of the Holy Name of
Jesus
Rob Lutton, Univ. of Nottingham
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
34 BERNHARD 209
Medieval Race and the Modern Scholar: Fear, heory, and the Way Forward (A
Roundtable)
Organizer: Sierra Lomuto, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Shokoofeh Rajabzadeh,
Univ. of California–Berkeley; Cord Whitaker, Wellesley College
Presider: Cord Whitaker
Fear of an Anti-Black Planet, or, Medieval Studies’ Post Racial/Pre-Racial Problem
Jared Rodríguez, Northwestern Univ.
Acts of Imagination: he Anatomy of Race and Racial hinking
homas Franke, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Race and Conversion in the Croxton Play of the Sacrament
Susan Nakley, St. Joseph’s College, New York
“Being” Anglo-Saxonist: Signiier, Profession, Ontology
Donna Beth Ellard, Univ. of Denver
ISAS Should Probably Change Its Name
Daniel Remein, Univ. of Massachusetts–Boston
35 BERNHARD 210
Mind the Gaps: Spaces in Manuscripts and Printed Books
Sponsor: Early Book Society
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.
Presider: Derek A. Pearsall, Harvard Univ.
Re-minding the Gaps in Manuscripts of the Canterbury Tales
Stephen Partridge, Univ. of British Columbia
Further Reading: Supplementing England’s Past in Fifteenth- and Sixteenth-Century
Manuscripts
Neil Weijer, Johns Hopkins Univ.
Filling in the Blanks: Matthew Parker’s Manipulations and heir Afterlives
Siân Echard, Univ. of British Columbia
Empty Spaces and Filled-In Spaces: Cast-Of Copy in Early Sixteenth-Century
English Printing
Joseph J. Gwara, United States Naval Academy
36 BERNHARD 211
Inside the Collector’s Mind: Exploring Carolingian Cultures of Collecting
Sponsor: Network for the Study of Late Antique and Early Medieval
Monasticism
Organizer: Matthieu van der Meer, Syracuse Univ.; Albrecht Diem, Syracuse
Univ.
Presider: Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften
Benedictine Dissections: Textual Triage in the Carolingian Age
Scott G. Bruce, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Serial Hagiographies: MS Montpellier H.55
Gordon Blennemann, Univ. de Montréal
Carolingian Collectors of Texts and heir Classical Predecessors: Continuities,
Innovations, and Omissions
Matthieu van der Meer
12
Medieval Franciscan heology and the Implications of the Trinitarian Mission
Organizer: Richard A. Nicholas, Univ. of St. Francis, Joliet
Presider: Gilbert Stockson, Univ. of Notre Dame
Victorine Inluence on Bonaventure’s Reductione artium ad theologiam
Andrew Benjamin Salzmann, Benedictine College
John Duns Scotus on the Divine Missions: Why God Isn’t a Nestorian or a Pelagian
Mitchell Kennard, Southern Methodist Univ.
Saint Francis of Assisi’s Trinitarian View of Authority
Richard A. Nicholas
38 BERNHARD 213
Anglo-Saxon Afect and Spirituality
Organizer: Erik A. Carlson, Univ. of Arkansas–Fort Smith
Presider: Wendy Marie Hoofnagle, Univ. of Northern Iowa
Glory and Gore: Afective Literacy in Prudentius’s Psychomachia
Kaylin O’Dell, Cornell Univ.
Better than Saints: Afective Models in Anglo-Saxon Hagiography
Kate Norcross, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
he Functionality and Independence of Sleep and Afect in he Wanderer, Bede’s
Account of Caedmon’s Hymn, and Andreas
Nicole Songstad, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
39 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
A Century without Chaucer
Sponsor: Lydgate Society
Organizer: Alaina Bupp, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder; Timothy R. Jordan,
Ohio Univ.–Zanesville
Presider: Alaina Bupp
Counterfactual Poetics and Prosodic Gamesmanship in the Works of Lydgate and
Hoccleve
Nicholas Myklebust, Regis Univ.
“Litel Enfaunt hat Were but Late Borne”: Lancastrian Anxiety and John Lydgate’s
Representation of the Child in he Dance of Death
Amy C. Nelson, St. Louis Univ.
John Capgrave’s Textual Images in he Life of Saint Katherine
Valerie Voight, Univ. of Virginia
Would the Real John Lydgate Please Sit Down? Victory over Chaucer via he Life
and Death of Hector (1614)
Betsy Bowden, Rutgers Univ.–Camden
13
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
37 BERNHARD 212
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
40 SANGREN 1320
Bastard Heroes in Medieval Romance Epic
Sponsor: Société Rencesvals, American-Canadian Branch
Organizer: Rebeca Castellanos, Grand Valley State Univ.
Presider: Mercedes Vaquero, Brown Univ.
A Tale of Two Bastards: Franco-Italian Epic and Orlandino
Stephen P. McCormick, Washington and Lee Univ.
“Fijo de Ninguno”: Bastardy in Spanish Epic Material
Peter Mahoney, Stonehill College
Rodrigo y Mudarra: Bastardía y renovación dinástica
Julio Hernando, Indiana Univ.–South Bend
El sentido de la bastardía en las leyendas de Mudarra y Antara
Rebeca Castellanos
41 SANGREN 1710
Medieval Tools (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the
Interdisciplinary Study of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art;
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile Arts,
Fabrics, and Fashion); EXARC; Medica: he Society for the
Study of Healing in the Middle Ages; Research Group on
Manuscript Evidence; Societas Magica
Organizer: Sarah hompson, Rochester Institute of Technology
Presider: Sean M. Winslow, Univ. of Toronto
A roundtable discussion with Constance H. Berman, Univ. of Iowa; Carla Tilghman,
Washburn Univ.; Frank Klaassen, Univ. of Saskatchewan; Linda Ehrsam Voigts, Univ.
of Missouri–Kansas City; and Darrell Markewitz, Wareham Forge.
42 SANGREN 1720
Kinship, Families, and Genealogy in the Various Disciplines of Celtic Studies
Sponsor: Celtic Studies Association of North America
Organizer: Frederick Suppe, Ball State Univ.
Presider: Frederick Suppe
Dangerous Foster-Brothers: Problems with Fictive Kinship in Tain Bo Cuailnge,
Pwll Pendevic Dyfed, and Branwen uerch Lyr
Lesley Jacobs, Brown Univ.
he Marriage of Llywelyn ap Grufudd: A Look at the Plantagenet Genealogy
Alexis Robertson, Ball State Univ.
Respondent: Frederick Suppe
43 SANGREN 1730
Dwelling in the Anglo-Saxon Landscape I
Sponsor: Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and
Manuscript Research
Organizer: Catherine E. Karkov, Univ. of Leeds
Presider: Donald G. Scragg, Univ. of Manchester
Creating Kingdoms: Landscapes of the Living and the Dead in Anglo-Saxon England
Sarah J. Semple, Durham Univ.
Richard Rawlinson Center Congress Speaker
Last Writes: Death and Landscapes of Memory in Anglo-Saxon England
Jill Hamilton Clements, Univ. of Alabama–Birmingham
14
Networks of Transmission: Histories and Practices of Collecting Medieval Manuscripts and Documents
Sponsor: Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts Project, Schoenberg Institute
for Manuscript Studies
Organizer: Lynn Ransom, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
Presider: Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America
he Bufalo Agency: A Manuscript Network in Northern Africa (Sixteenth–Twentieth Century)
Paul Love, Al Akhawayn Univ.
Visualizing the Global Movement of Manuscripts: Phillipps Manuscripts in Australian Collections
Toby Burrows, Univ. of Western Australia
Invisible Manuscripts: he Vast and Undiscovered Continent of Medieval Italian
Manuscript Sources
Justine Walden, Univ. of Toronto
he Production and Ownership of Chetham’s Library MS 6711: A “Mandeville”
Manuscript in Late Medieval England
Collin Chadwick, Univ. of Arizona
45 SANGREN 1750
Relics and Reliquaries: Forms, Functions, Meanings (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Beth Williamson, Univ. of Bristol
Presider: Beth Williamson
A roundtable discussion with Karen Eileen Overbey, Tufts Univ./Material Collective;
Joseph Salvatore Ackley, Barnard College; Eliza Garrison, Middlebury College; Anne
E. Lester, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder; William J. Purkis, Univ. of Birmingham; and
Scott B. Montgomery, Univ. of Denver.
46 SANGREN 1910
Penguin Medieval Editions: Scholarship, Pedagogy, and the “Academic Book”
Sponsor: Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Bristol; Centre for Publishing,
Univ. College London
Organizer: Leah Tether, Univ. of Bristol
Presider: Benjamin Pohl, Univ. of Bristol
Penguin’s “Arthurian Romances”: Repackaging Chrétien’s Masterpieces for the
British Paperback Market
Leah Tether
Editing Female Voices: Penguin Classics and Medieval Women Writers
Rebecca Lyons, Univ. of Bristol
Roger Lancelyn Green’s King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table: Peritext
and Pedagogy in the Digital Age
Adele Cook, Univ. of Bedfordshire
he Ship-Wrecked Malory: Penguin and Le Morte Darthur
Samantha Rayner, Univ. College London
15
Thursday 10:00 a.m.
44 SANGREN 1740
Thursday lunchtime
47 SANGREN 1920
Central European Medieval Networks
Sponsor: Medieval Central Europe Research Network (MECERN)
Organizer: Nada Zecevic, Central European Univ.
Presider: Gerhard Jaritz, Central European Univ.
Comparative Political Development in the Arc of Medieval Europe
Christian Rafensperger, Wittenberg Univ.
Urban Networks in Medieval East Central Europe
Katalin Szende, Central European Univ.
Complex Networks of Legal Traditions and Social Structures: Cases from
Croatia-Dalmatia and Slavonia-Hungary
Damir Karbic, Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti; Suzana Miljan, Hrvatska
akademija znanosti i umjetnosti
—End of 10:00 a.m. Sessions—
Thursday, May 11
Lunchtime Events
11:30 a.m.–
1:30 p.m.
LUNCH
Valley Dining Center
Noon
Research Group on Manuscript
Evidence
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1030
Noon
Medieval Association of the Midwest
(MAM)
Executive Council Meeting
Bernhard 107
Noon
Society for the Study of the Bible in
the Middle Ages (SSBMA)
Business Meeting
Bernhard 212
Noon
Medica: he Society for the Study of
Healing in the Middle Ages
Business Meeting
Bernhard 213
Noon
Société Guilhem IX
Executive Council Meeting
Bernhard 215
Noon
Richard Rawlinson Center for
Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript
Research
Lunch (by invitation)
Bernhard
President’s
Dining Room
Noon
Société Rencesvals, American
Canadian Branch
Business Meeting
Sangren 1320
12:30 p.m.
Lone Medievalist
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson Lounge
16
48 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Middle English Literature
Presider: Megan Cook, Colby College
he Steward Shall Inherit the Earth: he End of Sir Orfeo in heological Context
Nathan Shuey, Duquesne Univ.
Calming Arthur’s “Brayn Wylde”: Learning to Rule in Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight
Kelly Evans, Southern Methodist Univ.
Repainting the Lion in Middle English Romance
Bonnie J. Erwin, Wilmington College
“Worthy unthur wede”: Totemic Identity, Marital Labor, and Active Patience in
Emaré
David Sweeten, Eastern New Mexico Univ.
49 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
When Medievalists Fictionalize the Middle Ages
Organizer: Rebecca Barnhouse, Youngstown State Univ.
Presider: Sharan Newman, Independent Scholar
he Mean Streets of Medieval York: he Murder Mystery as Cultural Lens
Candace Robb, Independent Scholar
he Fantasy Space of Medieval History: he Case of Chaucer, Gower, and Bruce
Holsinger’s A Burnable Book
Debra E. Best, California State Univ.–Dominguez Hills
Worldbuilding in Rebecca Barnhouse’s he Coming of the Dragon and Peaceweaver
Patricia H. Ward, College of Charleston
Armored Knights and Winged Faeries: he English Middle Ages and the Medieval
Fantasy Novel
Emily Lavin Leverett, Methodist Univ.
50 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Late Medieval Perspectives on Tolerance
Sponsor: Dept. of Philosophy, Maynooth Univ.
Organizer: Simon F. Nolan, Maynooth Univ.
Presider: Stephen E. Lahey, Univ. of Nebraska–Lincoln
Getting the Message to the People? FitzRalph on Toleration in His Dundalk
Sermons
Michael W. Dunne, Maynooth Univ.
“Unrepeatable Singularity”: Cusa’s Concept of Singularity as a Foundation for
Toleration?
Susan Gottloeber, Maynooth Univ.
Tolerance and the Other in Early Carmelite Scholasticism
Simon F. Nolan
“[M]artyris Al to Manye in þis Lond”: Tolerance of Heretics in Dives and Pauper
Erin K. Wagner, Urbana Univ.
17
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 11
1:30 p.m.–3:00 p.m.
Sessions 48–95
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
51 VALLEY II HARVEY 204
A Place at the Table: Material and Spatial Aspects of the Medieval Meal
Sponsor: Mens et Mensa: Society for the Study of Food in the Middle Ages
Organizer: John August Bollweg, College of DuPage
Presider: Alberto Ferreiro, Seattle Paciic Univ.
he Sexual Politics of Food in Early French Comedy
Deborah Hovland, Bufalo State, SUNY
Medieval Tablescapes: Status, Space, and Settings
Austin C. Baker, Univ. of Indianapolis
Multisensory Experience Design in the Medieval Meal
Samantha A. Meigs, Univ. of Indianapolis
52 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
C. S. Lewis and the Middle Ages I: Lewis and Mysticism
Sponsor: Center for the Study of C. S. Lewis and Friends, Taylor Univ.
Organizer: Joe Ricke, Taylor Univ.
Presider: Joe Stephenson, Abilene Christian Univ.
As Above, So Below: Medieval Echoes in the Underworlds of C. S. Lewis’s Fiction
Nathan E. H. Fayard, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
Lewis’s Turn Toward Contemplative Prayer
Robert Moore-Jumonville, Spring Arbor Univ.
Ransom’s Mystical Vision on Perelandra
Marsha Daigle-Williamson, Spring Arbor Univ.
Yearning and Disciplining Joy: Toward a “New Asceticism” in Lewis
Matthew A. Roberts, Abilene Christian Univ.
53 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
Philosophy of Saint homas Aquinas II: Deliberation and Choice
Sponsor: Center for homistic Studies, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Organizer: Steven J. Jensen, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Presider: Jordan Olver, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
“Omitting to hink” and Sins against Prudence in Aquinas
Maureen Bielinski, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Aquinas, Passions, and Deliberation
Christopher Bobier, Univ. of California–Irvine
Why Does Aquinas hink an Undetermined Divine Choice Is Coherent?
Jamie Anne Spiering, Benedictine College
54 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Reading Aloud Old French and Middle French (A Workshop)
Organizer: Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.
Presider: Tamara Bentley Caudill
A workshop led by Simonetta Cochis, Transylvania Univ.; Darrell Estes, Ohio State
Univ.; and Yvonne LeBlanc, Independent Scholar.
55 FETZER 1005
he Deaf Everyman and Deaf Snow White heatre Projects (Documentary Film)
Sponsor: UNICORN Virtual Museum of Medieval Studies and Medievalism
Organizer: Carol L. Robinson, Kent State Univ.–Trumbull
Presider: Pamela J. Clements, Siena College
A premier viewing of the inal revision of two short ilms, which are episodes (chapters)
18
56 FETZER 1010
Sessions in Honor of Maureen Boulton I: Vernacular Religious Literature
Sponsor: Medieval Institute, Univ. of Notre Dame
Organizer: Anna Siebach-Larsen, Univ. of Notre Dame; Sarah Baechle,
Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider: Sarah Baechle
he Two French Vies of Saint Colette of Corbie: Male and Female Perspectives?
Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski, Univ. of Pittsburgh
What Did Medieval Christian Laywomen Know about the Hebrew Bible?
helma Fenster, Fordham Univ.
Narrating Confession in the Miroir de sainte egylse
Anna Siebach-Larsen
57 FETZER 1040
Arthurian Books and Readers
Sponsor: Arthurian Literature
Organizer: David F. Johnson, Florida State Univ.
Presider: Elizabeth Archibald, Durham Univ.
Reading Arthur Upside-Down: Purnell’s he Modern Arthur and the Politics of
Colonial Medievalism
Robert Rouse, Univ. of British Columbia
Reading Walter Map into the Lancelot-Grail Cycle
Joshua Byron Smith, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
Cultivating Courtesy (Redux): Reading Sir Gawain and the Carle of Carlisle in
NLW MS Brogyntyn II.1
Kelsey Moskal, Univ. of British Columbia
Reading with Fingers in the Manuscript of Sir homas Malory’s “Hoole Book of
Kyng Arthur”
Kevin S. Whetter, Acadia Univ.
58 FETZER 1045
Peril and Possibility: Political Writing in Late Medieval England
Sponsor: Society of the White Hart
Organizer: Mark Arvanigian, California State Univ.–Fresno
Presider: Linda E. Mitchell, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City
I Laughed, I Cried, I Made Fun of the Aristocracy: he Wakeield Master and the
Secunda pastorum
Paul Frisch, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Worthington-Scranton
Chronicle Writing in the Yorkist Age: he Chronicle from Rollo to Edward IV and
he History of the Arrival of King Edward IV
Noah Peterson, Texas A&M Univ.
19
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
of a longer feature ilm that documents the generation of two performances by both
deaf and hearing actors and stage crew: For Every Man, Woman and Child, a modern
morality inspired by Everyman (written by world-renowned playwright Willy Conley)
and Deaf Snow White (directed by Broadway actor, Iosif Schneiderman).
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
59 FETZER 1060
Philosophical hemes and Issues in Malory’s Morte Darthur
Organizer: Felicia Nimue Ackerman, Brown Univ.
Presider: Felicia Nimue Ackerman
“La me dale”: Establishing Control in Malory’s Morte Darthur
Meredith Reynolds, Francis Marion Univ.
Friends and Frenemies: Aristotle, Cicero, and the Rhetoric of Anti-friendship in
Malory
Richard Sévère, Valparaiso Univ.
“Everyone Makes Divine Mistakes!”: Malory’s Guinevere on Film
Amy S. Kaufman, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
hinking Space in Malory’s Morte Darthur
Molly Martin, Univ. of Indianapolis
60 FETZER 2016
Repudiated (Hi)Stories I: Literary Studies
Sponsor: Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies
Organizer: Linde M. Brocato, Univ. of Memphis
Presider: Linde M. Brocato
Displaced Faith: Translation and Textual Dystopia in the Mester de Clerecía
Robin M. Bower, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Beaver
“Inorganic . . . and Ininitesimal” Dante: Revisiting Dante’s Role in C. R. Post’s
Mediaeval Spanish Allegory
Daniel Hartnett, Kenyon College
Sleazy Narrative: Gender Roles in the Carajicomedia
Ana Isabel Montero, Willamette Univ.
61 FETZER 2020
he Music of the Beneventan Rite I (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Society for Beneventan Studies
Organizer: Andrew J. M. Irving, Rijksuniv. Groningen
Presider: Andrew J. M. Irving
A roundtable discussion with homas Forrest Kelly, Harvard Univ.; Luisa Nardini,
Univ. of Texas–Austin; Matthew Peattie, College-Conservatory of Music, Univ. of
Cincinnati; Alejandro Planchart, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara; and Matthew
Swanson, College-Conservatory of Music, Univ. of Cincinnati.
62 FETZER 2030
Ovid’s Medieval Metamorphoses I: Shaping Pygmalion, Relecting Narcissus
Organizer: Lucas Wood, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider: Peggy McCracken, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Narcisus’s Singular Desires
Lucas Wood
Pygmalion’s Phantasmic Craft in Machaut’s Fonteinne amoureuse
Sarah Powrie, St. homas More College
Narcissus and Pygmalion: Christine de Pizan’s Transformations of Ovid in L’Epistre
Othea
Kevin Brownlee, Univ. of Pennsylvania
20
Women in the Age of Bede I
Sponsor:
BedeNet; Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Christopher Newport
Univ.
Organizer: Sharon M. Rowley, Christopher Newport Univ.; Paul Hilliard,
Univ. of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary; Máirín
MacCarron, Univ. of Sheield
Presider:
Virginia Blanton, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City
Bede’s First Wives Club
Lindy Brady, Univ. of Mississippi
Transgression, Transgender, or Female Power? Women with Weapons in Early
Anglo-Saxon Graves
Andrew Welton, Univ. of Florida
Bede, Bertha, and Early Christian Kent
Richard Shaw, Our Lady Seat of Wisdom
64 SCHNEIDER 1120
Dead Poet Flyting Karaoke (Performances)
Sponsor:
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of New Mexico
Organizer: Doaa Omran, Univ. of New Mexico; Sally Abed, Univ. of Utah
Presider:
Nicholas Schwartz, Univ. of New Mexico
he Old High German St. Galler Spottverse
Adam Oberlin, Atlanta International School
Short Latin Flytings from Waltharius
homas R. Leek, Univ. of Wisconsin–Stevens Point
Flyting in the Hárbarðsljóð
David Carlton, Western Univ.
Selections from Medieval Flyting Poetry
Doaa Omran and Sally Abed
Hrothgar, Wealhtheow, and the Future of Heorot
Heide Estes, Monmouth Univ.; Hilary E. Fox, Wayne State Univ.
65 SCHNEIDER 1225
Cusanus’s Legacy in Number, Image, Text, and Sound
Sponsor:
American Cusanus Society
Organizer: Adam Knight Gilbert, Univ. of Southern California
Presider:
Nancy van Deusen, Claremont Graduate Univ.
Cusan hought in Musical Symbolism and heory, ca. 1430–1620
Adam Knight Gilbert
Performance of the Visual and Participation of the Divine: Sacred Representation
in Cordier’s Tout par compas
Rachel McNellis, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Charles de Bovelles’s Duodecimal System: he Creation of Renaissance Symbolic
Number heory
Tamara Albertini, Univ. of Hawaii–Manoa
21
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
63 FETZER 2040
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
66 SCHNEIDER 1280
Gender and Species: Ecofeminist Intersections (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Carolynn Van Dyke, Lafayette College
Presider:
Lesley Kordecki, DePaul Univ.
Does It Have to Be about Women? Feminism Goes to the Dogs
Carolynn Van Dyke
Compassion and Benignytee: A Reassessment of the Relationship between Canacee
and the Falcon in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale
Melissa Ridley Elmes, Lindenwood Univ.
La Femme Bisclavret: Gender, Species, and Language
Alison Langdon, Western Kentucky Univ.
he Owl and the Nightingale: Belligerent Mothers and the Power of Feminine
Speech
Wendy A. Matlock, Kansas State Univ.
Flying, Hunting, Reading: Feminism and Falconry
Sara Petrosillo, Univ. of California–Davis
Questioning Gynocentric Utopia: Nature as Addict in “Farewell to Cookeham”
Liberty S. Stanavage, SUNY–Potsdam
67 SCHNEIDER 1320
Shakespeare and Transmedia
Sponsor:
Shakespeare at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Nora L. Corrigan, Mississippi Univ. for Women
Presider:
Elizabeth J. Nielsen, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Bologna’s Bridegroom: Meat and Murder in Scotland, PA
Dianne Berg, Tufts Univ.
“Your Queen and I Are Devils”: he Winter’s Tale and the Aftertext of Stuart
Topicality
Jason Gildow, Nebraska Wesleyan Univ.
“hat is the Question”: What Does Transmedia Reveal about “To Be, or Not To Be?”
Parker Gordon, Abilene Christian Univ.
If I Hadn’t Died in his Battle: “Fixing” King John as Transmedia
Christina Gutierrez-Dennehy, Northern Arizona Univ.
68 SCHNEIDER 1325
Papers by Undergraduates I
Organizer: Marcia Smith Marzec, Univ. of St. Francis, Joliet
Presider:
Richard A. Nicholas, Univ. of St. Francis, Joliet
Christ, Creation, and Humanity: An Eco-heological Reading of John Scottus
Eriugena
Matthew A. Stanley, Wheaton College
“De Ris Ecrire”: Play and Subversion in a French Gothic Manuscript
Philippe Depairon, Univ. de Montréal
Coding and Programming for a Digital Edition of Huon d’Auvergne, a Pre-Modern
Franco-Italian Epic
Abdurrafey Khan, Washington and Lee Univ.
Ordering Myths and Men: Snorri Sturluson, Sir homas Malory, and Political Bias
Mary Gilbert, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
22
Gower’s Afterlives
Sponsor: John Gower Society
Organizer: Brian Gastle, Western Carolina Univ.
Presider: Steele Nowlin, Hampden-Sydney College
Textual Revenants: he Emperor, the Masons, and Gower’s Tomb
Kara L. McShane, Ursinus College
Chitre, Jargoune, or Seie? Gower’s Birds and Twenty-First Century Biotranslation
heory
Andrea Schutz, St. homas Univ.
Gower and Eighteenth-Century Literary Culture
R. F. Yeager, Univ. of West Florida
70 SCHNEIDER 1335
Archaeology of Medieval Europe II: Bioarchaeological Research on Eastern Europe
Sponsor: Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Florida
Organizer: Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida
Presider: Cristina Tica, Univ. of Nevada–Las Vegas
Health, Diet, and Lifestyles of Early Medieval Populations in the Eastern Adriatic
Region (Sixth–Twelfth Centuries)
Mario Novak, Institute for Anthropological Research, Zagreb
Congress Travel Award Winner
Urbanization and the Bioarchaeology of Neoplastic Disease: Examining Social
Processes and Disease in the Past, in Reference to Medieval Poland
homas Siek, Univ. College London
Karrer Travel Award Winner
Life and Death in the Tenth to hirteenth Century: Comparative Paleodemographic
Analysis of Skeletal Populations Excavated in the Eastern Part of the Great Hungarian
Plain
István János, Nyíregyházi Egyetem
New Lines of Evidence: Using Human Skeletal Remains to Understand Late
Medieval History and Population Dynamics in Eastern Europe
Kathryn Grow Allen, Univ. at Bufalo
71 SCHNEIDER 1340
Medieval Boundaries and Borders I: Intersecting Identities
Sponsor: Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Organizer: Axel E. W. Müller, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Presider: Axel E. W. Müller
he Trickster Wife: Transgressing Boundaries and Challenging Binaries in Old
French Fabliaux
Vanessa Wright, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Fixed or Fluid Boundaries? Portuguese Attitudes toward African Cultures, Spaces, and
Places in the Four Fifteenth-Century Chronicles of Gomes Eanes de Zurara (d. ca. 1474)
Iona McCleery, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Opportunism and (Dis)Honor: Apostasy and Infamy in the hirteenth-Century
Conquest of Majorca
Ariana Myers, Princeton Univ.
Who’s In Charge Here? Border Lords and Central Control in North-Eastern Iberia
around the Year 1000
Jonathan Jarrett, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
23
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
69 SCHNEIDER 1330
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
72 SCHNEIDER 1345
New Directions in Medieval Rural History
Sponsor: Medieval Association for Rural Studies (MARS)
Organizer: Adam Franklin-Lyons, Marlboro College
Presider: Adam Franklin-Lyons
Corrupt Oicials and Deprived Peasants: Governmental Malfeasance in Pre-Black
Death Lincolnshire Countryside
Jack Newman, Univ. of Kent
New Directions from Venetian Dalmatia: Pastoral Lifeworlds between Village
Communities and Venetian Jurisdiction on Korčula in the Fifteenth Century
Fabian Benedikt Kümmeler, Univ. Wien
he Anchorite Next Door: Medieval English Anchorites in Local Historical Context
Joshua Britt, Univ. of South Florida
73 SCHNEIDER 1350
Manuscript Studies
Presider: Judy Ann Ford, Texas A&M Univ.–Commerce
Garnish, Appetizer, or Main Course: he Paratext in Vincent of Beauvais’s
Speculum maius
Maura Laferty, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
Medieval Bestiaries of the H Family
Ilya Dines, Library of Congress
Christine de Pizan’s Livre du corps de policie in the Order of Texts of New York
Public Library, Spencer MS 17
Karen Fresco, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
Simple Image as Text, Simple Text as Image
Magdalena Charzyńska-Ẃjcik, John Paul II Catholic Univ. of Lublin
74 SCHNEIDER 1355
he heology of Catherine of Siena
Organizer: Steven J. McMichael, OFM Conv., Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
Presider: Jennifer N. Brown, Marymount Manhattan College
Pauline hemes in Catherine of Siena’s Letters
Karen Scott, DePaul Univ.
Echoes of Dante: Catherine of Siena and Poetic heology
Lisa Vitale, Southern Connecticut State Univ.
Catherine of Siena’s Eucharistic Imagery: Blood, Bridge, and Banquet in he
Dialogue
Catherine Annette Grisé, McMaster Univ.
he heology of Resurrection in the Works of Catherine of Siena
Steven J. McMichael, OFM Conv.
75 SCHNEIDER 1360
Medieval(ist) Bodies and Boundaries (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Karra Shimabukuro, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider: Maggie M. Williams, William Paterson Univ./Material Collective
“A Forest on the Flat Earth”: Forms, Reformations, and a Forest of Roods
Richard Ford Burley, Boston College
Crossing Boundaries to Reclaim the Female Body: An Autobiographical Engagement with a Medieval Saint’s Torture Marks
Nicole Nyfenegger, Univ. Bern
24
76 BERNHARD 106
he Future of the Profession: he Adjunctiication of the Academy and the Fate
of Medieval Studies (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Societas Johannis Higginsis
Organizer: Kenneth Mondschein, Societas Johannis Higginsis
Presider: Michael A. Cramer, Borough of Manhattan Community
College, CUNY
A roundtable discussion with Philip Ademola Olayoku, Univ. of Ibadan; Kenneth
Mondschein; John A. Dempsey, Westield State Univ.; Cliford J. Rogers, United
States Military Academy, West Point; and Larry J. Swain, Bemidji State Univ.
77 BERNHARD 158
Buildings, Planning, and Networks of Medieval Cities I
Sponsor: AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the
Interdisciplinary Study of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art
Organizer: Sarah hompson, Rochester Institute of Technology
Presider: Mickey Abel, Univ. of North Texas
he Congregation of Tiron: Urban Development in Medieval France and Britain
Ruth Cline, Georgetown Univ.
Resident and Absentee Planners in New Town Development of hirteenth-Century
Languedoc
Catherine Barrett, Univ. of Oklahoma
Angevin Manfredonia and the Development of a New Adriatic Port
Alexander Harper, Princeton Univ.
Orsanmichele: A Florentine Civic, Commercial, and Religious Space, and Its
Loggias, to 1337
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, American Univ.
78 BERNHARD 204
New Voices in Anglo-Saxon Studies I
Sponsor: International Society of Anglo-Saxonists
Organizer: Mary Kate Hurley, Ohio Univ.
Presider: Jill Hamilton Clements, Univ. of Alabama–Birmingham
A New Anglo-Saxon Priest’s Book? he Warsaw Lectionary and the Liturgy
Gerald Dyson, Kentucky Christian Univ.
Drawing Dead Anglo-Saxon Bodies
Sian Mui, Durham Univ.
Tashjian Travel Award Winner
As hough “Wit” Never Were: A Grammar of Reuniication within he Wife’s
Lament
Amy W. Clark, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Univ. of California, Berkeley Graduate Student Prize Winner
Response: Asa Simon Mittman, California State Univ.–Chico
25
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
Torture and Tattoos: he Duality of Narratives
Karra Shimabukuro
Communal Bodies and Permeable Boundaries
Karen Eileen Overbey, Tufts Univ.
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
79 BERNHARD 205
Medieval Sermon Studies II: Educating the Laity
Sponsor: International Medieval Sermon Studies Society
Organizer: Holly Johnson, Mississippi State Univ.
Presider: Carolyn Muessig, Univ. of Bristol
Date Eleemosyna: Pope Innocent III’s Rhetorical and Spiritual Approach to
Almsgiving
homas Maurer, Western Michigan Univ.
An Education from the Pulpit: he Transmission of University Philosophy and
heology to Laypeople
Andrew Reeves, Middle Georgia State Univ.
Preaching the Imago Dei in the Sermons of Robert Rypon
Holly Johnson
Composing Sermons on Mary: Two Sermons by the Franciscan Johannes Sintram
(d. 1450)
Kimberly Rivers, Univ. of Wisconsin–Oshkosh
80 BERNHARD 208
Bede and Alfred
Presider: G. Matthew Adkins, Columbus State Community College
Bede’s Historia ecclesiastica as Advice Literature
Toby R. Beeny, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Time, Narrative, and Vision: Physical and Spiritual Healing in Bede’s Ecclesiastical
History
Brian McFadden, Texas Tech Univ.
he Meaning of Latinity in Alfredian Translation
Ryan Hall, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
81 BERNHARD 209
Aesthetics of Form
Sponsor: Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Organizer: Lee Manion, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Presider: Lee Manion
Aesthetics against Form, Reference against Form
Julie Orlemanski, Univ. of Chicago
Aesthetics of Metrical Form: he Case of Middle English Lyric
Ian Cornelius, Loyola Univ. Chicago
Lyric Voices and the Politics of Aesthetics
Ingrid Nelson, Amherst College
82 BERNHARD 210
Constructing the Wycliite Bible
Sponsor: Lollard Society
Organizer: Michael Van Dussen, McGill Univ.
Presider: Kathleen Kennedy, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Brandywine
Finding Aids and the Construction of Literacy in Wycliite Biblical Manuscripts
David Lavinsky, Yeshiva Univ.
Towards a New Edition of the Wycliite Bible
Elizabeth Solopova, Univ. of Oxford
Bodleian Library, Oxford MS Bodl.554 and William horpe’s Psalter
Michael P. Kuczynski, Tulane Univ.
26
Early Medieval Monasticisms, New Questions, New Approaches I: Monastic
Landscapes
Sponsor: Network for the Study of Late Antique and Early Medieval
Monasticism
Organizer: Matthieu van der Meer, Syracuse Univ.; Albrecht Diem, Syracuse
Univ.
Presider: Albrecht Diem
Like a Fish Out of Water: Antony the Great and the Ascetic Landscape
Daniel Lemeni, West Univ. of Timişoara
Consider the Cook, the Baker, and the Server: he Archaeology of Monastic
Kitchens from Early Byzantine Monasteries in the Near East
Darlene L. Brooks Hedstrom, Wittenberg Univ.
Monastic Landscapes of the Mind: Pope Gregory’s Negotiation of Greek and
Latin Psychology and Demonology
Benjamin E. Heidgerken, St. Olaf College
84 BERNHARD 212
Academic Publishing in Crisis? Routes to Survival
Sponsor: Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University
Organizer: Simon Forde, Medieval Institute Publications
Presider: Anne Nolan, Arc Humanities Press
he Successful Boydell & Brewer Model and Employee Buyout
Caroline Palmer, Boydell & Brewer, Ltd.
he Commercial Environment and Successful New Entrants and Trends
Ian Stevens, ISD Distribution
Innovation at the University of Michigan Press
Rebecca A. Welzenbach, Michigan Publishing, Univ. of Michigan Library
MIP at Kalamazoo: Finding the Best of the American University Press and the
European Publishing Worlds
Simon Forde
85 BERNHARD 213
Franciscan Women and Material Culture
Sponsor: Women in the Franciscan Intellectual Tradition (WIFIT)
Organizer: Diane V. Tomkinson, OSF, Neumann Univ.
Presider: Darleen Pryds, Franciscan School of heology
Sancia and the Holy Places: Conlicts between Politics and Personal Spirituality
in the Late Medieval Mediterranean
Jon Paul Heyne, Catholic Univ. of America
Lay Women in Franciscan Churches: Outcasts or Equals?
Erik Gustafson, George Mason Univ.
Donning Penance: he Authority of the Franciscan Habit in the Lives of Rose of
Viterbo, Margaret of Cortona, and Robert of Naples
Asher Marron, Independent Scholar
27
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
83 BERNHARD 211
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
86 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
In Honor of Richard K. Emmerson: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Medieval
Literature, Drama, and Art I
Sponsor: Dept. of Art History, Florida State Univ.
Organizer: Karlyn Griith, California State Polytechnic Univ.–Pomona;
Deirdre Carter, Florida State Univ.
Presider: Paula L. Gerson, Florida State Univ.
Staging the Tegernsee Antichrist
David Bevington, Univ. of Chicago
he Endurance of the Name in Manuscript Books, 700–1400
Elaine M. Treharne, Stanford Univ.
Found in Translation? Artist and Patron, Audience and Message in a FourteenthCentury Anglo-Norman Bible
Kathryn Smith, New York Univ.
God’s Palimpsest: Omne bonum and the Medieval “Artists’ Book”
Penn Szittya, Georgetown Univ.
87 SANGREN 1320
Hiding in the Chanson de Geste
Sponsor: Société Rencesvals, American-Canadian Branch
Organizer: Hillary Engelhart, Univ. of Wisconsin–Fox Valley; Ana Grinberg,
East Tennessee State Univ.
Presider: Mercedes Vaquero, Brown Univ.
Un jeu de cache-cache, Hiding in a Chanson de Geste from the Fifteenth Century:
he Croniques et conquestes de Charlemaine from David Aubert
Valérie Guyen-Croquez, Independent Scholar
“Au chevauchier samble mal barbarin”: Disguise and Hiding in Chansons de
Geste
Ana Grinberg
88 SANGREN 1710
Trobar! (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Société Guilhem IX
Organizer: Mary Franklin-Brown, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider: Mary Franklin-Brown
he Etymology of Trobar
William D. Paden, Northwestern Univ.
www.trobar.info: he Care and Feeding of a Middle Aged Database
Kathryn Klingebiel, Univ. of Hawaii–Manoa
Traces of Medieval Trobar in the Caribbean
Valerie M. Wilhite, Univ. of the Virgin Islands
“It don’t matter how it all went wrong”: Finding the Emotional Moment
Mark Taylor, Berry College
89 SANGREN 1720
New Work by Young Celtic Studies Scholars
Sponsor: Celtic Studies Association of North America
Organizer: Frederick Suppe, Ball State Univ.
Presider: Frederick Suppe
Cut to the Quick: Horse-Maiming in Medieval England and Wales
Shirley Kinney, Univ. of Toronto
28
90 SANGREN 1730
Material (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Material Collective
Organizer: Joy Partridge, Graduate Center, CUNY; Alexa Sand, Utah State Univ.
Presider: Joy Partridge
Eating Medieval Art
Marian Bleeke, Cleveland State Univ.
“And the light thereof was like to a precious stone”: he Heavenly Jerusalem and
the Erbach Panels
Lora Webb, Stanford Univ.
Motifs as Immateriality in Cappadocian Painting
Alice Lynn McMichael, Michigan State Univ.
he Sculptors of Souillac and the (Im)material Virgin
Jennifer Lyons, Ithaca College
Plaster Casts and the Culture of the Copy
Julia Finch, Morehead State Univ.
91 SANGREN 1740
New Voices in Medieval History I
Sponsor: Haskins Society
Organizer: Robert F. Berkhofer III, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider: Charles Insley, Univ. of Manchester
Translating Bede’s “Golden Age” of Monasticism into Old English in the Tenth
Century
Christopher Riedel, Boston College
Money Men: Placement Pattern Recognition in Tenth- and Eleventh-Century
English Mints
Jeremy Piercy, Univ. of Edinburgh
Tashjian Travel Award Winner
Solid Foundations for Strong Structures: he Form and Siting of Anglo-Norman
Castles in the Irish Sea Region
Rachel E. Swallow, Independent Scholar
92 SANGREN 1750
Inscriptions
Sponsor: Early Book Society
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.
Presider: Michael W. Twomey, Ithaca College
Spaces, Signs, and Original Charters in the Cartulary of the Cathedral Church of
Angoulême
Michael F. Webb, Univ. of Toronto
Other People’s Names: Multivalent Marginalia in Agnès de Bourgogne’s Books
S. C. Kaplan, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
British Library Sloane MS 3011 and an Inscription to a False Queen
Valerie Schutte, independent Scholar
29
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
Celtiberian Bear Cult(s) in Roman Spain: A Reappraisal of the Epigraphic Evidence
David Wallace-Hare, Univ. of Toronto
Respondent: Frederick Suppe
Thursday 1:30 p.m.
93 SANGREN 1910
heorizing Orientalism in the Middle Ages (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Sierra Lomuto, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Shokoofeh Rajabzadeh,
Univ. of California–Berkeley
Presider: Sierra Lomuto
Introductory Remarks: What Is Orientalism?
Shokoofeh Rajabzadeh
Charlemagne, Chris Kyle, and Cross-Temporal Orientalism
Leila K. Norako, Univ. of Washington–Seattle
he Cloth as Skin: Reading the Two Women in Emaré
Lydia Yaitsky Kertz, Fordham Univ.
Criticism through Deviation: Examining Richard of Devizes’s Chronicon, Chaucer’s
Prioress’s Tale and the Jewish Ritual Murder Plot
Dylan hompson, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
East Teaches West: Orientalism and Its Alternatives in the Polychronicon
Stephanie Pentz, Northwestern Univ.
Respondent: Tamar M. Boyadjian, Michigan State Univ.
94 SANGREN 1920
Encounters with the Paranormal in Medieval Iceland I: Deinitions and Categories
Organizer: Ármann Jakobsson, Hásḱli Íslands
Presider: Miriam Mayburd, Hásḱli Íslands
Doomsday in Medieval Iceland
Kolinna J́natansd́ttir, Hásḱli Íslands
Sacramental Showdowns: Catholic Priests versus Icelandic Undead
Kent Pettit, St. Louis Univ.
“Cherchez (Pas) la Femme”: Deining Fylgjur in Old Icelandic Literature
Zuzana Stankovitsová, Hásḱli Íslands
Trolling Guðmundr: Paranormal Defamation in Ljósvetninga saga
Yoav Tirosh, Hásḱli Íslands
95 WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Using Open Manuscript Data I: Introduction (A Workshop)
Sponsor: Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
Organizer: Dorothy Carr Porter, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider: Jessie Dummer, Univ. of Pennsylvania
his workshop—led by Dorothy Carr Porter, Univ. of Pennsylvania, and the presider—
uses the Univ. of Pennsylvania’s OPenn collections and he Digital Walters as resources,
walking attendees through the process of bulk downloading digital images and metadata and introducing a few methods for processing the data. No programming experience
is required or expected. Participants are encouraged to bring their laptop computers
enabled with WMU WiFi.
—End of 1:30 p.m. Sessions—
3:00–4:00 p.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
30
Fetzer Center
Bernhard Center
96 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Studies on the Hêliand
Organizer: David Eugene Clark, Sufolk County Community College;
Perry Neil Harrison, Baylor Univ.
Presider: David Eugene Clark
he Hêliand and heories of Germanic Intertextuality
Paul Battles, Hanover College
Christ, Commitatus, and Christology
Larry J. Swain, Bemidji State Univ.
Healing Power and the Disabled Body in the Hêliand
Perry Neil Harrison
he One and the Other: Parables of Diference in the Old Saxon Hêliand
Kenneth C. Hawley, Lubbock Christian Univ.
97 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Would You Write More, or What? he Quest to Publish Historically-Based Creative
Writing in the Contemporary Literary Marketplace (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Curtis VanDonkelaar, Michigan State Univ.
Presider: Curtis VanDonkelaar
A roundtable discussion with Grace Tifany, Western Michigan Univ.; Amanda
Sikarskie, Univ. of Michigan–Dearborn; Merrie Haskell, Library, Univ. of Michigan
Library; and Edward L. Risden, St. Norbert College.
98 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Medievalists Writing Provocative and Edgy Short-Form Publications: he Past
Imperfect Series (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University
Organizer: Simon Forde, Medieval Institute Publications
Presider: Christian Rafensperger, Wittenberg Univ.
Aroundtable discussion with Richard Utz, Georgia Institute of Technology; M. Jane
Toswell, Western Univ.; Katalin Szende, Central European Univ.; Jamie Wood, Univ.
of Lincoln; Ema Miljkovic, Univ. of Belgrade; Scott G. Bruce, Univ. of Colorado–
Boulder; and Christine D. Baker, Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania.
99 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
C. S. Lewis and the Middle Ages II: Lewis and Eros (In Memory of Joy Davidman)
Sponsor: Center for the Study of C. S. Lewis and Friends, Taylor Univ.
Organizer: Joe Ricke, Taylor Univ.
Presider: Robert Moore-Jumonville, Spring Arbor Univ.
Eros in the Chronicles of Narnia
Crystal Kirgiss, Purdue Univ.
Divine Eros: Julian’s Revelations of Divine Love and he Great Divorce
Corey Latta, Christ United Methodist Church
Eros in Lewis’s Till We Have Faces
Laura Smit, Calvin College
31
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 11
3:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m.
Sessions 96–142
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
100 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
Philosophy of Saint homas Aquinas III: Natural Law and Natural Love
Sponsor: Center for homistic Studies, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Organizer: Steven J. Jensen, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Presider: Domenic D’Ettore, Marian Univ.
Participation and the homistic Deinition of Natural Law
Catherine Peters, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
Natural Law Teaching on the Properties of Marriage: A Comparison of the
Doctrines of Saint homas Aquinas and the New Natural Law heorists in Light
of the Catholic Magisterial and Canonical Tradition
Joseph Arias, Christendom Graduate School
Likeness as a Cause of Love
Jordan Olver, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
101 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Gender and Sanctity in Medieval Ireland: Papers in Honor of the 1500th
Anniversary of Saint Darerca’s Death
Organizer: Maeve Callan, Simpson College
Presider: Maeve Callan
Coming into the Country: Saints, Gender, and Land in Early Christian Ireland
Dorothy Africa, Harvard Univ.
Conchubranus’s Saint Monenna
Dorothy Ann Bray, McGill Univ.
It’s Not Easy to Keep a Good Holy Woman Down: he Manipulation of Female
Sanctity and Gender Roles in the Lives of Saint Darerca (aka Moninna and
Modwenna), from the Tenth to the hirteenth Century
Diane P. Auslander, Lehman College, CUNY
102 FETZER 1005
Repudiated (Hi)Stories II: History and Literature
Sponsor: Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies
Organizer: Linde M. Brocato, Univ. of Memphis
Presider: Jessica A. Boon, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
Hero or Villain? Ibn Ḥabīb’s Memories of the Conqueror Mūsā b. Nuṣayr
Denise K. Filios, Univ. of Iowa
Streams of Law, Poetry, and Doctrine: Conversion and Repudiation in Medieval Iberia
Isabel Orozco-Vela, Loyola Univ. Chicago
La producción literaria de un infante injuriado
Ana Adams, Gustavus Adolphus College
“ . . . And he was sent out of the king’s house”: Defending and Denouncing the
Privados of Alfonso XI of Castile
David Cantor-Echols, Univ. of Chicago
103 FETZER 1010
Sessions in Honor of Maureen Boulton II: Anglo-Norman Literatures
Sponsor: Medieval Institute, Univ. of Notre Dame
Organizer: Anna Siebach-Larsen, Univ. of Notre Dame; Sarah Baechle,
Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider: Anna Siebach-Larsen
Beholding Mary in Anglo-French Poetry
Claire M. Waters, Univ. of California–Davis
32
104 FETZER 1040
Despair in the Middle Ages (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Medievalists@Penn
Organizer: Mariah Junglan Min, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Samantha Pious,
Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider: Mariah Junglan Min
Despair and Confession in Robert the Deuyll
Gina Marie Hurley, Yale Univ.
When “Hope Has Flown”: Despair and Decrepitude in the Medieval Love-Lyrics
of Baudri de Bourgeuil, Arnaut Daniel, and Francesco Petrarch
Alani Hicks-Bartlett, Univ. of California–Berkeley
“I get knocked down, but I get up again . . .”: Elements of Despair in Late Medieval
Religious Literature
Hetta Howes, Queen Mary, Univ. of London
Despair and False Hope in the Stanzaic Morte Arthur
Christopher Jensen, Florida State Univ.
Mediating Afect: Linguistic Enclosures of Despair in Julian of Norwich’s A
Revelation of Love and he Book of Margery Kempe
Jessica Zisa, New York Univ.
105 FETZER 1045
Feminism with/out Gender (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: BABEL Working Group
Organizer: Robin Norris, Carleton Univ.
Presider: Damian Fleming, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne
“Ic ane geseah idese sittan”: Old English Verse and the Bechdel-Wallace Test
Alexandra Reider, Yale Univ.
“Þus oððe bet”: Writing, Gender, and Anglo-Saxon Textual Practice
homas A. Bredehoft, Chancery Hill Books and Antiques
Feminist Scholarship and Embodied Experience
Irina A. Dumitrescu, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Univ. Bonn
Why Do I Bake for Department Meetings?
Marian Bleeke, Cleveland State Univ.
Working as (if ) a Man: Relative Genders in the Academic Workplace
Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Univ. of Toronto
A Voice of One’s Own: In Our Own Skin at Work
Alexa Huang, George Washington Univ.
33
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
Constructing an Anglo-French Hermeneutic
Sarah Baechle
Anglo-French in the Twenty-First Century
Ardis Butterield, Yale Univ.
“En celle maison . . . n’avra que ung languaige”: French Chaste-Matron Books in
Late Medieval England
Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Fordham Univ.
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
106 FETZER 1060
Place, Space, and/or Travel in Courtly Context
Sponsor:
International Courtly Literature Society (ICLS), North American
Branch
Organizer: Patricia Price, California State Univ.–San Marcos
Presider:
Kenneth Salzberg, Hamline Univ.
Spatiality and the Rendering of Order in Troilus and Criseyde and he Knight’s Tale
Matthew Smith, Univ. of Alabama
Welsh Bardic Travel and Cultural Interchange in the Late Middle Ages
Patricia Price
Regional Identity between Courts in the Romance Mediterranean
Valerie M. Wilhite, Univ. of the Virgin Islands
107 FETZER 2016
Flyting Poetry across Medieval Cultures (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Sally Abed, Univ. of Utah; Doaa Omran, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider:
Maha Baddar, Pima Community College
Top Flyte: Masculine Panic and Verbal Confrontation
Robert Stanton, Boston College
Bríatharcath na m-ban of Fled Bricrenn: Female Flyting in Medieval Ireland
Dylan Cooper, National University of Ireland–Galway
Recipient of the NUI, Galway’s Sieg & Dunlop Travel Bursary
he “Other” Germanic Flyting
Adam Oberlin, Atlanta International School
Female Flyters in Medieval Arabic Poetry
Doaa Omran
Self Flyters in Medieval Arabic Poetry
Sally Abed
108
FETZER 2020
he Music of the Beneventan Rite II (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Society for Beneventan Studies
Organizer: Andrew J. M. Irving, Rijksuniv. Groningen
Presider:
Andrew J. M. Irving
A workshop led by Matthew Peattie, College-Conservatory of Music, Univ. of Cincinnati,
and Matthew Swanson, College-Conservatory of Music, Univ. of Cincinnati.
109 FETZER 2030
Ovid’s Medieval Metamorphoses II: Touching the Ovide moralisé
Organizer: Lucas Wood, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Lucas Wood
Acteon and His Dogs
Peggy McCracken, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Fortune’s Touch: Christine de Pizan’s Encounters with the Ovide moralisé
Miranda Griin, St. Catharine’s College, Univ. of Cambridge
Ovid Moralized Twice: On hree Glossed Manuscripts of the Ovide moralisé
Mattia Cavagna, Univ. catholique de Louvain; hibaut Radomme, Univ.
catholique de Louvain/Univ. de Lausanne
34
Women in the Age of Bede II
Sponsor:
BedeNet; Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Christopher
Newport Univ.
Organizer: Sharon M. Rowley, Christopher Newport Univ.; Paul Hilliard,
Univ. of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary; Máirín
MacCarron, Univ. of Sheield
Presider:
Sharon M. Rowley
Translating Women in the Age of Bede
Helene Scheck, Univ. at Albany
Holy Women, the Community of Memory, and the Memory of Communities in
Bede’s Historia ecclesiastica
Sachi Shimomura, Virginia Commonwealth Univ.
Bede and the Virgin Mother
Stephen J. Harris, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
111 SCHNEIDER 1120
he Craft (Beer) of Medievalism: Popular Culture, the Middle Ages, and Contemporary Brewing (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Megan Cook, Colby College
Presider:
Megan Cook
Brewing in Hell: Infernal Imagery in Contemporary Belgian Beer Marketing and
Its Medieval Antecedents
Rosemary O’Neill, Kenyon College
Codex Cervisarius: A Pilgrim’s Guide to the Medievalism of Craft Beer in Québec
and Ontario
John A. Geck, Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland
Brewing Goes Berserk: Viking Medievalisms in Modern Craft Brewing
Stephen C. Law, Univ. of Central Oklahoma/Medieval Brewers Guild
his Must Be Belgium: Medieval Heritage Seeks Match with Craft Beer
Etienne Boumans, Independent Scholar
Drinking Like a Monk: Monastic Mystiication and Modern Marketing
Nöelle Phillips, Douglas College
112
SCHNEIDER 1225
Church Reform on the Eve of Luther
Sponsor:
American Cusanus Society
Organizer: Christopher M. Bellitto, Kean Univ.
Presider:
Wendy Love Anderson, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Matěj of Janov’s Vision of Reform
Stephen E. Lahey, Univ. of Nebraska–Lincoln
Personal Reform from the Pulpit: Pierre d’Ailly’s Sermons
Christopher M. Bellitto
he Cardinal Grants Indulgences: Cusanus in the Jubilee Year 1450
homas M. Izbicki, Rutgers Univ.
35
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
110 FETZER 2040
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
113 SCHNEIDER 1280
To “Gladly Teche”: Becoming Great Teachers in Graduate School (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Center for Teaching Excellence, Rice Univ.; Medieval Academy
Graduate Student Committee
Organizer: Joshua Eyler, Rice Univ.; Caitlin Hutchison, Univ. of Delaware;
Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.; Frank Napolitano,
Radford Univ.; Shyama Rajendran, George Washington Univ.
Presider:
Joshua Eyler and Caitlin Hutchison
A roundtable dicussion with Kalani Craig, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington; Christine
Evans, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison; Beth Fischer, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel
Hill; Meg Gregory, Illinois State Univ.; Shyama Rajendran; Frank Napolitano; and
Gregory Roper, Univ. of Dallas.
114 SCHNEIDER 1320
Stages of Power: Shakespeare and Marlowe, 1592: A Reacting to the Past Game
and Teaching Workshop
Sponsor:
Shakespeare at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Nora L. Corrigan, Mississippi Univ. for Women
Presider:
Eric S. Mallin, Univ. of Texas–Austin
his teaching workshop—led by Anna Riehl Bertolet, Auburn Univ. and Nora L.
Corrigan—provides an introduction to the Reacting to the Past series of pedagogical
role-playing games. We will be playing the game “Stages of Power: Shakespeare and
Marlowe, 1592.” One of the game authors and two faculty members who have used
the game in their classrooms will preside and discuss their experiences. Registration
(to
[email protected]) is encouraged but not required.
115 SCHNEIDER 1325
Papers by Undergraduates II
Organizer: Marcia Smith Marzec, Univ. of St. Francis, Joliet
Presider:
Richard A. Nicholas, Univ. of St. Francis, Joliet
he Spectrum of Existence and the Organization of the Beowulf-Manuscript
Jan Blaschak, Wayne State Univ.
Discovering Beowulf ’s God: A Cognitive and Computational Linguistic Approach
Traver Scott Carlson, Wheaton College
he Empowerment of the Formel Eagle: he Feminist Reading of Nature and Venus
Aubrey Connors, Furman Univ.
Just the Tip: Holy Phalluses and Queer Beheadings in Medieval Romance
Zac Clifton, Univ. of Montevallo
116 SCHNEIDER 1330
Gower’s Animals
Sponsor:
John Gower Society
Organizer: Brian Gastle, Western Carolina Univ.
Presider:
Gabrielle Parkin, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Fowl Play: Birds and Social Bonds in “Tereus, Procne, and Philomela”
Jefery G. Stoyanof, Spring Hill College
Animal Bodies, Social Critique, and Equine Medicine in John Gower’s “Tale of
Rosiphelee”
Francine McGregor, Arizona State Univ.
Animal Life and Men of Law in John Gower’s Mirour de l’omme and Vox clamantis
Natalie Grinnell, Woford College
36
117 SCHNEIDER 1335
Malory’s Morte Darthur I
Presider:
Michael W. Twomey, Ithaca College
Malory and Authorship: he Production of Material Form in Le Morte Darthur
Christy McCarter, Purdue Univ.
Winner of the homas Ohlgren Award for Best Graduate Student Essay in Medieval
and Renaissance Studies
Holy Grail, Holy Empire: Typological Signiicance in Malory’s Roman War and
Grail Quest
Kathryn Mogk, Harvard Univ.
Malory’s Shape-Shifting Christ Child
heresa Kenney, Univ. of Dallas
118 SCHNEIDER 1340
Medieval Boundaries and Borders II: hresholds of Agency
Sponsor:
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Organizer: Axel E. W. Müller, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Presider:
Emilia Jamroziak, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Scottish Identity and the Ethics of War in English Chronicles, 1327–77
Trevor Russell Smith, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
Border Lordship, Communication, and Aristocratic Sociability in Eleventh- and
Early Twelfth-Century Northeastern Brittany
Regan Eby, Boston College
Imagining Bureaucratic Identity and Agency in Twelfth-Century British Court
Criticism
Danielle Bradley, Rutgers Univ.
he (In)Articulate Suferer: Lameness, Pain, and the Non-Human Patient in Later
Medieval Horse-Medicine Treatises
Sunny Harrison, Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds
119 SCHNEIDER 1345
Personal Politics? Character, Personalities, and Relationships in Late Medieval
England
Sponsor:
Society of the White Hart
Organizer: Mark Arvanigian, California State Univ.–Fresno
Presider:
Jefrey S. Hamilton, Baylor Univ.
Anne of Bohemia: A Political Post-Mortem
Anna Duch, Univ. of North Texas
Personal Politics and the Turmoil of Henry VI’s Minority Council
Jon-Mark Grussenmeyer, Univ. of Kent
Constitutionalism or Regional Anomaly? Richard II and Elite Political Culture in
the North
Mark Arvanigian
37
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
he Kinde Creatures: Fair Trade in the Tale of Adrian and Bardus
Roger Ladd, Univ. of North Carolina–Pembroke
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
120 SCHNEIDER 1350
Fresh Perspectives on Medieval Pilgrimage: Canterbury Cathedral, Durham
Cathedral, and York Minster
Sponsor:
Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture, Univ. of York
Organizer: Dee Dyas, Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture,
Univ. of York
Presider:
Anthony Bale, Birkbeck, Univ. of London
“Surely this is no other than the gate of Heaven?”: Analyzing and Replicating
Medieval Pilgrim Experience
Dee Dyas
Sharing Sacred Space: Pilgrims, Priests and the Liturgy in English Cathedrals
John Jenkins, Univ. of York
Presenting and Interpreting Medieval Saints Today: Pilgrims and Other Visitors
to Canterbury, Durham, and York
Tiina Sepp, Univ. of York
121 SCHNEIDER 1355
Medieval Framed Narratives and the Single-Author Collection
Sponsor:
Mediaevalia: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Medieval Studies
Worldwide
Organizer: Olivia Holmes, Binghamton Univ.
Presider:
Olivia Holmes
Class Limits on Heroic Clerkly Misogyny in the Dolopathos
Randy Schif, Univ. at Bufalo
A Framed/Unframed Anthology between Novellino and Decameron
Irene Cappelletti, Univ. della Svizzera italiana
he Decameron: How Important Was the Frame?
Laurie Shepard, Boston College
Frames of Mind: Boccaccio’s Alatiel, Chaucer’s Constance, and the Uses of Tales
in Tales
Warren Ginsberg, Univ. of Oregon
122 SCHNEIDER 1360
Saintly Bodies: Materiality, Manuscripts, Movement (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Jenny C. Bledsoe, Emory Univ.; Lynneth J. Miller, Baylor Univ.
Presider:
Jenny C. Bledsoe
Translated Bodies and Traveling Souls: Movement in Anglo-Saxon Hagiography
Rebecca E. Straple, Western Michigan Univ.
Sacrilegious “Relics”: Female Bodies in the Tale of the Cursed Dancing Carolers
Lynneth J. Miller
Le Jongleur de Notre-Dame: Delightful Play, Engaged Bodily Performance
Rachel Watson, New York Univ.
Reworking Relics: Painting the Teodolinda Chapel in Monza
Laura Maria Somenzi, Emory Univ.
he Reliquary Codex: Saints’ Lives, Books, and Bones in hirteenth-Century Liège
Sara Ritchey, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Finding Women Saints in the Body of the Text
Courtney E. Rydel, Washington College
he Lives and Afterlives of Holy Women: Medieval Spirituality and SeventeenthCentury Printing in the Low Countries
Barbara Zimbalist, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
38
Richard Coeur de Lion: hen and Now
Sponsor:
TEAMS (Teaching Association for Medieval Studies)
Organizer: Russell A. Peck, Univ. of Rochester
Presider:
Christopher Guyol, SUNY–Geneseo
Rethinking the METS Richard Coer de Lyon: Romance Accretions and Historiography
Peter Larkin, Univ. of North Carolina–Charlotte
Lion-Hearted and Demon-Spawned: Comprehending the King’s Cannibalism
Michael Livingston, he Citadel
Which Richard? Bidder’s Choice
Russell A. Peck
Respondent: Kelly DeVries, Loyola Univ. Maryland
124 BERNHARD 158
Augustine’s Correspondence: Networking from North Africa
Organizer: Marianne Djuth, Canisius College
Presider:
Marianne Djuth
From “Your Letters Overlowing with Milk and Honey” (Augustine to Paulinus,
Ep. 27) to “Unhappy I hat Have Absorbed the Poisonous Taste of that Hateful
Tree” (Augustine quoting Paulinus back to Paulinus, Ep. 186)
Nancy Weatherwax, Albion College
Equality in Desolation and the Church: Women, Men, and hree of Augustine’s
Letters
Robert N. Parks, Univ. of Dayton
Precursors to “Just War heory” in the Letters of Augustine (ca. 400–425 AD)
Joseph Grabau, KU Leuven
Augustine’s Epistolary Doctrine of Grace: he Role of Letters in the Pelagian
Controversy
Anthony Dupont, KU Leuven
125 BERNHARD 204
Soundscapes in Medieval Occitania
Sponsor:
Société Guilhem IX
Organizer: Mary Franklin-Brown, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider:
Mary Franklin-Brown
What Do Troubadour Dreams Sound Like?
María Sánchez-Reyes, New York Univ.
Meter and Melody in Troubadour X (Paris, BnF, fr. 20050)
Elizabeth K. Hebbard, Univ. of New Hampshire
he Sounds of Medieval Occitan heatre
Wendy Pfefer, Univ. of Louisville
39
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
123 BERNHARD 106
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
126 BERNHARD 205
Medieval Sermon Studies III: Preaching in England
Sponsor:
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society
Organizer: Holly Johnson, Mississippi State Univ.
Presider:
Holly Johnson
he Last Judgment in the Prick of Conscience and the Sermons of Shrewsbury
School MS 3
Christine Cooper-Rompato, Utah State Univ.
Preaching the Word to Women: he Woman of Canaan in Late Medieval English
Sermons
Beth Allison Barr, Baylor Univ.
“Leve Frend”: Gender Inclusive Language and Imagined Audiences in MS Longleat 4
Elizabeth Harper, Mercer Univ.
Downside Abbey Manuscripts: he Collection and Its Manuscripts of Sermon
Literature
George Ferzoco, Univ. of Bristol
127 BERNHARD 208
Afective Politics: Kinship in Medieval Communities (East and West)
Sponsor:
Politicas: he Society for the Study of Political hought in the
Middle Ages
Organizer: Elizabeth McCartney, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Elizabeth McCartney
he Headless Hierarchy: Afective Kinship in Pseudo-Dionysius
Benjamin Frazer-Simser, DePaul Univ.
Afective Insignia: Jouvenel des Ursins and Family Politics in Fifteenth-Century
France
Jennifer Courts, Univ. of Southern Mississippi
he Idea of the Translation of Empire in Late Medieal French and German
Humanism
homas J. Renna, Saginaw Valley State Univ.
128 BERNHARD 209
Constructing Race in Arthurian Romances
Sponsor:
Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, St. Louis Univ.
Organizer: Evelyn Meyer, St. Louis Univ.
Presider:
Deva F. Kemmis, Goethe-Institut Washington
Is He “a Vylayne Born”? Redeining Otherness in Malory’s “Gareth”
Vanessa Jaeger, Binghamton Univ.
Race and the Reconciliation of the Other in Middle English Arthurian Romance
Chera A. Cole, Texas Woman’s Univ.
Constructing the Racial and Oriental Other in Text and Illumination in Wolfram
von Eschenbach’s Parzival
Evelyn Meyer
40
“Can hese Bones Come To Life?”: Politics and Diversity in Re-construction,
Re-enactment, and Re-creation
Sponsor:
Societas Johannis Higginsis
Organizer: Kenneth Mondschein, Societas Johannis Higginsis
Presider:
Michael A. Cramer, Borough of Manhattan Community College,
CUNY
Reenactment, Recreation, and the Historiography of Imagined Whiteness
Kenneth Mondschein
(Re)Animating the Star-Spangled Golem: he Medieval Roots and Modern Controversies Surrounding a Comic Book Legend
Lisa Evans, Independent Scholar
Civilizational Discourse and the Politics of Embodiment in Contemporary Historical European Martial Arts
Nathan L. Clough, Univ. of Minnesota–Duluth; Brandon Foat, Nova Classical
Academy
130 BERNHARD 211
Early Medieval Monasticisms, New Questions, New Approaches II: Monasticisms
before and after Benedict of Nursia
Sponsor:
Network for the Study of Late Antique and Early Medieval
Monasticism
Organizer: Matthieu van der Meer, Syracuse Univ.; Albrecht Diem, Syracuse
Univ.
Presider:
Matthieu van der Meer
Pre-Benedictine Monasticism in Sixth-Century Rome
Andrea Antonio Verardi, Univ. degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”/Pontiicia
Univ. Gregoriana
Beyond the Cloister: Wandering Monks and Nuns in Early Ireland
Westley Follett, Univ. of Southern Mississippi–Gulf Coast
Irish Monasticism prior to the Arrival of the New Orders
Elaine Pereira Farrell, Univ. College Dublin
A Cell of One’s Own: Recluses, Hermits, and Anchorites in the Carolingian World
Ingrid Rembold, Hertford College, Univ. of Oxford
131 BERNHARD 212
Sex Magic: Past and Present, Imagined and Real
Sponsor:
Societas Magica
Organizer: Marla Segol, Univ. at Bufalo
Presider:
Mildred Budny, Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
Erectile Dys-monk-tion: Monastic Uses for the Old Irish Magical Anti-Viagra
Phillip Bernhardt-House, Skagit Valley College–Whidbey Island
Roots and Shoots: Late Antique and Medieval Models for Contemporary Sex Magic
Marla Segol
Response: Liana Saif, Oriental Institute, Univ. of Oxford
41
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
129 BERNHARD 210
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
132 BERNHARD 213
“Renewed in Each Sex”: Women and Men in the Rediscovered Life of Saint Francis
of Assisi
Sponsor:
Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ.; Women in the
Franciscan Intellectual Tradition (WIFIT)
Organizer: Diane V. Tomkinson, OSF, Neumann Univ.
Presider:
Diane V. Tomkinson, OSF
homas of Celano’s Rediscovered Life of St. Francis: Where Have Clare and the
Sisters Gone?
Jean-François Godet-Calogeras, Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ.
he Lost First Companion of Saint Francis
Kevin Elphick, Franciscan Brothers of the Resurrection
“Invoked by the Bystanders”: Francis of Assisi and the Faithful Laity in the Vita
brevior
Darleen Pryds, Franciscan School of heology
133 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
In Honor of Richard K. Emmerson: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Medieval
Literature, Drama, and Art II (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Dept. of Art History, Florida State Univ.
Organizer: Deirdre Carter, Florida State Univ.; Karlyn Griith, California
State Polytechnic Univ.–Pomona
Presider:
Deirdre Carter
How I Learned to Love the Apocalypse
Ronald Herzman, SUNY–Geneseo
Medieval Drama/Rick Emmerson: Before and After
heresa Coletti, Univ. of Maryland
Text and Image: Crossing Disciplinary and Departmental Lines
Joan A. Holladay, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Rick Emmerson as Mr. Apocalypse
Bernard McGinn, Univ. of Chicago
Illustrated Apocalypse Manuscripts as Spectacle: A Student’s Perspective
Karlyn Griith
his Is the End
Elina Gertsman, Case Western Reserve Univ.
134 SANGREN 1320
New Voices in Anglo-Saxon Studies II
Sponsor:
International Society of Anglo-Saxonists
Organizer: Mary Kate Hurley, Ohio Univ.
Presider:
Mary Kate Hurley
What Happened to the Cup hat Runneth Over? King Alfred’s Translation of the
Twenty-hird Psalm
Bradley D. Tepper, Univ. of New Mexico
Infernal Logic: Conceptual Metaphor, Dissonance, and Play in the Old English
Vision of Saint Paul and he Descent into Hell
Stephen Hopkins, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Solomon and Saturn: A Framework for Transgressive Wisdom
Jeanie Abbott, Stanford Univ.
Response: Johanna Kramer, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
42
SANGREN 1710
Medieval Ecocriticisms: Intersections (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Medieval Ecocriticisms
Organizer: Heide Estes, Monmouth Univ.
Presider:
Heide Estes
Material Subjects, Vulnerable Bodies
Richard H. Godden, Loyola Univ. New Orleans
Queer Waste in Wynnere and Wastoure
Micah Goodrich, Univ. of Connecticut
Environmental Diversity and the Cultural Terrain of a Temporal Monolith:
Eosturmonath, Nisan, and the Paschal Table
Miriamne Ara Krummel, Univ. of Dayton
Reverberations from the Sibyl’s Cave: Tracking the Ecology, Materiality, and
Authority of the Female Prophet across Medieval Europe
Alan S. Montroso, George Washington Univ.
136 SANGREN 1720
Ælfrician Texts and Contexts
Organizer: Rachel Elizabeth Grabowski, Cornell Univ.
Presider:
Rachel Elizabeth Grabowski
Ælfric and Anglo-Saxon Translation heory
David Wilton, Texas A&M Univ.
Ælfric and the Eicacy of Infant Baptism
Miranda Wilcox, Brigham Young Univ.
Punctuating the Letter of the Law in Ælfric’s Catholic Homilies
Max Stevenson, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Ælfric, Oswald, and Beyond: he Reception of the Oswald Narrative in Late
Anglo-Saxon England
M. Breann Leake, Univ. of Connecticut
137 SANGREN 1730
Collective (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Material Collective
Organizer: Joy Partridge, Graduate Center, CUNY; Alexa Sand, Utah
State Univ.
Presider:
Alexa Sand
We Are the Union
Maggie M. Williams, William Paterson Univ./Material Collective
Bad “We’s”
Julie Orlemanski, Univ. of Chicago
With and against Objects, and Ourselves
Benjamin C. Tilghman, Lawrence Univ./Material Collective
From Collaboration to Community: Art History hat
Amy K. Hamlin, St. Catherine Univ.; Karen J. Leader, Florida Atlantic Univ.
Do We Only Preserve What We Enjoy? Sustaining Images of Medieval Art and
Architecture
Alison Langmead, Univ. of Pittsburgh; Aisling Quigley, Univ. of Pittsburgh
43
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
135
Thursday 3:30 p.m.
138 SANGREN 1740
New Voices in Medieval History II
Sponsor:
Haskins Society
Organizer: Robert F. Berkhofer III, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Laura L. Gathagan, SUNY–Cortland
Photios the Document Tamperer: Lies, Genre, and Shared Standards of Truth and
Legitimacy between Italy and Byzantium
Shane Bobrycki, Harvard Univ./Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Talking about Tyrants in Anglo-Norman England and Norman Sicily
Philippa Byrne, Univ. of Oxford
139 SANGREN 1750
Manuscripts and Books Unbound: Identiication and Recovery of Fragments
Sponsor:
Early Book Society
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.
Presider:
Michael Johnston, Purdue Univ.
Unbound Early Medieval Drawings in an Eleventh-Century Palimpsest
Ludovico V. Geymonat, Univ. of Notre Dame
Almost at a Loss: Saving Peniarth 20’s Poetical Triads
Brian Cook, Univ. of Mississippi
Middle English Verse in Unlikely Places: Discovering a Chanson d’Aventure at
Saint Mary’s College
Sarah Noonan, Saint Mary’s College
Elias Bouhéreau’s Books Unbound: A Study of Fragments Found in Bouhéreau’s
Books in Marsh’s Library, Dublin
Niamh Pattwell, Univ. College Dublin
140 SANGREN 1910
Buildings, Planning, and Networks of Medieval Cities II
Sponsor:
AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the
Interdisciplinary Study of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art
Organizer: Sarah hompson, Rochester Institute of Technology
Presider:
Virginia Jansen, Univ. of California–Santa Cruz
Sacred Places: Rethinking the Limits between Urban and Rural Space: the Example
of the “Cubas” from Southern Portugal
Luis Ferro, Univ. do Porto
Building a Brand: Abbot Desiderius’s Development of a Monastic Identity
Rachel Hiser, Univ. of North Texas
Water as the Philosophical and Organizational Basis for an “Urban” Community
Plan: he Case of Maillezais Abbey
Mickey Abel, Univ. of North Texas
“Any Place I Hang My Hat”: Peripatetic Ymagiers and the Emergence of Urbs
Janet Snyder, Univ. of West Virginia
141 SANGREN 1920
Encounters with the Paranormal in Medieval Iceland II: Social Concerns
Organizer: Ármann Jakobsson, Hásḱli Íslands
Presider:
Kolinna J́natansd́ttir, Hásḱli Íslands
“Who is Selkolla, what is she?”: Disentangling Traditions in the Sagas of Guðmundur
Arason and Elsewhere
Shaun F. D. Hughes, Purdue Univ.
44
142 WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Using Open Manuscript Data II: Advanced (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
Organizer: Dorothy Carr Porter, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Dorothy Carr Porter
his workshop—led by Jessie Dummer, Univ. of Pennsylvania, and the presider—
builds on skills learned in Workshop I (Session 95) and introduces additional ways to
access complex open collections, including e-codices and he Getty. Participants are
encouraged to bring their laptop computers enabled with WMU WiFi.
—End of 3:30 p.m. Sessions—
Thursday, May 11
Early Evening Events
5:00 p.m.
WINE HOUR
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Harrison 301
Eldridge 310
5:00 p.m.
TEAMS: Teaching Association for
Medieval Studies
Editorial Board Meeting
Valley III
Stinson 306
5:00 p.m.
BABEL Working Group
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1045
5:00 p.m.
Reception in Honor of Richard K.
Emmerson
with cash bar
sponsored by the Dept. of Art History
and Medieval Studies Association,
Florida State Univ.
Bernhard
Brown & Gold
Room
5:15 p.m.
International Anchoritic
Society
Business Meeting
Valley III
Eldridge 309
5:15 p.m.
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Business Meeting
Fetzer 2020
45
Thursday early evening
Geocentric Topographies in Barðar Saga Snæfellsáss: Locating the Paranormal from
Snæfellsness to Hellalund
Daniel Remein, Univ. of Massachusetts–Boston
Cognitive Contingencies: Íslendingasögur’s Speculative Realism and the Value of
Uncertainty
Miriam Mayburd, Hásḱli Íslands
Glámr and the Uncanny Valley: A Cognitive-Semiotic Reading of Grettis saga
Sarah Bienko Eriksen, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Talking to Death in Alvíssmál
Andrew McGillivray, Univ. of Winnipeg
Thursday early evening
5:15 p.m.
American Cusanus Society
Business Meeting
Schneider 1225
5:15 p.m.
Société Guilhem IX
Business Meeting
Bernhard 204
5:15 p.m.
International Arthurian Society,
North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Executive Advisory Committee
Meeting
Bernhard 213
5:30 p.m.
Medieval Association for Rural
Studies (MARS)
Business Meeting
Valley II
LeFevre Lounge
5:30 p.m.
Medieval Academy Graduate
Student Committee
Reception with cash bar
Fetzer 1055
5:30 p.m.
Goliardic Society, Western
Michigan Univ.
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard G10
5:30 p.m.
Medieval Association of the
Midwest (MAM)
Business Meeting and Reception
with hosted bar
Bernhard 107
6:00–7:30 p.m.
DINNER
Valley Dining Center
6:00 p.m.
TEAMS: Teaching Association for
Medieval Studies
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Harrison 302
6:00 p.m.
Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Fetzer 1035
Studies and Digital Medievalist
Reception with hosted bar
6:00 p.m.
Remembering Claire Sponsler
Bernhard
Reception with cash bar, hosted by
Faculty Lounge
Mary Hayes, Jonathan Wilcox, Robert
Clark, Theresa Coletti, and Carol Symes.
46
143 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Medievalist Poets’ Reading (Performances)
Organizer: A. J. Odasso, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider:
A. J. Odasso
After the Labyrinth: Dreams of Ariadne
Jane Beal, Univ. of California–Davis
Poetry Reading
Eirik Westcoat, Independent Scholar
Poetry Reading
Kathryn Hinds, Univ. of North Georgia
If there is time remaining at the end, we welcome readings from the audience, so
bring a few poems or translations along!
144 VALLEY II HARVEY 204
Gaylord Workshop on Reading Chaucer Aloud
Sponsor:
Chaucer MetaPage
Organizer: Susan Yager, Iowa State Univ.
Presider:
Susan Yager
his workshop is led by Regula M. Evitt, Colorado College, and Elise E. Morse-Gagné,
Tougaloo College.
145 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
he Kind Leading the Blind: Best Practices in Graduate Advising (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
Southeastern Medieval Association (SEMA)
Organizer: Alan Baragona, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Bonnie Wheeler, Southern Methodist Univ.
A panel discussion with Larry J. Swain, Bemidji State Univ.; Amy N. Vines, Univ. of
North Carolina–Greensboro; Britt Mize, Texas A&M Univ.; homas J. Farrell, Stetson
Univ.; Larissa Tracy, Longwood Univ.; and D. homas Hanks, Jr., Baylor Univ.
146 FETZER 1005
he White Hart Lecture
Sponsor:
Society of the White Hart
Organizer: Mark Arvanigian, California State Univ.–Fresno
Presider:
Mark Arvanigian
Edward II and the Vicissitudes of Kingship
Jefrey S. Hamilton, Baylor Univ.
147 FETZER 1010
47
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, May 11
7:30-9:00 p.m.
Sessions 143-165
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Digital Humanities and Medieval Italy (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
Italians and Italianists at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Akash Kumar, Univ. of California–Santa Cruz
Presider:
Akash Kumar
Visualizing Dante’s World: Geography, History, and Mapping
Allison DeWitt, Columbia Univ.
Medieval Textuality in the Digital Domain: he Petrarchive Project
Isabella Magni, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Maestro Martino: From Manuscript to the Digital World
Lino Mioni, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Reading Medieval Epic Digitally
Stephen P. McCormick, Washington and Lee Univ.
148 FETZER 1040
Relecting on Gender and Medieval Studies
Sponsor:
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of York
Organizer: Craig Taylor, Univ. of York
Presider:
Craig Taylor
From Women to Men, and Back Again
Katherine J. Lewis, Univ. of Huddersield
From Romances to Bromances: Studies in Masculinity at York and Beyond
Rachel E. Moss, Corpus Christi College, Univ. of Oxford
From Romance to Administrative History: New Perspectives on Queenship in
Late Medieval England
Lisa Benz, Univ. of York
149 FETZER 1045
(Dis)Played and (Dis)Covered: Constructing Gender in Persianate Literature
Sponsor:
Great Lakes Adiban Society
Organizer: Cameron Cross, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Presider:
Franklin Lewis, Univ. of Chicago
Mammoth Bodies, Chests, Arms and highs: On Masculinity in Firdawsi’s
Shahnameh
Alexandra Hofmann, Univ. of Chicago
Rebellious Princesses: he Ghazals of Jahān Malik Khātun and Zīb un-Nisā Makhfī
Maryam Sabbaghi, Univ. of Chicago
Poetry and Paragons of Masculine Eroticism in Late Medieval India and Iran
Nathan L. M. Tabor, Western Michigan Univ.
150 FETZER 1060
Performance in and of Courtly Literature
Sponsor:
International Courtly Literature Society (ICLS), North American
Branch
Organizer: Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.
Presider:
Tamara Bentley Caudill
A chantar in Performance
Laura Zoll, Independent Scholar
he Performance of Awe in Courtly Romance
Evelyn Birge Vitz, New York Univ.
Shifting Our Horizons of Expectation: Love Service in the Devotional Contrafacta
of Jacques de Cambrai
48
151 FETZER 2016
Post-Medieval Anchorites (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Anchoritic Society
Organizer: Michelle M. Sauer, Univ. of North Dakota
Presider:
Christopher M. Roman, Kent State Univ.–Tuscarawas
Seclusion and Devotion: A Woman’s Escape
Jillian Marie Allbritton, Independent Scholar
Anchoritic hemes in Post-Medieval Literature
Susannah Chewning, Union County College
he Contemporary Presence of “Medieval” Women in Enclosed Spaces
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Swansea Univ.
Living Medieval: Real Anchoresses of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries
Michelle M. Sauer
152 FETZER 2020
Medieval Art and Failure (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Gerry Guest, John Carroll Univ.
Presider:
Gerry Guest
he Failures of Perceiving Failures in Medieval Art
Roland Betancourt, Institute for Advanced Study/Univ. of California–Irvine
“Shapelessness” in the Middle English Romance
Hannah M. Christensen, Univ. of Chicago
Erased Faces: Vandalizing Images in Hagiographic Manuscripts
Kyunghee Pyun, Fashion Institute of Technology
Failure to Transmit
Alexa Sand, Utah State Univ.
153 FETZER 2030
New Books Roundtable
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Germanic Studies (SMGS)
Organizer: Tina Boyer, Wake Forest Univ.; Adam Oberlin, Atlanta International School
Presider:
Ernst Ralf Hintz, Truman State Univ.
Intrigen: Die Macht der Möglichkeiten in der mittelhochdeutschen Epik
Katharina Hanuschkin, Univ. Trier
154 FETZER 2040
he Virgin as Bridge: Cultural Exchange and Connection through Images of the
49
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Christopher Callahan, Illinois Wesleyan Univ.
“Þe forme to be fynisment foldez ful selden”: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
and the Dynamics of Performance
Gerard Lavin, Univ. of New Mexico
Univ. of New Mexico Graduate Student Prize Winner
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Virgin Mary
Organizer:
Diliana Angelova, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Amanda
Luyster, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Amanda Luyster
he Virgin: Bridging Flesh, Matter, and Spirit
Diliana Angelova
he Earliest Icons of the Virgin in Rome: East or West?
Maria Lidova, British Museum
Congress Travel Award Winner
Saint Bridget’s Vision of the Nativity: Cultural Exchange through Mental Images
of the Virgin Mary
Fabian Wolf, Städel Museum
Karrer Travel Award Winner
“En la forma y suerte que esta en su sanctuario”: Hybridity, Materiality, and
Nuestra Señora de Guadeloupe in Extremadura
Nicole Corrigan, Emory Univ.
155 BERNHARD 106
Archaeology and Experiment: Moving beyond the Artifacts
Sponsor:
EXARC
Organizer: Neil Peterson, Wilfrid Laurier Univ.
Presider:
Neil Peterson
Symmetry and Asymmetry in Viking Age Dress
V. M. Roberts, Independent Scholar
he Growth of Yeast and Mold on Viking Age Flat Bread versus Modern Sliced Bread
Marci Lyn Walef, Independent Scholar
Minimalist Survival Gear: hree Points in Time
Stevan E. Walef, Independent Scholar
156 BERNHARD 158
Gawain at Play: Ambiguous Reading and Performance in the Pearl Manuscript (A
Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Research Seminar, Baylor Univ.
Organizer: Sarah B. Rude, Baylor Univ.
Presider:
Sarah B. Rude
Sight Alliteration in Cotton Nero A.x?
Matthew Brumit, Univ. of Dallas
Sound, Silence, and Ways of Reading Patience
Ingrid Pierce, Purdue Univ.
Bobs and Games in British Library, MS Cotton Nero A.x
Kimberly Bell, Sam Houston State Univ.; Julie Nelson Couch, Texas Tech Univ.
Readers: Clint Morrison, Texas Tech Univ.; Mackenzie Peck, Texas Tech Univ.; and
Sarah Jane Sprouse, Texas Tech Univ.
Respondent: Tison Pugh, Univ. of Central Florida
157 BERNHARD 204
Performing Medievalisms (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Society for the Study of Medievalism
50
158 BERNHARD 205
Community Outreach: Medieval Studies outside of the Academy
Organizer: Julie Polcrack, Western Michigan Univ.; Eric Gobel, Western
Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Julie Polcrack
Marching with Medieval Penguins: Teaching Medieval Texts while Working in
Antarctica
Kelly E. Hall, Program for Aloat College Education (PACE), U.S. Navy
Translating Medievalisms on the Regional Stage: Beowulf: A housand Years of
Baggage at Trinity Repertory heatre
Daniel Ruppel, Brown Univ.
159
BERNHARD 208
Faniction in Medieval Studies: What Do We Mean When We Say “Faniction”?
Organizer: Anna Wilson, Univ. of Toronto
Presider:
Anna Wilson
Fanic: he Impossible Gift?
Kristin Noone, Irvine Valley College
Republics of Games: Literary Culture and Game Structures before and after Print
Elyse Graham, Stony Brook Univ.
A Gawain of Our Own: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Canonicity, and Audience
Participation
Angela Florschuetz, Cheyney Univ.
Writing Her Own Deliverance: Christine de Pizan’s he Book of the City of Ladies
as Reclamatory Fan Work
Elizabeth J. Nielsen, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
160 BERNHARD 209
Why We Read (Medieval) Fiction (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History
51
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Organizer: Amy S. Kaufman, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Presider:
Carol L. Robinson, Kent State Univ.–Trumbull
he One True Hero: Performing Medievalism in ABC’s he Quest
Susan Aronstein, Univ. of Wyoming
Negotiating the Future: Subversive Southern Medievalism in he House behind
the Cedars
Alexandra Cook, Univ. of Alabama
“An Indiferent Nebula”: Fantasy Role-Playing Games, Leisure Culture, and the
Simulated Middle Ages
Gerald Nachtwey, Eastern Kentucky Univ.
Playing Chaucer: Performance, Adaptation, and Its Importance in Fandom in
Medieval Studies
Hillary Yeager, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Habits and Habitus: he Western Martial Arts Revival and Embodied Hermeneutics
Robert Rouse, Univ. of British Columbia
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
of Emotions
Organizer: Stephanie Trigg, Univ. of Melbourne
Presider:
Stephanie Trigg
Mental Spaciousness
Maura Nolan, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Chaucerian Afectivity
Sarah Baechle, Univ. of Notre Dame
Why We (Still) Watch Passion Plays
Paul Megna, Univ. of Western Australia
Veridical Perception
Elizabeth Robertson, Univ. of Glasgow
Reading in Bed with Troilus and Criseyde
Clare Davidson, Univ. of Western Australia
Emotion, Cognition, and the Psychoanalytic Subject
Ruth Evans, St. Louis Univ.
161 BERNHARD 210
he Teaching of Old English (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Old English Forum, Modern Language Association
Organizer: Matthew T. Hussey, Simon Fraser Univ.
Presider:
Robin Norris, Carleton Univ.
A Course in Beowulf and Tolkien
Paul Acker, St. Louis Univ.
Teaching Old English in History of the English Language
Heide Estes, Monmouth Univ.
Assignments to Enliven a Dead Language
Jacqueline A. Fay, Univ. of Texas–Arlington
An Anglo-Saxon Sampler
Damian Fleming, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne
Material Culture and Old English Pedagogy
M. Breann Leake, Univ. of Connecticut
Reading Like Anglo-Saxons
Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
162 BERNHARD 211
Romance Friends and (Fr)Enemies
Organizer: Usha Vishnuvajjala, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Usha Vishnuvajjala
Near and Sometimes Dear: Fr(Enemies) in Le Chevalier aux deux épées
Kristin L. Burr, St. Joseph’s Univ.
Hagiography and Dorigen’s Discontent in he Franklin’s Tale
John Fry, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Amis and Amiloun: More than Blood Brothers
Rachel Levinson-Emley, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Between Frenemies: Violence as Friendship in Codex Ashmole 61
Ilan Mitchell-Smith, California State Univ.–Long Beach
163 BERNHARD 212
Legitimacy, Imagery, and Imagination: Creating and Sustaining Identities in the
High Middle Ages
52
164 BERNHARD 213
Hiberno-Latin Studies
Organizer: Shannon O. Ambrose, St. Xavier Univ.
Presider:
Kristen Carella, Assumption College
Some Observations on Easter Reckoning in Early Medieval Ireland
Marina Smyth, Univ. of Notre Dame
he Redactor, Organization, and Source Collections of Vat. Reg. lat. 49, a Late
Tenth-Century Breton Compilation of Latin Texts
Jean Rittmueller, Univ. of Memphis
Reassessing the Transmission Patterns of Hiberno-Latin Texts in German and
Austrian Manuscripts: he Evidence of the High Middle Ages
Shannon O. Ambrose
165 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Wolves Outside, Inside, and at the Medieval Door
Organizer: Laura D. Gelfand, Utah State Univ.
Presider:
Kathleen Ashley, Univ. of Southern Maine
Hagiography and Historical Encounters with Canis Lupus Lupus
Laura D. Gelfand
Saint Norbert and the Wolves of Prémontré
Ellen M. Shortell, Massachusetts College of Art and Design
Wolf versus Lion: he Princely Avatars of Orleans and Burgundy
Elizabeth J. Moodey, Vanderbilt Univ.
—End of 7:30 p.m. Sessions—
Thursday, May 11
Late Evening Events
53
Thursday 7:30 p.m.
Sponsor:
Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Ana Oliveira Dias, Durham Univ.
Presider:
Jay Diehl, Long Island Univ.–C. W. Post Campus
he Textual Made Visual: he Illustrations of the Leonese Beatus Manuscripts
and heir Meaning
Ana Oliveira Dias
Alchemy, Moral Exemplum, and John Lydgate’s he Churl and the Bird in MS
Harley 2407
Curtis Runstedler, Durham Univ.
Illegitimacy and Power: Anglo-Norman and Angevin Illegitimate Royal Children
within Twelfth-Century Aristocratic Society
James Turner, Durham Univ.
Thursday late evening
8:00 p.m.
Leaf-by-Niggle
Univ. of Maryland
It’s a Miracle!
he Harlotry Players, Univ. of
Michigan–Ann Arbor
Cooch E. Whippet
(Farce of Martin of Cambray)
Radford Univ.
Gilmore heatre
Complex
$15.00 General Admission
$10.00 presale through online Congress registration
Shuttles leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) beginning at 7:15 p.m.
A triple bill featuring a Tolkien fairy tale staged in a medieval
style, a lorilegium of fakery from the Harlotry Players, and a
ilthy French farce, courtesy of Radford’s ensemble and translator Jody Enders.
9:00 p.m.
Univ. of Toronto Press; Centre for
Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Harrison 302
9:00 p.m.
Pontiical Institute of Mediaeval
Studies; Institute of Medieval and
Early Modern Studies, Durham Univ.
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Eldridge 310
9:00 p.m.
International Courtly Literature
Fetzer 1030
Society (ICLS), North American Branch
Business Meeting and Reception with
hosted bar
9:00 p.m.
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ.
Fetzer 1040
of Leeds; Centre for Medieval Studies,
Univ. of York
Reception with hosted bar
9:00 p.m.
John Gower Society
Business Meeting with cash bar
54
Fetzer 1060
Friday, May 12
Morning Events
7:00–9:00 a.m.
BREAKFAST
Valley Dining Center
8:00–10:30 a.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Bernhard Center
8:30 a.m.
Plenary Lecture I
Sponsored by the Medieval Academy
of America
Presider: Jana K. Schulman,
Western Michigan Univ.
Bernhard
East Ballroom
Artifacts of the Inidel: Medieval and Modern Interpretations of the Sacred Law of Islam
Leor Halevi, Vanderbilt Univ.
9:00–10:30 a.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Fetzer Center
Friday, May 12
10:00–11:30 a.m.
Sessions 166–224
166 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Power and Society in Late Antique Italy I: Conlict and Resolution
Sponsor:
Summer Program “he Birth of Medieval Europe,” Central
European Univ. (CEU)
Organizer: Samuel Cohen, Sonoma State Univ.
Presider:
Samuel Cohen
Rome–Quierzy–Paderborn: Charlemagne’s Italian Politics and the Conquest of Saxony
Christopher Landon, Univ. of Toronto
Ravenna’s Saturnalia: Private Ceremonies and Pagan Practices in the Fifth-Century
Imperial Capital
Edward M. Schoolman, Univ. of Nevada–Reno
he Oath at Ravenna
Nicholas Wheeler, Univ. of Toronto
167 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Ranging across Time, Space, and Topic: Papers in Honor of Dr. Tom Renna
Sponsor:
Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ.
Organizer: Michael F. Cusato, OFM, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Steven J. McMichael, OFM Conv., Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
he Ordering of Love in the Twelfth Century
Bernard McGinn, Divinity School, Univ. of Chicago
he Opposition of the Franciscan Joachites to the Seventh Crusade (1246–1254)
Michael F. Cusato, OFM
John Wyclif as Reader of Canon Law
Ian Christopher Levy, Providence College
55
Friday 10:00 a.m.
University Welcome
Presentation of the twenty-irst Otto Gründler Book Prize
Friday 10:00 a.m.
168 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Continuity and Change in Arthurian Literature (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Organizer: Kevin S. Whetter, Acadia Univ.
Presider:
Felicia Nimue Ackerman, Brown Univ.
Changing Continuity: Some houghts about Heinrich von dem Tuerlin’s diu Crone
Susann herese Samples, Mount St. Mary’s Univ.
“Rather I would say: Here in this world he changed his life”
Louis J. Boyle, Carlow Univ.
Continuity and Discontinuity: Reading Malory’s Tristram
Stephen Atkinson, Park Univ.
Arthur Northward
Sarah M. Anderson, Princeton Univ.
“he Frenssche and heir Book”: Shaping (or Not) the Arthurian Legend
Janina P. Traxler, Manchester Univ.
169 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
La corónica International Book Award: Laura Ackerman Smoller, he Saint and
the Chopped-Up Baby: he Cult of Vincent Ferrer in Medieval and Early Modern
Europe (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages,
Literatures, and Cultures
Organizer: Jonathan Burgoyne, Ohio State Univ.
Presider:
Mark D. Johnston, DePaul Univ.
A panel discussion with Laura Ackerman Smoller, Univ. of Rochester; Alison K.
Frazier, Univ. of Texas–Austin; Philip Daileader, College of William & Mary; and
Katherine Lindeman, McMaster Univ.
170 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
Classical Philosophy in the Lands of Islam and Its Inluence (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Aquinas and ‘the Arabs’ International Working Group
Organizer: Nicholas A. Oschman, Marquette Univ.
Presider:
Nicholas A. Oschman
hree Scotist Arguments against Averroes: Antonius Andreas on the Subject-Matter
of Metaphysics
Anna-Katharina Strohschneider, Univ. Würzburg
Arabic Sources in James of Viterbo’s heory of Causality
Mark D. Gossiaux, Loyola Univ. New Orleans
Al-Ghazālī, the Anachronistic Analytic Philosopher of Religion
Brett Yardley, Marquette Univ.
171 VALLEY I HADLEY 102
Movement and Meaning in Early Medieval Literature
Organizer: Rebecca E. Straple, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Rebecca E. Straple
he Movement of Christian Experience in he Dream of the Rood
Mary Leech, Univ. of Cincinnati
Travel, Escape, and Ampliicatio in Reginald’s Malchus
Monika Otter, Dartmouth College
Movement, Space, and Gender in the Mercian Register of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Kelly Williams, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
56
172 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Piers Plowman and Langland Studies: Where Are We Now? (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Piers Plowman Electronic Archive; Society for Early English
and Norse Electronic Texts (SEENET)
Organizer: James Knowles, North Carolina State Univ.
Presider:
James Knowles
A roundtable discussion with Michael Calabrese, California State Univ.–Los Angeles;
Andrew Cole, Princeton Univ.; Ian Cornelius, Loyola Univ. Chicago; homas Goodmann,
Univ. of Miami; Ellen Rentz, Claremont McKenna College; Elizabeth Robertson, Univ. of
Glasgow; and Timothy Stinson, North Carolina State Univ.
173 FETZER 1005
174 FETZER 1010
Conlict and Liturgy: Bridging Divides
Organizer: Pieter Byttebier, Univ. Gent
Presider:
Margot E. Fassler, Univ. of Notre Dame
Liturgical Leadership: Bruno of Toul (1026–1051) and Episcopal Liturgy for the
Abbey of Moyenmoutier
Pieter Byttebier
Liturgy Bridging the Diferent Iberias: A Case Study from the Old Hispanic Rite
Raquel Rojo Carrillo, Univ. of Bristol
Conlict over Prayers for the Rulers in the Roman Canon of the Mass during the
so-called Gregorian Reform
Paweł Figurski, Univ. Warszawski/Univ. of Notre Dame
175 FETZER 1040
Dress and Textiles I: Details from Documents
Sponsor:
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile
Arts, Fabrics, and Fashion)
Organizer: Robin Netherton, DISTAFF
Presider:
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, Univ. of Manchester
Saints Subverting Early Medieval Fashion
Sarah-Grace Heller, Ohio State Univ.
Hemp and Hemp Cloth in the Medieval Rus Lands
Heidi Sherman, Univ. of Wisconsin–Green Bay
“Lulych Greuez” and “Wedes Enker-Grene”: Clothing and Its Social Implications
in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Kara Larson Maloney, Binghamton Univ.
“At Hir Mariage”: Wedding Clothes in Sixteenth-Century England and Scotland
Melanie Schuessler Bond, Eastern Michigan Univ.
57
Friday 10:00 a.m.
he Second Shepherds’ Play: An Adaptation (A Film Screening)
Organizer: Douglas Morse, New School
Presider:
Martin Walsh, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
A screening and discussion of a new ilm adaptation of the Wakeield Master’s Second
Shepherds’ Play. his pivotal medieval drama (also known as the Second Shepherds’
Pageant), rarely performed in the modern theater, has been adapted for the screen for
the irst time and shot on a working sheep farm outside of Cambridge, England.
Respondents: Maura Giles-Watson, Univ. of San Diego; Liam Purdon, Doane Univ.
(“he Second Shepherds’ Play and the ‘Inventive’ Empirical Creaturely Triune Mind”)
176 FETZER 1045
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Workshop on Ibero-Romance Paleography
Sponsor:
Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies (HSMS)
Organizer: Francisco Gago-Jover, College of the Holy Cross; Pablo PastranaPérez, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Lis Torres, Western Michigan Univ.
Paleografía en lengua castellana hasta el siglo XV
Francisco Gago-Jover
Paleografía en lengua española siglos XV y XVI
Pablo Pastrana-Pérez
Transcribir y editar hoy textos medievales iberorromances. Algunos aspectos
paleográicos y de edición digital
Ricardo Pichel Gotérrez, Univ. de Alcalá/Univ. de Santiago de Compostela
177 FETZER 1060
Reconsidering the Boundaries of Late Medieval Political Literature I
Sponsor:
Canadian Society of Medievalists/La Société canadienne des
médiévistes; Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Univ.
and Univ. of York
Organizer: Kristin Bourassa, Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk
Univ.; Justin Sturgeon, Univ. of West Florida
Presider:
Kristin Bourassa
Political Literature without a Political Nation? An Assessment of the Takkanot
ha-Kahal Texts and Other Legislative Literature in Jewish Communities at the
End of the Middle Ages
Martin Borýsek, Centre for Medieval Literature, Univ. of York
he Invention of a New Language of Politics in between Medicine, Economics,
and Science: he Singular Contribution of Nicole Oresme
Nicole Hochner, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem
Late Medieval Princely Hagiography in Rus’ and the Balkans as Political Literature
Alexandra Vukovich, Newnham College, Univ. of Cambridge
178 FETZER 2016
Hoards
Sponsor:
Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and
Manuscript Research
Organizer: Elizabeth C. Teviotdale, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Maggie M. Williams, William Paterson Univ./Material Collective
A New Type of Hoard: Europe’s Northernmost Pre-Viking Hacksilver
Alice Blackwell, National Museums Scotland
he Private Lives of Hoards
Rory Naismith, King’s College London
Respondent: Catherine E. Karkov, Univ. of Leeds
58
179 FETZER 2020
A Feminist Renaissance in Anglo-Saxon Studies I
Organizer: Rebecca Stephenson; Univ. College Dublin; Robin Norris,
Carleton Univ.; Renée R. Trilling, Univ. of Illinois–UrbanaChampaign
Presider:
Renée R. Trilling
Beyond Peace-Weaving: Revisiting the Women in Beowulf
Eduardo Ramos, Pennsylvania State Univ.
A Wit-Locker of Sense Full: Intellect in Judith
Cristal Guzman, Independent Scholar
Sighting Gender in the Old English Verse Genesis
Stacy S. Klein, Rutgers Univ.
FETZER 2030
181
FETZER 2040
Uninished/Inini: Incomplete, Ongoing, and Never-Ending Works of Art
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Program, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Organizer: Joan A. Holladay, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Presider:
Joan A. Holladay
he Crusader Church of the Resurrection at Abu Ghosh, in and out of Time
Megan Boomer, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Illusory and Abandoned Ends in Chretien de Troyes’s Arthurian Romances
Rebecca Newby, Cardif Univ.
he Tickhill Psalter: Uninished but Unforgotten at Worksop Abbey
Anne Rudlof Stanton, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Early Medieval Europe I: Monasticism and Memory
Sponsor:
Early Medieval Europe
Organizer: Deborah M. Deliyannis, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Deborah M. Deliyannis
he Monastery of Acoemetae in Constantinople and Its Contribution to the Latin
West
Sukanya Raisharma, Univ. of Oxford
Gregory the Great and Monasticism: he Hagiographic Evidence
Nikolas O. Hoel, Northeastern Illinois Univ.
Remembering the Monastic Past at Early Aniane
Martin A. Claussen, Univ. of San Francisco
59
Friday 10:00 a.m.
180
Friday 10:00 a.m.
182 SCHNEIDER 1120
Teaching a Diverse and Inclusive Middle Ages (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
CARA (Committee on Centers and Regional Associations,
Medieval Academy of America)
Organizer: Sarah Davis-Secord, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider:
Sarah Davis-Secord
Teaching Intersections of LGBT and Medieval History
Michael A. Ryan, Univ. of New Mexico
Engaging with Diversity in the Medieval Music Classroom
Karen M. Cook, Hartt School, Univ. of Hartford
Connecting Diverse Students to a Diverse Middle Ages: Teaching the “Greater
West” in an Urban Community College
Nicole Lopez-Jantzen, Queensborough Community College, CUNY
Teaching Rumi in a Time of Revolution
Matthew B. Lynch, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
Teaching a Diverse and Inclusive Middle Ages: Masculinities Reconsidered
Michael Martin, Fort Lewis College
183
SCHNEIDER 1125
Musical Sources
Sponsor:
Organizer:
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Adam Knight Gilbert, Univ. of Southern California
he Contents of the Music heory Booklet Balliol 173A f. 74r–81v and Its
Dissemination in Later English Codices
C. Matthew Balensuela, DePauw Univ.
he Music of the León Antiphoner
Elsa De Luca, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
Music, Manuscripts, and Materiality: he Origins of Quaestiones in musica
T. J. H. McCarthy, New College of Florida
184 SCHNEIDER 1130
Gender and Voice in Medieval French Literature and Lyric
Organizer: Rachel May Golden, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville; Katherine
Kong, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Daisy Delogu, Univ. of Chicago
“I will sufer just as I am”: Gendered Expression and Self-Awareness in Crusade
Laments
Rachel May Golden
What Is “Self Representation” in Female-Voiced Troubadour Poetry?
Gale Sigal, Wake Forest Univ.
“Mon Chans, Ma Chansso”: Language, Gender, and Performance in the Troubadour
Tornada
Anne Levitsky, Columbia Univ.
Lancelot in Prison: Fictions of Power in Le chevalier de la charrette
Katherine Kong
60
185 SCHNEIDER 1135
Medieval Art of Germany and Austria
Presider:
Maile S. Hutterer, Univ. of Oregon
he Magdeburg Maurice: Race, Portraiture, and Figural Sculpture in the hirteenthCentury
Jacqueline M. Lombard, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Portioning Continuity: Making the Virgin at the Halberstadt Liebfrauenkirche,
ca. 1225
Luke Fidler, Univ. of Chicago
Reformulating Images in Response to a New Text
Cheryl Goggin, Univ. of Southern Mississippi
186 SCHNEIDER 1145
187 SCHNEIDER 1155
Acquired Cardinal Virtues in the Christian? Revisiting the Question
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics
Organizer: Alexander W. Hall, Clayton State Univ.
Presider:
Alexander W. Hall
he Virtual Presence of the Cardinal Virtues
Lloyd Newton, Univ. of the Incarnate Word
A Problem with Several Solutions: Aquinas and the Relation between Infused and
Acquired Virtue
Angela Knobel, Catholic Univ. of America
A Question Revisited: Can Christians Possess the Acquired Cardinal Virtues?
William C. Mattison, III, Univ. of Notre Dame
188 SCHNEIDER 1160
eManuscripts: Digital Humanities and Medieval Studies (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of New Mexico
Organizer: Abigail G. Robertson, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider:
Abigail G. Robertson
A roundtable discussion with William F. Endres, Univ. of Oklahoma; Dorothy Carr
Porter, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies, Univ. of Pennsylvania; and Elaine
M. Treharne, Stanford Univ.
61
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Tricksters in Medieval and Early Modern Culture
Sponsor:
Center for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Organizer: Isaac S. Schendel, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider:
Jennifer Schmitt Carnell, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
he Success and Failure of Welsh Trickster Couples
Lisa LeBlanc, Anna Maria College
he Menippean Poet as Trickster: Author and Hero in Johann Fischart’s Eulenspiegel
Reimenweiß (1572)
Frank Jasper Noll, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie
Trickster in the Tavern: Elucidating the “Griesche” in Rutebeuf ’s Poems of Misfortune
Ashley Powers, Ohio Wesleyan Univ.
To What Extent Are Tricksters and Fools Related?
Isaac S. Schendel
189 SCHNEIDER 1220
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Chaucer’s Voices I: Frame versus Core
Sponsor:
Chaucer Review
Organizer: Susanna Fein, Kent State Univ.; David Raybin, Eastern Illinois Univ.
Presider:
David Raybin
Challenging Authority in he House of Fame
Jacob Couturiaux, Univ. of Connecticut
“By My Soun”: Voice, Sound, and the Material of Poetry
Steele Nowlin, Hampden-Sydney College
Who Tells he Merchant’s Tale?
Robert J. Meyer-Lee, Agnes Scott College
Framing the Core: he Traumatic Center of he Canterbury Tales
William Rogers, Univ. of Louisiana–Monroe
190 SCHNEIDER 1225
Growing Up Medieval: he Middle Ages in Children’s and Young Adult Literature
Sponsor:
Tales after Tolkien Society
Organizer: Helen Young, Univ. of Sydney
Presider:
Geofrey B. Elliott, Independent Scholar
he Dream Frame of Baum’s Wizard of Oz
William Racicot, Independent Scholar
Women Piercing through the Medieval Fantasy Genre: A Look at Tamora Pierce’s
Inluence on Women in Medieval Fantasy
Rachel Cooper, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Heralds of the Queen: Upholding and Subverting the Medieval Ideal through
Girl Power, Sexuality, and le Merveilleux in Mercedes Lackey’s Valdemar Series
Carrie Pagels, Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame
191 SCHNEIDER 1245
he Liber Nemrod, an Arabic Library, and the First French Royal Psalters
Sponsor:
Early Book Society; Institut de recherche et d’histoire des
textes (IRHT)
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.; Patricia Stirnemann, IRHT–Paris
Presider:
Martha W. Driver
he Liber Nemrod de astronomia: A Very Rare Transcultural Witness to the Syriac
Measurement of the Cosmos
Isabelle Draelants, IRHT–Paris
he Pilot Project for the Library of Mohamed Tahar in Timbuktu
Muriel Roiland, IRHT–Paris
A Family Afair: he Ingeborg Psalter and the Psalter of Blanche de Castile
Patricia Stirnemann
192 SCHNEIDER 1255
Peace, Piety, and Vendetta in Medieval Italy
Sponsor:
Italians and Italianists at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Jennifer Stiles, Univ. of Akron; Kyler Williamsen, Western
Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Jennifer Stiles
“Siena could not stop them”: Vendetta as a Political Tool in Late Medieval Siena
(Twelfth–Fourteenth Centuries)
Kyler Williamsen
62
Establishing an Honorable Peace: he Role of Forgiveness, Penance, and Mercy in
Forgoing Vendettas in Trecento Italy
Glenn Kumhera, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Erie, he Behrend College
Peace Is the Word: Peacemaking during the Bianchi Processions of 1399 in Tuscany
Alexandra Lee, Univ. College London
193 SCHNEIDER 1265
194 SCHNEIDER 1275
Animating the Medieval: Research on Animated Representations of the Middle
Ages in Memory of Michael N. Salda
Sponsor:
Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching
of the Medieval in Popular Culture
Organizer: Michael A. Torregrossa, Association for the Advancement of
Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in Popular Culture
Presider:
Jennie Friedrich, Univ. of California–Riverside
Reading, Writing, and Sorcery: Education in the Animated Middle Ages
Valentina S. Grub, Univ. of St. Andrews
History and Stories: he Middle Ages in European Animated Cartoons
Marie-Anne Smith, Independent Scholar
Teaching the History of the English Language with Comics
Patrick J. Murphy, Miami Univ. of Ohio
195 SCHNEIDER 1280
Staging the Undead
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS)
Organizer: Cameron Hunt McNabb, Southeastern Univ.
Presider:
Cameron Hunt McNabb
When the End Is Only the Beginning: Justice for the Undead on the Global
Medieval Stage
Jesse Njus, Univ. of Pittsburgh
And Jesus Wept (or at Least He Pretended to) in N-Town’s “Raising of Lazarus”
Mary Hayes, Univ. of Mississippi
Waking Dreams, Walking Statues, and Posthuman Afect in he Winter’s Tale
Jasmine Lellock, Newton South High School
63
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Rolandslied, Willehalm, Stricker’s Karl, Karlmeinet, and Other Medieval German
Chansons de Geste: Interpretations, Reception, Adaptations, Sources
Sponsor:
Oswald-von-Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft
Organizer: Sibylle Jeferis, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Sibylle Jeferis
Karl der Große als Wahrer des Rechts? Zum Gerichtsverfahren in “Morant und Galie”
Claudia Händl, Univ. degli Studi di Genova
“Sein vart riht er zehant gein dem land Ytaliam daz gehaizzen ist Lompardiam”:
Charlemagne’s campaign in Italy in the Medieval German Tradition
Chiara Benati, Univ. degli Studi di Genova
Death to the King, Long Live the King: Charlemagne in Late Medieval German
Literature, with an Emphasis on Elisabeth von Nassau-Saarbrücken
Albrecht Classen, Univ. of Arizona
196 SCHNEIDER 1320
Friday 10:00 a.m.
he Child in Medieval Romance I: he heorized Child
Sponsor:
Medieval Romance Society
Organizer: Robert Grout, Univ. of York
Presider:
Eve Salisbury, Western Michigan Univ.
heories of Childhood
Robert Grout
he Culture-Straddling Child
Ivana Djordjević, Concordia Univ. Montréal
Sanctuary and Genealogy
Elizabeth Allen, Univ. of California–Irvine
Response: heorizing the Medieval Child: Textuality and Subjectivity/Violence
and Ethics
Daniel T. Kline, Univ. of Alaska–Anchorage
197 SCHNEIDER 1325
Manuscripts in Motion
Sponsor:
Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures
Organizer: Jeanette Patterson, Binghamton Univ.; Albert Lloret, Univ. of
Massachusetts–Amherst
Presider:
Jeanette Patterson
Christine de Pizan’s Queen’s Manuscript (London, BL, Harley 4431) Goes to
England
Lori Walters, Florida State Univ.
Materiality and Mobility: Pilgrim Badges in a Manuscript Context
Elizabeth Voss, Syracuse Univ.
Traveling Manuscripts and the Dominican Reform Movement: he FifteenthCentury Book Transfer between Sankt Katharina (Nuremberg) and Heilig Kreuz
(Regensburg)
Björn Klaus Buschbeck, Stanford Univ.
he Reluctant Old English Corpus
Alexandra Bolintineanu, Univ. of Toronto
198 SCHNEIDER 1330
Service Learning, Civic Engagement, and the Medieval Studies Classroom
Organizer: Elizabeth Harper, Mercer Univ.
Presider:
Elizabeth Harper
Learning in Lock-up: Teaching the Honors Medieval World Class in a Men’s Prison
Karen Taylor, Morehead State Univ.
Service Learning, Social Justice, and the Wife of Bath
Alexandra Verini, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Going Viking as Service-Learning
F. Tyler Sergent, Berea College
199 SCHNEIDER 1335
Reformation Discourse I: Crossing Cultural Boundaries
Sponsor:
Society for Reformation Research
Organizer: Maureen hum, Univ. of Michigan–Flint
Presider:
Maureen hum
Cultural Responses to Reformational Change in Central and Eastern Europe, 1500–1570
Benjamin Esswein, Liberty Univ.
64
English Romans and French Wars: Anthony Munday, Religious Conlict, and the
English Reformation Abroad
Kristin Bezio, Univ. of Richmond
Lollardy, the End of Culture, and the Creation of “Traditional Religion”
Daniel Stokes, Hunter College, CUNY
Gerson in Martin Luther’s hought: New Findings
Yelena Mazour-Matusevich, Univ. of Alaska–Fairbanks
Discussion Leader: Rudolph P. Almasy, West Virginia Univ.
200 SCHNEIDER 1340
201 SCHNEIDER 1345
Cultural and Literary Transmission in the Global Middle Ages
Sponsor:
Program in Medieval Studies, Rutgers Univ.
Organizer: Isabel Stern, Rutgers Univ.
Presider:
Erik Wade, Rutgers Univ.
he Literary “Auld Alliance”: Roman Antiques and Scottish Nationalism within
John Barbour’s he Brus
Ruth M. E. Oldman, Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania
I Just Can’t Wait to Be King: Ethics, Aristotle, and the Example of Alexander in
Medieval Norse Kingship Literature
Roderick McDonald, Univ. of Nottingham
Muslim “Inconstancy” or Charlemagne’s Imperial Error? he Problem of “Fides”
in Einhard, Notker, and the French, Italian and Spanish Epic Traditions
Alani Hicks-Bartlett, Univ. of California–Berkeley
202 SCHNEIDER 1350
he Textual Foundations of Late Medieval History
Presider:
Alison Langdon, Western Kentucky Univ.
“Que vous n’oubliez le françois”: Political Undertones and Literary Manuscripts
in the France of Henry VI (1422–1453)
David Cormier, Univ. de Montréal
Sisters and Sororal Bonds in Late Medieval London Wills
Taylor A. Sims, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
he Corpus of Middle English Local Documents: A New Digital Language
Resource, 1399–1525
Kjetil V. hengs, Univ. of Stavanger
65
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Lydgate and Literary Technologies (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Lydgate Society
Organizer: Alaina Bupp, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder; Timothy R. Jordan,
Ohio Univ.–Zanesville
Presider:
Christopher M. Roman, Kent State Univ.–Tuscarawas
A roundtable discussion with Anna Wilson, Univ. of Toronto (“Digital Reading Practices and Lydgate’s Chaucerian Faniction”); Timothy R. Jordan (“Recording Lydgate’s
Siege of hebes”); Alaina Bupp (“Transitioning Lydgate from Manuscript to Print”);
Matthew Evan Davis, McMaster Univ.; and Bridget Whearty, Binghamton Univ.
203 SCHNEIDER 1355
Friday 10:00 a.m.
he Truthful Lie: Fiction and Fictionality in Medieval Persian Literature
Sponsor:
Great Lakes Adiban Society
Organizer: Cameron Cross, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Presider:
Nathan L. M. Tabor, Western Michigan Univ.
Allusion and Anachronism: “Memorizing” the Noble Self in the Ayadgar-i Zareran
Samuel Lasman, Univ. of Chicago
New Meanings in Old Stories: he Rise of the Persian Romance
Cameron Cross
Justifying the Allegorical Fantastic
Austin O’Malley, Univ. of Chicago
Conventions of Truth: Sincerity and Hypocrisy, Fantasy versus Historicity, and
Other Continua
Franklin Lewis, Univ. of Chicago
204 SCHNEIDER 1360
Fancy Pincushions Part Two (A Demonstration)
Organizer: Cameron Christian-Weir, Grey Goose Bows/Augsburg College
Presider:
Andrew Barwis, Grey Goose Bows
A demonstration of the indings from an ongoing experimental archeology study
on the ballistics complicity of warbows and arrows of the Hundred Years war.
Featured are a warbow (unbraced) from the study, as well as two war arrows also
from the study (a MR livery arrow and a west minster style shaft) to illustrate the
weight and design on the shafts.
205 SCHNEIDER 2335
Topics in Medieval Numismatics
Sponsor:
Numismatists at Kalamazoo
Organizer: David Sorenson, Allen G. Berman, Numismatist
Presider:
Eleanor A. Congdon, Youngstown State Univ.
From Byzantine to Lusignan in the Excavation Coins from Polis, Cyprus
Alan Stahl, Princeton Univ.
Saxons under a Norman King: Revealing and Disseminating New Narratives of
the Norman Conquest of England through the Coinages of William I and II
Anja Rohde, Univ. of Nottingham
Changing Emissions and Transitional Dies in Paris under Charles VI
David Sorenson
206 SCHNEIDER 2345
New Research on the Disticha Catonis I
Organizer: W. Martin Bloomer, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
Justin Hastings, Loyola Univ. Chicago
Catonian Authority in the Carolingian Curriculum
Elizabeth Archibald, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Pater ad ilium: he Disticha Catonis in the Context of Other Didactic Texts of
the Type “Advice of a Father to His Son”
Nikolaus Henkel, Albert-Ludwigs-Univ. Freiburg
First Look at the Commentary Summi deus largitor
Julia A. Schneider, Univ. of Notre Dame
66
207 SCHNEIDER 2355
he Materiality of Scholasticism: Urban Life and Forms of Learning
Organizer: Martin Schwarz, Univ. of Chicago
Presider:
Martin Schwarz
he Architecture of Scholasticism in Medieval Paris
Michael T. Davis, Mount Holyoke College
Psalms and the Active Life: Urban Context of Medieval Scholastic Psalms Commentaries
heresa Gross-Diaz, Loyola Univ. Chicago
Ars Disputandi and the “Art” of Debate
Alex J. Novikof, Fordham Univ.
208 BERNHARD 106
209 BERNHARD 158
he Stones Cry Out: Modes of Citation in Medieval Architecture
Organizer: Lindsay S. Cook, Columbia Univ.; Zachary Stewart, Fordham
Univ.
Presider:
Lindsay S. Cook and Zachary Stewart
Repeated Citations of the Sainte-Chapelle of Paris during the hirteenth Century
and the Late Middle Ages: he Sainte-Croix Collegiate Church in Liège
Mathieu Piavaux, Univ. de Namur
A “Bible in Stone”? he Sculptures of the West Facade of Amiens and Contemporary
Modes of Citation
Jennifer M. Feltman, Univ. of Alabama
Nicolaus Cusanus’s Sankt Nikolaus Hospital (1458) in Bernkastel-Kues, Germany:
Appropriations of/Deviations from the Mediterranean Contemporary Canons
Il Kim, Auburn Univ.
67
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Anglo-Norman Texts and Manuscripts
Sponsor:
Anglo-Norman Text Society
Organizer: Maureen B. M. Boulton, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
Nicole Clifton, Northern Illinois Univ.
Beyond Oxford: he Locations of French Teaching and Learning in Medieval
England
Rory G. Critten, Univ. Bern
What Language Is his? Anglo-Norman Recipes for Paints and Dyes
Heather Pagan, Anglo-Norman Dictionary Project, Aberystwyth Univ.
Early Modern Reception of Anglo-Norman Texts: he Evidence of Manuscript
Use and Ownership
Julia Marvin, Univ. of Notre Dame
Friday 10:00 a.m.
210 BERNHARD 204
Remembering the Crusades: A Representation of Otherness
Sponsor:
Dept. d’histoire , Univ. de Montréal
Organizer: Cornel Bontea, Univ. de Montréal
Presider:
Cornel Bontea
Otherness in Crusading, or, Others in Crusade?
Vincent Tremblay, Univ. de Montréal
he Representation of the Knights Templars and Knights Hospitallers as Seen
through the Lens of Eastern Chroniclers
Rodrigue Bufet, Univ. de Montréal
Audita Tremendi and Western Understanding of the Crusader States in the Itinerarium peregrinorum
Stefan Vander Elst, Univ. of San Diego
Venetians through the Eyes of the Fourth Crusade
Éric Hupin, Univ. de Montréal
211 BERNHARD 205
Saints and Slavery in the Early Middle Ages
Sponsor:
Hagiography Society
Organizer: Lois L. Huneycutt, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Presider:
Lois L. Huneycutt
Beyond Novelistic Heroism: he Rhetorics of Eugenia, Slavery, and Chastity in
the Ancient Greek Novel and Early Christian Narrative
Koen De Temmerman, Univ. Gent
Servi et Servi Dei: Slaves and Saints in Early Medieval Hagiography
Christopher Paolella, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
he Virginal Slave? Honor, Slavery, and Sanctity in the Early Medieval World
homas J. MacMaster, Morehouse College
212 BENRHARD 208
Secular Clergy and the Laity I: Clerical and Lay Initiative
Sponsor:
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops and Secular Clergy
in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Michael Burger, Auburn Univ.–Montgomery
Presider:
Michael Burger
Elite Laywomen as Leaders of the Early Church
Aneilya Barnes, Coastal Carolina Univ.
he Making and Unmaking of a Bishop: Bonizo of Sutri and the Laity of Piacenza
John A. Dempsey, Westield State Univ.
Parish Clergy, Friars, and the Question of Light Penances in hirteenth-Century
England
William H. Campbell, Univ. of Pittsburgh–Greensburg
213 BERNHARD 209
Pedagogical Approaches to Medieval Irish Studies (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
American Society of Irish Medieval Studies (ASIMS)
Organizer: James Lyttleton, Independent Scholar
Presider:
James G. Schryver, Univ. of Minnesota–Morris
Experiential Learning and the Middle Ages
Mary A. Valante, Appalachian State Univ.
68
Using Social Media and 3-D Printing in Teaching the Irish Middle Ages
Vicky McAlister, Southeast Missouri State Univ.
Castles, Bones, and Battle-Axes: Creating Medieval Material Culture
Bridgette Slavin, Medaille College
Interactive Approaches to Teaching the Viking Era in Ireland
Lahney Preston-Matto, Adelphi Univ.
Bringing Irish Medieval Buildings to Life
James Lyttleton
214 BERNHARD 210
215 BERNHARD 211
Monastic Ethics in the Long Twelfth Century
Sponsor:
Centre for Catholic Studies, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Jay Diehl, Long Island Univ.–C. W. Post Campus
Presider:
Diane Reilly, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
“Ueraciter in carne experietur”:he Ethics of Knowing in Isaac of Stella
Sigbjorn Sonnesyn, Durham Univ.
he Writing Dead: Letters, the Rule, and the Ethics of Lay Spiritual Instruction,
ca. 1000–1200
Christopher D. Fletcher, Newberry Library
When Charisma Fails: Negotiating Ethics in Twelfth-Century Monastic Culture
Jay Diehl
216 BERNHARD 212
Green Spenser
Sponsor:
Organizer:
Spenser at Kalamazoo
Sean Henry, Univ. of Victoria; Rachel E. Hile, Indiana
Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne; Susannah B. Monta, Univ. of
Notre Dame
homas Herron, East Carolina Univ.
Presider:
Opening Remarks
David Lee Miller, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
“And straight they saw the raging surges reard”: Watery Wildernesses and Narratives of National Self in Spenser’s Book II of he Faerie Queene
Amber N. Slaven, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Moving Metaphors: Spenser’s Clouds
Archie Cornish, Univ. of Oxford
“Seeking for Daunger and Aduentures” in Spenser’s Gardens
Christine Coch, College of the Holy Cross
69
Friday 10:00 a.m.
Landscape Approaches to the Plague
Sponsor:
Contagions: Society for Historic Infectious Disease Studies
Organizer: Michelle Ziegler, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Philip Slavin, Univ. of Kent
Plague in the Sixth-Century Bavarian Landscape
Michelle Ziegler
44.7%: New archaeological Evidence for the Impact of the Black Death in
England and Its Implications for Future Research
Carenza Lewis, Univ. of Lincoln
Heterogeneous Immunological Landscapes and Medieval Plague
Fabian Crespo, Univ. of Louisville
Friday 10:00 a.m.
217 BERNHARD 213
Navigating Seas of Faith: Authority and Religious Identity in the Mediterranean
Sponsor:
Dept. of History, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: David D. Terry, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Larry J. Simon, Western Michigan Univ.
he Canon and the Mosque: A Case of Christian-Muslim Relations in
Twelfth-Century Toledo
Patrick Harris, Western Michigan Univ.
“We don’t need no stinkin’ pope (except to call crusades)”: he Crusader Kingdom and Canon Law in the Twelfth Century
Phyllis G. Jestice, College of Charleston
United by Fear: Christian, Muslim, and Jewish Merchants Facing a Pirate Attack
in 1301
David D. Terry
Ransoming Captives in Late Medieval Sicily
Jack Goodman, Western Michigan Univ.
218 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
he United States of Medievalism
Sponsor:
International Society for the Study of Medievalism
Organizer: Susan Aronstein, Univ. of Wyoming
Presider:
Susan Aronstein
Philadelphia’s Medievalist Jewels: Bryn Athyn Cathedral and Glencairn
Kevin J. Harty, La Salle Univ.
he Vikings are Due on Main Street: Norse Incursion into Minnesota’s Literary
Imagination
Glenn Davis, St. Cloud State Univ.
Robin Hood’s Greenwood in Texas: Sherwood Forest Faire
Lorraine Kochanske Stock, Univ. of Houston
Orlando: heme Park Medievalisms
Tison Pugh, Univ. of Central Florida
Las Vegas: Getting Medieval in Sin City
Laurie A. Finke, Kenyon College; Martin B. Shichtman, Eastern Michigan Univ.
219 SANGREN 1710
Cognition and Emotion in Medieval Literature
Sponsor:
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History
of Emotions
Organizer: Stephanie Trigg, Univ. of Melbourne
Presider:
Stephanie Trigg
hree’s Company: Olivi, Alisoun, and Afective Cognition
Mark Amsler, Univ. of Auckland
he Grammar of Joy in Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde
Lucie Kaempfer, Lincoln College, Univ. of Oxford
Game on? Play and Knowingness in Jack and His Stepdame
Melissa Raine, Independent Scholar
he Rationality of Emotion: he Cases of Love and Envy
Jessica Rosenfeld, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
70
220 SANGREN 1720
Law as Culture: Legislation, Statutory Interpretation, and Parliamentary Procedure
Sponsor:
Selden Society
Organizer: Alexander Volokh, Emory Law School
Presider:
Alexander Volokh
Lawless Order and Functional Feuding: Bloodfeud and Lawmaking in Anglo-Saxon
England and Ottonian Germany
Laura Wangerin, Seton Hall Univ.
Aquinas and the heory of Statutory Interpretation
Stefanus Hendrianto, SJ, Boston College
Legislative Procedure and the Balance of Power in the Late Medieval English
Parliament
Antonios Kouroutakis, IE Univ.
Mappings I: Maps as/and Narratives
Organizer: Felicitas Schmieder, Historisches Institut, Fernuniv. in Hagen
Presider:
Oren Falk, Cornell Univ.
Epic Mapping in Medieval Europe
Amanda Gerber, St. Louis Univ.
Medieval Maps and the Bayeux Tapestry
Rachel Dressler, Univ. at Albany
Spatial Awareness and Historia in Northern England
Dan Terkla, Illinois Wesleyan Univ.
222 SANGREN 1750
Scandinavian Studies
Sponsor:
Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies
Organizer: Shaun F. D. Hughes, Purdue Univ.
Presider:
Shaun F. D. Hughes
Style Shifting in the Eddic Praise Poems
Megan E. Hartman, Univ. of Nebraska–Kearney
Old Norse Skaldic Authority: Tracing Its Development
Eirik Westcoat, Independent Scholar
he Mythological Lore in the Hauksbók version of Trójumanna saga: A Study of
Literary Transfer
Sabine Heidi Walther, Københavns Univ./Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Univ. Bonn
223 SANGREN 1920
Sustaining Vivid Medieval Studies Programs in a Time of Diminished Fiscal and
Faculty Resources (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
TEAMS (Teaching Association for Medieval Studies)
Organizer: Bonnie Wheeler, Southern Methodist Univ.
Presider:
Benjamin Joy Ambler, Dwight-Englewood School
A roundtable discussion with M. Wendy Hennequin, Tennessee State Univ.; Danielle
B. Joyner, Southern Methodist Univ.; Anne E. Lester, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder;
and Bonnie Wheeler.
71
Friday 10:00 a.m.
221 SANGREN 1730
224 GOLDSWORTH VALLEY POND
Casting an International Congress on Medieval Studies Pilgrim’s Badge (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Dark Ages Recreation Company
Organizer: Neil Peterson, Wilfrid Laurier Univ.
Presider:
Neil Peterson
A hands-on workshop led by Darrell Markewitz, Wareham Forge, allows attendees
to learn the process of casting pewter tokens in a soapstone mold as was done in the
Middle Ages, allowing attendees the opportunity to cast a pilgrim’s badge they can
take away for a cost of $5.00.
Friday lunchtime
—End of 10:00 a.m. Sessions—
Friday, May 12
Lunchtime Events
11:30 a.m.– 1:30 p.m. LUNCH
Valley Dining Center
11:30 a.m.
Society for Medieval Feminist
Scholarship (SMFS)
Advisory Board Meeting
Fetzer 1035
11:30 a.m.
Hagiography Society
Business Meeting
Bernhard G10
11:45 a.m.
Medieval and Renaissance
Drama Society (MRDS)
Executive Council Meeting
Fetzer 1030
Noon
Women in the Franciscan
Intellectual Tradition (WIFIT)
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson Lounge
Noon
DARC Fibre Stitch and Bitch Team
Gathering
Valley I
Shilling Lounge
Noon
International Arthurian Society,
North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1005
Noon
Material Collective
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1060
Noon
Game Cultures Society
Business Meeting
Schneider 1220
Noon
Episcopus: Society for the Study of
Bernhard 107
Bishops and the Secular Clergy in the
Middle Ages
Business Meeting
72
Society for the Study of Homosexuality Bernhard 204
in the Middle Ages (SSHMA)
Business Meeting
Noon
American Society of Irish Medieval
Studies (ASIMS)
Business Meeting
Bernhard 209
Noon
Contagions: Society for Historic
Infectious Disease Studies
Business Meeting
Bernhard 210
Noon
CARA (Committee on Centers and
Regional Associations, Medieval
Academy of America)
Business Meeting
(pre-registration required)
Bernhard
President’s
Dining Room
12:30 p.m.
New England Saga Society (NESS)
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson 306
Friday, May 12
1:30 p.m.–3:00 p.m.
Sessions 225–282
225 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Passionate and Penitential Instruction
Sponsor:
Spenser at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Jennifer Vaught, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette; David Scott WilsonOkamura, East Carolina Univ.; Sean Henry, Univ. of Victoria
Presider:
Lauren Silberman, Baruch College
Counseling Endings in he Faerie Queene
John Walters, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Exemplary Feeling: Guyon’s Encounter with Amavia
Judith Owens, Univ. of Manitoba
226 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Authorities: Bible, Rule, Customary, and Tradition in Medieval Benedictine
Monasteries
Sponsor:
American Benedictine Academy
Organizer: Hugh Bernard Feiss, OSB, Monastery of the Ascension
Presider:
Hugh Bernard Feiss, OSB
Monks as Champions: Sources of “Spiritual Warfare” in the Benedictine Practice
Joseph Morrel, Univ. of Dallas/Cassata Catholic High School
Benedict of Aniane and the Authorities
Colleen Maura McGrane, OSB, Benedictine Sisters of Perpetual Adoration
Saint Aethelwold and Authority: A Rhetoric of Absence
Jacob Riyef, Marquette Univ.
Instruction in Monastic Customs: Aelfric’s Letter to the Monks of Eynsham and
Liturgical Authority
Nathan John Haydon, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
73
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Noon
227 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Medieval heories of the Atonement
Sponsor:
Christendom Graduate School
Organizer: Robert Joseph Matava, Christendom Graduate School
Presider:
Robert Joseph Matava
Julian of Norwich, he Cloud of Unknowing, and the Doctrine of Deiication
Justin A. Jackson, Hillsdale College
Satisfaction and Merit: he Dynamics of Atonement in Anselm, Bonaventure,
and Aquinas
Junius C. Johnson, Baylor Univ.
Friday 1:30 p.m.
228 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
Medieval Translation heory and Practice I
Organizer: Jeanette Beer, Univ. of Oxford
Presider:
Jeanette Beer
Against a Domesticating Model for the Alfredian Translations
Ben Garceau, Univ. of California–Irvine
Ennobling the Vernacular: Alchemical Translations in the Fifteenth Century
Eoin Bentick, Univ. College London
Soothing Listeners’ Ears: Confronting Reader Resistance in the Bible historiale
Jeanette Patterson, Binghamton Univ.
he Old French Bible in Context
Clive R. Sneddon, Univ. of St. Andrews
229 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
he Medieval Tradition of Natural Law I
Organizer: Harvey Brown, Western Univ.
Presider:
Harvey Brown
What Was Natural Law
Richard B. Friedman, Independent Scholar
Francisco Suarez and the Unity of Natural Law
Toy-Fung Tung, John Jay Collage of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Natural Law, Personalism, and Human Rights
Paul J. Cornish, Grand Valley State Univ.
230 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
he Mirror of Simple Souls: Read Aloud, in Manuscripts, and in Printed Books
Sponsor:
International Marguerite Porete Society
Organizer: Robert Staufer, Dominican College
Presider:
Christopher M. Bellitto, Kean Univ.
New Trends in Marguerite Porete Studies
Wendy Terry, Univ. of California–Davis
Orthodox Readings of the Condemned Mirror
Robert Staufer
74
231 FETZER 1005
Justice
Sponsor:
International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Organizer: Kevin S. Whetter, Acadia Univ.
Presider:
Nicole Clifton, Northern Illinois Univ.
Ruled by Counsel: Arthur, Justice, and the Inluence of Merlin in Malory’s Morte
Darthur
Russell L. Keck, Harding Univ.
Besieged Ladies: homas Malory’s Lyonesse and the Paston Letters
Kristin Bovaird-Abbo, Univ. of Northern Colorado
Northern Justice: Morgause’s Sons, Arthur’s Nephews
Katharine Mudd, Northern Illinois Univ.
Environmental Justice in Arthurian Romance
Michael W. Twomey, Ithaca College
Catastrophe and Periodization (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (MEMSI),
George Washington Univ.
Organizer: Jefrey Jerome Cohen, George Washington Univ.
Presider:
Jefrey Jerome Cohen
Learning to Die
Shannon Gayk, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Roman Ruins in the Renaissance, or, Was the Fall of Rome a Catastrophe?
Katherine C. Little, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Time as Catastrophe in Old English
Mary Kate Hurley, Ohio Univ.
Dancing toward Death (and the Reformation) at Saint Paul’s
Megan Cook, Colby College
Ruins, Stately Churches, and Climate Change in Lyly’s Gallathea
Patricia L. Badir, Univ. of British Columbia
he N-Town Noah, Mary Mattingly, and Who’s Responsible for the Waves
Rob Wakeman, Univ. of South Florida
233 FETZER 1040
Dress and Textiles II: Real and Unreal
Sponsor:
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile
Arts, Fabrics, and Fashion)
Organizer: Robin Netherton, DISTAFF
Presider:
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, Univ. of Manchester
A Change of Face, or, A Man in an Otter Suit
M. A. Nordtorp-Madson, Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
he Real Unreal: Chrétien de Troyes’s Fashioning of Erec and Enide
Monica L. Wright, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
“Monstrous Men of Fashion”: Striped Costume in a Danish Church Wall Painting
John Block Friedman, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, he Ohio
State Univ.
Tall Hats, Scrolling Brims, and the Byzantine Scholar in Late Medieval European
Painting
Joyce Kubiski, Western Michigan Univ.
75
Friday 1:30 p.m.
232 FETZER 1010
Friday 1:30 p.m.
234 FETZER 1045
he Transformative Pearl-Poet: Translation and Adaptation
Sponsor:
Pearl-Poet Society
Organizer: Kara Larson Maloney, Binghamton Univ.
Presider:
Kara Larson Maloney
Translation Squared: Translating the Pearl-Poet’s Translations
Matthew Brumit, Univ. of Dallas
“As Holy Wryt Telles”: Translation and Conversion in the Pearl-Poet’s Patience
Kathryn P. Goldstein, Rutgers Univ.
Puzzling Pearl: he Untranslatability of the Divine
Derek Shank, Independent Scholar
Chivalric Sensibilities: Transformative Neurocognitive Rhetoric in Sir Gawain
and the Green Knight
Scott Troyan, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Respondent: Jane Beal, Univ. of California–Davis
235 FETZER 1060
Who Made hat? Misattribution and Anonymity
Sponsor:
Fifteenth-Century French Studies
Organizer: Daisy Delogu, Univ. of Chicago
Presider:
Daisy Delogu
Oblique Authorship: Identity and Ascription in Late Medieval Epitaph Fictions
Helen J. Swift, St. Hilda’s College, Univ. of Oxford
he Slippery Attribution of the Spanish Quarto of Columbus’s Barcelona Letter
Elizabeth Willingham, Baylor Univ.
“Who made that, and who sung that?”: Traces of Performance in Early FifteenthCentury Musical Attributions
Lucia Marchi, DePaul Univ.
Early Printed Editions and Misattribution: he Case of Alain Chartier
Joan E. McRae, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
236 FETZER 2016
In Honor of Caroline Palmer I: Publishing the Medieval Now: Open Access and
Other Futures (A Panel Discussion)
Organizer: Elizabeth Archibald, Durham Univ.; Christopher Baswell,
Barnard College; Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Fordham Univ.
Presider:
Jocelyn Wogan-Browne
A panel discussion with Bonnie Wheeler, Southern Methodist Univ.; Jerome E. Singerman,
Univ. of Pennsylvania Press; and Sarah Spence, Speculum, Medieval Academy of America.
237 FETZER 2020
Chaucer’s Voices II: Truth versus Trumpery
Sponsor:
Chaucer Review
Organizer: Susanna Fein, Kent State Univ.; David Raybin, Eastern Illinois Univ.
Presider:
David Raybin
Political and Linguistic Order in Chaucer’s Lak of Stedfastnesse
Chad Crosson, Univ. of California–Berkeley
he Chaucer-Gower Quarrel
Frederick M. Biggs, Univ. of Connecticut
he Friar, the Summoner, and “Al his Compaignye”
David K. Coley, Simon Fraser Univ.
76
he Scent of the Text: Entente, Emotion, and Narrative in the Summoner’s Tale
Gregory Roper, Univ. of Dallas
238 FETZER 2030
239
FETZER 2040
New Research in Parish Church Art and Architecture in England and on the
Continent, 1100–1600 I
Organizer: Sarah Blick, Kenyon College
Presider:
Louise Hampson, Centre for the Study of Christianity and
Culture, Univ. of York
he Font Canopy at Saint Peter Mancroft, Norwich: Toward a Reconstruction
with New Finds from the Philadelphia Museum of Art
Amy Gillette, Temple Univ.; Zachary Stewart, Fordham Univ.
“High and Lifted Up”: he Elevation of the Host and the Reservation of the Sacrament in Late Medieval England
Allan Barton, Univ. of Wales Trinity St. David
Mercantile Ambitions and Angelic Representations in Late Medieval Norwich
Sarah Cassell, Univ. of East Anglia
he Early Sixteenth-Century Stained-Glass Program of Saint Michael-le-Belfrey,
York: Intersections between Lay Piety and Imaging the Community of Saints
Lisa Reilly, Univ. of Virginia; Mary B. Shepard, Univ. of Arkansas–Fort Smith
240 SCHNEIDER 1120
Materiality and Place in the Northern World I
Sponsor:
Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and
Manuscript Research
Organizer: Catherine E. Karkov, Univ. of Leeds
Presider:
Jill Frederick, Minnesota State Univ.–Moorhead
“he Gates of Paradise”: (Be)jeweled Borders, Precious Stones, and the Presentation
of Paradise in the Early Church
Meg Boulton, Univ. of York
Water, Parchment, Place in Anglo-Saxon Manuscript Illumination
Tina Bawden, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Freie Univ. Berlin
he Wolf of Winchester
Catherine E. Karkov
77
Friday 1:30 p.m.
he Crusades at Home: Roots, Impact, and Cultural Signiicance of the Crusades
in France and Occitania
Sponsor:
Crusades in France and Occitania
Organizer: homas Lecaque, SUNY–Orange
Presider:
homas Lecaque
“We were hawks, and they were herons”: Troubadour Lyrics and the Legacy of 1204
Jordan Amspacher, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
Vicarious Crusading in Medieval Champagne
Michael Peixoto, Robert D. Clark Honors College, Univ. of Oregon
he Crusades in the Twelfth-Century Library of Saint-Amand
Bradley Phillis, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
he Hagiography of Crusading Captivity as Homefront Literature
Katherine Allen Smith, Univ. of Puget Sound
241 SCHNEIDER 1125
Sounding Sentiment: Emotion in Late Medieval Song (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Cathy Ann Elias
In this workshop—led by Graeme Boone, Ohio State Univ.—is intended for musicologists
and non-musicologists alike. We engage questions about the emotive dimensions of late
medieval song, with attention to the ways in which musical settings situate and instrumentalize the emotive powers of text and also to the ways in which music in general, and song
in particular, were fundamentally understood to be expressive
Friday 1:30 p.m.
242 SCHNEIDER 1130
Negativity and Emptiness in the Intellectual Culture of the Middle Ages
Sponsor:
Claremont Consortium for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Organizer: Nancy van Deusen, Claremont Graduate Univ.
Presider:
Nancy van Deusen
Negativity in Eckhart and Cusanus
Peter J. Casarella, Univ. of Notre Dame
Sacrament as Kenosis: Hadewijch on the Eucharist and Its Implications for Late
Medieval Negative heology
Willemien Otten, Univ. of Chicago
Vernacular Negativity in Geofrey Chaucer’s A Treatise on the Astrolabe
Michelle Brooks, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Original Sin and the Vacuum: Blind Synagoga and Deaf Ecclesia in Medieval
Representations
Karen Webb, Univ. of Pittsburgh
243 SCHNEIDER 1135
Reconsidering the Boundaries of Late Medieval Political Literature II
Sponsor:
Canadian Society of Medievalists/La Société canadienne des
médiévistes; Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Univ.
and Univ. of York
Organizer: Kristin Bourassa, Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk
Univ.; Justin Sturgeon, Univ. of West Florida
Presider:
Justin Sturgeon
Political Tyranny, Women, and Love in Fifteenth-Century Castilian Letters
Ana M. Montero, St. Louis Univ.
Le livre des fais du bon messire Jehan Le Maingre, dit Bouciquat: A Mirror for
Princes?
Craig Taylor, Univ. of York
Mirror-for-Magistrates: Relections on a European Urban Corpus of Political
Manuals
David P. H. Napolitano, Univ. of Cambridge
244 SCHNEIDER 1145
Alfredian Texts and Contexts
Organizer: Nicole Guenther Discenza, Univ. of South Florida
Presider:
Nicole Guenther Discenza
Construction of West-Saxon and English Identity in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles
Courtnay Konshuh, St. homas More College, Univ. of Saskatchewan
78
Book Ontology and Ptolemaic Learning in the Old English *Boethius*
Jesse McDowell, North Carolina State Univ.
Alfred’s Cottage and Solomon’s Temple: A Reconsideration of the Preface to the
Old English Soliloquies
Francis Leneghan, St. Cross College, Univ. of Oxford
245 SCHNEIDER 1155
246 SCHNEIDER 1160
Material Histories of Exchange I: Representations of Cross-Cultural Dress in
Byzantium and Beyond
Sponsor:
Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture
Organizer: Annie Montgomery Labatt, Univ. of Texas–San Antonio;
Heather Badamo, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Presider:
Heather Badamo
Monastic Dress Codes and the Secular World
Jennifer Ball, Brooklyn College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Dressing the Magi: Visualizing the Persian East in Early Medieval Italy
Annie Montgomery Labatt
Dress Ornamentation in the Late Byzantine Period
Antje Bosselmann-Ruickbie, Johannes Gutenberg-Univ. Mainz
247 SCHNEIDER 1220
Medieval Games and Gender
Sponsor:
Game Cultures Society
Organizer: Betsy McCormick, Mount San Antonio College
Presider:
Betsy McCormick
Playing at the Margins: Gender and Jesting in Early Print Editions of Chaucer
Hope Johnston, Baylor Univ.
King or Queen? Who Holds the Power?
Stavros Stavroulias, Univ. of Waterloo
Huntsman or Daughter: Subverted Gaming Roles in Pearl
Clint Morrison, Texas Tech Univ.
Playing at Manhood: Perkyn Revelour, Sir Topaz, and Gendered Games in Chaucer’s
Canterbury Tales
Christopher Flavin, Northeastern State Univ.–Tahlequah
79
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Sense and Sensibility in Anglo-Saxon England
Organizer: Hilary E. Fox, Wayne State Univ.
Presider:
Hilary E. Fox
he Blossoms’ Sweet Stench: he Sense of Smell in Old English Texts
Maren Clegg Hyer, Valdosta State Univ.
Sense and the Senses in Constructions of Personhood in Narratives of Impairment
Marit Ronen, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem
Terrifying Sounds in Beowulf: Toward a heory of Anglo-Saxon Fear and Horror
Brian O’Camb, Indiana Univ. Northwest
Friday 1:30 p.m.
248 SCHNEIDER 1225
Early Medieval Europe II: Strategies of Power
Sponsor:
Early Medieval Europe
Organizer: Deborah M. Deliyannis, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Kalani Craig, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Conquest or Assumption? he Territorial Implementation Mechanisms of Visigothic
and Merovingian Monarchies
Pablo Poveda Arias, Univ. de Salamanca
Familial Strategies in Seventh- and Eighth-Century Italy: Nuancing Political
History
Nicole Lopez-Jantzen, Queensborough Community College, CUNY
heology and Warfare in Lombard Italy: A Review of the Evidence
Eduardo Fabbro, Trent Univ.
Between David and Christ: Narratives of Imposed Penance and Self-Humiliation
of Kings in Ottonian Historiography (919–1024)
Iliana Kandzha, Central European Univ.
249 SCHNEIDER 1245
he Western Iberian Kingdoms after 1143 I
Sponsor:
Instituto de Estudios Medievales, Univ. de Lén; Instituto de
Estudos Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
Organizer: Alicia Miguélez Cavero, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Univ.
Nova de Lisboa; María Dolores Teijeira Pablos, Instituto de
Estudios Medievales, Univ. de Lén
Presider:
Alicia Miguélez Cavero
he Circulation of Regular and Secular Canons between the Kingdoms of León
and Portugal during the Twelfth Century: he Cases of Braga, Coimbra, León,
and Zamora
Maria João Branco, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
In the Middle of Two Kingdoms: Romanesque Workshops, Patterns, and Artistic
Patronage in the Borders between Galicia and Portugal
Margarita Vázquez Corbal, Univ. de Santiago de Compostela
Portugal in the Chronicles of Twelfth-Century Castile and Leon
Israel San Martín, Univ. de Santiago de Compostela
250 SCHNEIDER 1255
Medieval Women
Presider:
Nichola Harris, SUNY–Ulster
Wisdom/Modor/Patria in Alfred’s Old English Boethius
Elan Justice Pavlinich, Univ. of South Florida
Independent Women: Female Actors in the Registers of Teobaldo II of Navarre
Jillian M. Bjerke, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Strategies of Female Power in hirteenth-Century Little Poland: he Case of
Duchess Kunegund
Sebastian P. Bartos, Valdosta State Univ.
Burning Down the House: Status, Ethnicity, and Punishment of Female Arsonists
in Anglo-Norman Ireland
Bridgette Slavin, Medaille College
80
251 SCHNEIDER 1265
Medieval Arabic Scholarship I: Transmission of Knowledge and Translation
Organizer: Maha Baddar, Pima Community College; Sally Abed, Univ. of Utah
Presider:
Maha Baddar
Translating Suism in Medieval England: Chaucer and he Conference of Birds
Jonathan Fruoco, Univ. Grenoble Alpes
Medieval Arabic Scholarship: Gateway to the European Renaissance
Norma H. Richardson, Central Michigan Univ.
Jewish-Karaite Medieval Bible Translation and Commentary in Arabic
Ilana Sasson, Sacred Heart Univ.
252 SCHNEIDER 1275
253 SCHNEIDER 1280
New Voices in Early Drama Studies
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS)
Organizer: Christina M. Fitzgerald, Univ. of Toledo
Presider:
Christina M. Fitzgerald
“If a Wheel Be in the Midst of a Wheel”: A Proposal for a Twelve-Station, FiftyPlay, One-Day York Cycle
Arlynda Boyer, Univ. of Toronto
Modeling the Magdalene: Staging Practice and the Question of Orthodoxy in the
Digby Mary Magdalene
Matthew Evan Davis, McMaster Univ.
Appendix’s Paradox: Metatheatricality and Antitheatricality in he Resurrection of
Our Lorde
Jay Zysk, Univ. of Massachusetts–Dartmouth
Bourgeois Virtue, Elite Vice, and Censorship: Cornelis Everaert’s Play about War
and Greed
Mandy L. Albert, Cornell Univ.
81
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Secular Clergy and the Laity II: Becoming a Bishop
Sponsor:
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops and Secular Clergy
in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Michael Burger, Auburn Univ.–Montgomery
Presider:
Evan A. Gatti, Elon Univ.
he Making of Saintly Bishops in Iceland: A Family Business
Tifany White, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Exploiting Early Academic and Pastoral Networks: Richard Gravesend’s Journey
to the Bishopric of Lincoln
Sam Howden, Univ. of Lincoln
Career Paths to the Episcopacy? he Pre-episcopal Careers of Late Medieval Scottish
and Norwegian Bishops
Sarah homas, Univ. of Hull
he Path to the Episcopate in the Norwegian “Skattland” Dioceses, ca. 1250–ca. 1450
Michael Frost, Univ. of Aberdeen
254 SCHNEIDER 1320
he Child in Medieval Romance II: he Curious Child
Sponsor:
Medieval Romance Society
Organizer: Robert Grout, Univ. of York
Presider:
Robert Grout
he Networked Child and Romance Character
Paul A. Broyles, North Carolina State Univ.
he Questioning Child in Middle English Romance
Nicola McDonald, Univ. of York
“Curiouser and Less Curious”: Some Contrasting Examples of the Education Plot
in Old French Verse Romances
Phyllis Gafney, Univ. College Dublin
Friday 1:30 p.m.
255 SCHNEIDER 1325
Early Middle English, the Idea of the Vernacular, and Multilingual Manuscripts
(1100–1350)
Sponsor:
Early Middle English Society
Organizer: Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
Presider:
Carla María homas, New York Univ.
Old Woods, New Forests: Deorfrið in Old and Middle English
Marian Homans-Turnbull, Univ. of California–Berkeley
“On englissch this is youre Pater noster”: English Latin in the Auchinleck Manuscript
Marjorie Harrington, Univ. of Notre Dame
Music, Multilingual Manuscripts, and the Medieval Lyric
Dorothy Kim
256 SCHNEIDER 1330
Cross-Cultural Studies of the Book in the Global Middle Ages I
Sponsor:
Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA), Univ. of
Birmingham; Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of Illinois–
Urbana-Champaign
Organizer: Eleonora Stoppino, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
Presider:
Daniel Reynolds, Univ. of Birmingham
Back and Forth from Manuscript to Edited Format: he Story of a West African
Chronicle
Mauro Nobili, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
he Ethiopian Book between Christendom and Islam
Sean M. Winslow, Univ. of Toronto
Books to Bankroll Buildings: Roman Books in Anglo-Saxon Northumbria
Tom Rochester, Univ. of Birmingham
257 SCHNEIDER 1335
Reformation Discourse II: Reformation(s) across the Disciplines
Sponsor:
Society for Reformation Research
Organizer: Maureen hum, Univ. of Michigan–Flint
Presider:
Benjamin Esswein, Liberty Univ.
Plague Treatises and the German Reformation: he Reform of Healing in Print
Erik Heinrichs, Winona State Univ.
Anatomy of the Reformation: Intersections of Medicine and Religious Change in
Early Sixteenth-Century Germany
S. Michael Malone, St. Louis Univ.
82
Polemic, Rhetoric, and the Boundaries of Propriety in Early Elizabethan England
Alex Ayris, Vanderbilt Univ.
Discussion Leader: Kristin Bezio, Univ. of Richmond
258 SCHNEIDER 1340
259 SCHNEIDER 1345
Games and Visual Culture I
Sponsor:
Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris; Univ. of Wisconsin–
Madison
Organizer: Elizabeth Lapina, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison; Vanina Kopp,
Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris
Presider:
Elizabeth Lapina
Playthings: Bodies, Chessmen, and Tusk
Elina Gertsman, Case Western Reserve Univ.
he Playing Eye: Game Miniatures as Mimetic Instructions
Michael Allman Conrad, Humboldt-Univ. Berlin
“Turne over the leef ”: Games and Interpretation on Misericords
Paul Hardwick, Leeds Trinity Univ.
260 SCHNEIDER 1350
Women and/as Objects: Foreign Brides and Cultural Transmission I
Sponsor:
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Stanford Univ.
Organizer: Fiona J. Griiths, Stanford Univ.; Kathryn Starkey, Stanford Univ.
Presider:
Christian Rafensperger, Wittenberg Univ.
Rus-Born Brides of Polish Rulers and heir Objects in the Twelfth and hirteenth
Centuries: hree Case Studies of Cultural Transfer
Talia Zajac, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Anne of Bohemia and Her Contributions to the Court of Richard II
Kristen Geaman, Univ. of Toledo
83
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Post-War Scholarship and the Study of the Middle Ages I: Gilson
Sponsor:
Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Organizer: Fred Dulson, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Maureen C. Miller,
Univ. of California–Berkeley; R. D. Perry, Univ. of California–
Berkeley
Presider:
Jasmin Miller, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Medieval heology and the Ghosts of Gilson
Jack H. Bell, Duke Univ.
Gilson at the End of the Middle (Ages)
Fred Dulson
he Aesthetics of Gilsonianism
Francesca Murphy, Univ. of Notre Dame
261 SCHNEIDER 1355
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Context of the Codex
Sponsor:
Hagiography Society
Organizer: Sara Ritchey, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Presider:
Sara Ritchey
(Re-)framing Bede’s Historia ecclesiastica as Hagiography in Twelfth-Century Germany: he Codex and Context of Manchester, John Rylands Library, MS Latin 182
Benjamin Pohl, Univ. of Bristol
Reading between the Binds: Scottish Legendary Manuscript
Melissa Coll-Smith, Aquinas College
he Old Norse-Icelandic Maríu saga in Its Manuscript Contexts
Daniel C. Najork, Arizona State Univ.
Signum, Res et Memoriam: Illustrating the Virtues of Saints in Boulogne MS 107
David Defries, Kansas State Univ.
262 SCHNEIDER 1360
Rulership in Medieval Central Europe (Bohemia, Hungary, and Poland): Ideal
and Practice
Sponsor:
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence; Center for Medieval
and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Florida
Organizer: Mildred Budny, Research Group on Manuscript Evidence;
Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida
Presider:
Dušan Zupka, Univ. of Oxford
Rulership in Early Medieval Bohemia: Between Ideals and Everyday Reality
Martin Whoda, Masarykova Univ.
heory and Practice of Legitimizing Royal Power in Early Medieval Hungary:
he Arpadian Dynasty
Vincent Múcska, Comenius Univ.
he Piast Rulership: he Process of Building Dynastic Power
Zbigniew Dalewski, Tadeusz Manteufel Institute of History, Polish Academy of
Sciences
Royal Exercise of Political, Cultural, and Legal Leadership in Fourteenth-Century
East Central Europe
Paul W. Knoll, Univ. of Southern California
263 SCHNEIDER 2335
Changing Representations of the Diferent Forms of Lordship over Noble Persons
in All Contemporary Media, ca. 1270–ca. 1520
Sponsor:
Seigneurie: he International Society for the Study of the
Nobility, Lordship, and Knighthood
Organizer: D’Arcy Jonathan D. Boulton, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
D’Arcy Jonathan D. Boulton
Edward I of England and the Creation of the Image of Royal Lordship on a New,
Arthurian Model (1272–1307)
Brooke Bartosh, Texas Tech Univ.
Resisting the New Solomon: Knightly Kingship and Lordship in the Teseida and
Regia carmina of Fourteenth-Century Naples (1335 –1341)
Tucker Million, Univ. of Rochester
he Look of Magniicence: Clothing a Monarch in Skelton’s Courtly Allegory
(1485–1519)
John Sleinger, Ohio State Univ.
84
264 SCHNEIDER 2345
Medieval Literature as Children’s Literature: Studies in Adaptation I
Organizer: Bruce Gilchrist, Concordia Univ. Montréal
Presider:
Renée Ward, Univ. of Lincoln
he Monsters and the Animals: heriocentric “Beowulfs”
Robert Stanton, Boston College
Landscape and Identity in Anglo-Saxon hemed Novels for Young Adults
Bruce Gilchrist
Poetry and Feminism in Susan Signe Morrison’s Grendel’s Mother
Melissa Filbeck, Texas A&M Univ.
265 SCHNEIDER 2355
266 BERNHARD 106
he Cultures of Georgia and Armenia
Sponsor:
Rare Book Dept., he Free Library of Philadelphia
Organizer: Bert Beynen, Temple Univ.
Presider:
Bert Beynen
he Year 1000 in the Armenian Imagination
Sergio La Porta, California State Univ.–Fresno
Previously Unknown Georgian Manuscript Books in Samarkand
Irine Chachanidze, Akaki Tsereteli State Univ.
MS Cairo Syriac 11: he Tri-Lingual Garshuni Manuscript Dictionary
Ester Petrosyan, Central European Univ.
Forms of Address as Sociolinguistic Markers in the Old Georgian Vita of Grigol
Khandzteli
Tamar Guchua, Akaki Tsereteli State Univ.
he Apostle Andrew in Georgia: A Comparative Study of Literary Sources and
Archaeological Discoveries
Vakhtang Licheli, Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State Univ.
85
Friday 1:30 p.m.
Loneliness and Solitude in Medieval England
Organizer: Travis Neel, Ohio State Univ.; Spencer Strub, Univ. of California–
Berkeley
Presider:
Fiona Somerset, Univ. of Connecticut
he Silence of the Lay Brother: Investigating the Invisible in Carthusian Communities
Francesca Breeden, Univ. of Sheield
“his is youre owen hous, parde”: Imposition, Interruption, and Imprudence in
Troilus and Criseyde
Sarah-Nelle Jackson, Univ. of British Columbia
Style and Loneliness in homas Hoccleve
Andres Millan, Univ. of Chicago
Mapping Eremitic Loneliness
Christopher M. Roman, Kent State Univ.–Tuscarawas
267 BERNHARD 158
Mappings II: Medieval Maps, heir Makers and Users
Organizer: Dan Terkla, Illinois Wesleyan Univ.
Presider:
Rachel Dressler, Univ. at Albany
Seabirds to Starboard: Notes on Norse Navigational Technique
Gaetan Dupont, Cornell Univ.; Oren Falk, Cornell Univ.
he Geography of Devotion in the London Psalter Maps
LauraLee Brott, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Russian “Old Drawing”: he Problem of Attribution
Alexey Frolov, Institute of World History, Russian Academy of Sciences
Friday 1:30 p.m.
268 BERNHARD 204
Queer Temporalities
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of Homosexuality in the Middle Ages
(SSHMA)
Organizer: Lisa M. C. Weston, California State Univ.–Fresno; Graham N.
Drake, SUNY–Geneseo
Presider:
Lisa M. C. Weston
Hanging and Lolling as Queer Temporal Pause in Piers Plowman
Micah Goodrich, Univ. of Connecticut
Asynchronous Anchoritic Love, Medieval/Modern/Modalities
Michelle M. Sauer, Univ. of North Dakota
269 BERNHARD 205
Networks of Books and Readers in the Medieval Mediterranean I: Books
Sponsor:
CU Mediterranean Studies Group
Organizer: Núria Silleras-Fernández, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Presider:
Núria Silleras-Fernández
Illuminating the Scriptorium: A Network of Books from the Monastery of Saint
Michael in Medieval Egypt
Andrea Myers Achi, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
Fantasy Kings and Favorite Sons: Arthurian Inluence in the Writing of Count
Pedro de Barcelós
Taiko M. Haessler, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Syriac Literary Circle at the Mongol Court (Late hirteenth Century)
Anton Pritula, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
270 BERNHARD 208
Medievalism and Immigration I
Sponsor:
International Society for the Study of Medievalism
Organizer: Amy S. Kaufman, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Presider:
Pamela J. Clements, Siena College
Images of Immigration and Notions of Nation in Early Modern Medievalism
Sarah A. Kelen, Nebraska Wesleyan Univ.
Medieval Religion in New France: Marie de l’Incarnation and the Ursuline Nuns
of Québec
Nancy Bradley Warren, Texas A&M Univ.
Arthur Hugh Clough’s Mari Mango, or, How to “Victorianize” he Canterbury Tales
William C. Calin, Univ. of Florida
86
271 BERNHARD 209
he Life Course in Medieval Ireland
Sponsor:
American Society of Irish Medieval Studies (ASIMS)
Organizer: James Lyttleton, Independent Scholar
Presider:
James Lyttleton
he Life Course in Early Medieval Ireland: A Bioarchaeological Approach
Rachel E. Scott, DePaul Univ.
Between Saints and Sinners: Some Early Medieval Perceptions of Childhood and
Adolescence
Erin Abraham, Univ. of Wyoming
272 BERNHARD 210
273 BERNHARD 211
Power and Society in Late Antique Italy II: Transformation of Leadership
Sponsor:
Summer Program “he Birth of Medieval Europe,” Central
European Univ. (CEU)
Organizer: Samuel Cohen, Sonoma State Univ.; Edward M. Schoolman,
Univ. of Nevada–Reno; Laurent J. Cases, Pennsylvania State Univ.
Presider:
Samuel Cohen
he Amali in Rome
Jonathan J. Arnold, Univ. of Tulsa
he Italian Vicarii in the Fourth Century
Laurent J. Cases
he Regionalization of Society in Late Antique Southern Italy
Valerie Ramseyer, Wellesley College
274 BERNHARD 212
Julian, Margery, and heir Reception
Presider:
Jessica Barr, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Fragmentation and Fellowship in Julian of Norwich’s A Revelation of Love
Mahlika Hopwood, Fordham Univ.
Beholding Broken Bodies: Pain as a heological Framework in Julian of Norwich’s
Vision and Revelation
Katherine Briant, Fordham Univ.
“Alle my childeryn, gostly & bodily”: Maternity, Exemplarity, and Lay Clericalism
in he Book of Margery Kempe
Sara Fredman, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Readings in the Margins: Carthusian Reader Annotations in he Book of Margery
Kempe (London, British Library, Add. MS. 61823) and Julian of Norwich’s A
Vision Showed to a Devout Woman (London, British Library, Add. MS. 37790)
Simone Kuegeler–Race, St. John’s College, Univ. of Cambridge
87
Friday 1:30 p.m.
he Great Transition: Climate, Disease, and Society in the Late Medieval World
(A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Contagions: Society for Historic Infectious Disease Studies
Organizer: Michelle Ziegler, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Michelle Ziegler
A roundtable discussion with Philip Slavin, Univ. of Kent; Wendy J. Turner, Augusta
Univ. ; Carenza Lewis, Univ. of Lincoln; Boris Valentijn Schmid, Univ. i Oslo;
Christopher P. Atwood, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Timur Khaydarov, Kazan National
Research Univ.; and Hendrik Poinar, Ancient DNA Centre, McMaster Univ.
275 BERNHARD 213
Friday 1:30 p.m.
he Pilgrim’s Library: Books and Reading on the Medieval Routes to Jerusalem
and Rome
Sponsor:
Pilgrim Libraries (Leverhulme International Research Network,
Birkbeck, Univ. of London)
Organizer: Anthony Bale, Birkbeck, Univ. of London
Presider:
Dee Dyas, Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture,
Univ. of York
he Vercelli Book, the Via Francigena, and Medieval Pilgrimage
Suzanne Hagedorn, College of William & Mary
hree Pilgrims’ Itineraries from Late Medieval England: Problems of Evidence
and Interpretation
Anthony Bale
276 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Cross-Cultural Images and Crafts: Transcultural Objects and Artisanal Migration
Sponsor:
Medieval Academy of America
Organizer: Leor Halevi, Vanderbilt Univ.; Sara Lipton, Stony Brook Univ.
Presider:
Leor Halevi
Mediterranean Stylistic Inluences in the Book of Durrow and the Book of Kells:
Mimesis and Metamorphosis in Irish Manuscript Illumination, 700-1000 CE
Laura McCloskey, Trinity College Dublin, Univ. of Dublin
Christian/Jewish Interaction in Parisian Luxury Workshops of the hirteenth
Century
Sharon Farmer, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Cross-Cultural Animal Fables: Comparative Iconography in hree Kalila wa
Dimna Manuscripts
Anna D. Russakof, American Univ. of Paris
277 SANGREN 1710
Othering Texts in Medieval Literature and Historiography
Sponsor:
Kaiserchronik Project, Dept. of German and Dutch, Univ. of
Cambridge (AHRC Grant)
Organizer: Christoph Pretzer, Univ. of Cambridge
Presider:
homas Foerster, Univ. of Cambridge
Does Evil Break Forth from Out of North? Identity and Alterity in the Idea of the
North in Twelfth-Century Universal Histories
Eric Wolever, Univ. of York
Between Artiice and Manifestation: Poetological Invention and Composition in
Early Vernacular Prologues
Christoph Pretzer
Developing Ethnic Consciousness in Vernacular Chronicles
homas R. Leek, Univ. of Wisconsin–Stevens Point
Inscribing Oneself in the Christian Universe: Strategies of Self-Characterization
in Religious Texts from the Late Middle Ages
Verena Linder-Spohn, Albert-Ludwigs-Univ. Freiburg
Gründler Travel Award Winner
88
278 SANGREN 1720
Stigmata: Bloody Wounds hat Matter I
Sponsor:
Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ.
Organizer: Catherine Mooney, Boston College
Presider:
Lezlie Knox, Marquette Univ.
he Particularity of Francis, according to Bonaventure: he Stigmata, the Sign of
the Living God, and the Franciscan Order
Holly J. Grieco, Siena College
Angela of Foligno, Lovesick for the Cruciied Christ
Travis Stevens, Harvard Univ.
Queering the Wounds of Christ in Late Medieval Books of Hours
Sophie Sexon, Univ. of Glasgow
Respondent: Catherine Mooney
Honoring Joel Rosenthal I: hose Who Fight
Sponsor:
Medieval Prosopography
Organizer: Amy Livingstone, Wittenberg Univ.; Caroline Barron, Royal
Holloway, Univ. of London
Presider:
Linda E. Mitchell, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City
he Old English Boethius, Chapter 17 and the heory of Estates
Paul E. Szarmach, Univ. of California–Berkeley/Western Michigan Univ.
hose Who Fight: Traditions of Military Service and Chivalric Identity in Late
hirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century Florence
Peter W. Sposato, Indiana Univ.–Kokomo
London’s Militia in the hirteenth Century
John McEwan, St. Louis Univ.
Pardons for Self-Defense under Richard II
John Lowell Leland, Salem International Univ.
280 SANGREN 1750
In Honor of Adelaide Bennett Hagens I: Text-Image Dynamics in Medieval
Manuscripts
Sponsor:
Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.
Organizer: Jessica Savage, Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.; Judith
Golden, Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.
Presider:
Judith H. Oliver, Colgate Univ.
Artists and Autonomy: Written Instructions and Preliminary Drawings for the
Illuminator in the Huntington Library Legenda aurea (HM 3027)
Martha Easton, Seton Hall Univ.
Bodies of Words: Text and Image in an Illustrated Anatomical Codex (Bodleian
Library, MS Ashmole 399)
Taylor McCall, Univ. of Cambridge
Sealed with a Kiss: A Votive “Closing” in the Claricia Psalter (Walters MS W.26)
Benjamin C. Tilghman, Lawrence Univ./Material Collective
89
Friday 1:30 p.m.
279 SANGREN 1730
281
SANGREN 1920
Emblem Studies
Sponsor:
Society for Emblem Studies
Organizer: Sabine Moedersheim, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Presider:
Pedro F. Campa, Univ. of Tennessee–Chattanooga
he Emblematum liber: From Poetic Collection to Common-Place Book
Javiera Barrientos Guajardo, Univ. de Chile
Alciato and Religion
Peter M. Daly, McGill Univ.
hreatened Mice: he Image of the Mouse in Kafka and Spiegelman
Bernard Deschamps, McGill Univ.
Friday 3:30 p.m.
282 WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Cantus Hackathon: Create an Inventory with the Cantus Database in Real Time
(A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Cantus: A Database for Latin Ecclesiastical Chant
Organizer: Debra Lacoste, Univ. of Waterloo; Kate Helsen, Western Univ.
Presider:
Debra Lacoste
Participants in this workshop—led by Kate Helsen—receive guest logins to Cantus
and basic instructions for indexing a medieval musical source online. Manuscript
images will be provided, and by the end of the session, the successful contributions of
participants might even become the start of a new Cantus inventory! Participants are
encouraged to bring their laptop computers enabled with WMU WiFi.
—End of 1:30 p.m. Sessions—
3:00–4:00 p.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Fetzer Center
Bernhard Center
Friday, May 12
3:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m.
Sessions 283–342
283 VALLEY III STINSON 306
Sex Makes a Diference: A Panel Discussion on the Work of Joan Cadden
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of Homosexuality in the Middle Ages
(SSHMA)
Organizer: Graham N. Drake, SUNY–Geneseo
Presider:
Graham N. Drake
A panel discussion with Karma Lochrie, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington; Sarah Star,
Univ. of Toronto; and Christopher T. Vaccaro, Univ. of Vermont.
Respondent: Joan Cadden, Univ. of California–Davis
284 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Law, Loopholes, and Justice in Medieval Contexts and Beyond
Sponsor:
Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM)
Organizer: Toy-Fung Tung, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Presider:
Toy-Fung Tung
From Dante’s Inferno to Steinbeck’s he Grapes of Wrath: Usury, the Law, and Loopholes
Lucas J. McCarthy, Western Michigan Univ.
90
“Tenuto buono e male adoperando”: From Trickery to Criminality in Decameron
3.6 and 4.2
Margaret Escher, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Nature, the Ultimate Loophole: Francis Bacon, John Bulwer, and the Psychophysiology of the English Courtroom
Jefrey Wollock, Texas A&M Univ.
285 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
286 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
Medieval Translation heory and Practice II (A Practicum)
Organizer: Jeanette Beer, Univ. of Oxford
Presider:
Jeanette Beer
Stanford Medieval Sourcebook: Translation for a Digital World
Mae Lyons-Penner, Stanford Univ.
Medieval Convent Drama: Translating and Transforming the Liturgy
Elisabeth Dutton, Univ. de Fribourg
Medieval Convent Drama: Translating and Transforming the Liturgy
Matthew Cheung Salisbury, Univ. of Oxford
Respondent: Carol Sweetenham, Univ. of Warwick
287 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
he Medieval Tradition of Natural Law II
Organizer: Harvey Brown, Western Univ.
Presider:
Harvey Brown
Stoic Inluences on Medieval Natural Law hinking
David Conter, Huron Univ. College
A Juridical Debate: Scotisitic and homistic Meta-Ethical Strategies for the Political
Discussion
Matteo Scozia, St. Michael’s College, Univ. of Toronto
Natural Law in Islam
Bernie Koenig, Fanshawe College
91
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Intellect and Cognition in Medieval Philosophy
Sponsor:
Christendom Graduate School
Organizer: Robert Joseph Matava, Christendom Graduate School
Presider:
Robert Joseph Matava
Pieces of an Early Scholastic Self-Knowledge Puzzle: Roger Bacon and PseudoHenry of Ghent’s Commentaries on the Liber de causis
herese Scarpelli Cory, Univ. of Notre Dame
A Parisian heory of the Soul: he Intellect as a Part of the Soul in the hirteenth
Century
Stephen Metzger, Medieval Institute, Univ. of Notre Dame
he Human Soul as “Hoc Aliquid” in Aquinas
Raphael Mary Salzillo, OP, Univ. of Notre Dame
288 VALLEY I HADLEY 102
Celtic Arthurian Literature
Organizer: Lindy Brady, Univ. of Mississippi
Presider:
Lindy Brady
Expedient Complicity in “he Dream of Rhonabwy”: A Historical Analysis
Coral Lumbley, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
Peredur and the Empress of Constantinople: Resistance and Othering in Peredur
fab Efrog
Nahir I. Otaño Gracia, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Parodic Narrative Structure of Breuddwyd Rhonabwy in Context
Irena Kurzová, Independent Scholar
Friday 3:30 p.m.
289 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Criminals, Kings, and Colors: he Study and Reception of Medieval Scandinavian Culture (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
Organizer: Blake Middleton, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of
Aberdeen
Presider:
Irene García Losquiño, Univ. of Aberdeen/Stockholms Univ.
he Semantic Puzzle of Red Gold in the Mythological and Heroic Eddic Poems
Claire Organ, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
Jötnar within the Eddic Narratives
Blake Middleton
he Scandinavian Mirrors for Princes
Heidi Synnove Djuve, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
Political and Military Change in High Medieval Scandinavia
Beñat Elortza, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
he Early Careers of Bishops in Late Medieval Scandinavia
Michael Frost, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
Normativity and Deviancy in Early Medieval Scandinavia
Keith Ruiter, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
Geomythogenesis
Sarah Hofrichter, Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen
290 FETZER 1005
Medieval Games and Pedagogy (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Game Cultures Society
Organizer: Betsy McCormick, Mount San Antonio College
Presider:
Teresa Reed, Jacksonville State Univ.
Using Analog Games to Explore the Ludic Arthur
James Howard, Georgia Institute of Technology
>GET EXCALIBUR: Teaching Medieval Adventure with Text Adventures Games
Paul A. Broyles, North Carolina State Univ.
“Like Medieval Cards against Humanity”: Adapting Le roi qui ne ment for the
British Literature Survey
Nora L. Corrigan, Mississippi Univ. for Women
Serious Play with Serious Medieval Studies: An Approach for Teaching and herapy
Carol L. Robinson, Kent State Univ.–Trumbull
Playing for Keeps: Understanding Early English Literature through Interactive
Gaming
Lauryn S. Mayer, Washington & Jeferson College
92
Gamifying Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales: he Pilgrims as RPG Avatars
Daniel T. Kline, Univ. of Alaska–Anchorage
291 FETZER 1010
292 FETZER 1040
Dress and Textiles III: Interpreting Artifacts
Sponsor:
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile
Arts, Fabrics, and Fashion)
Organizer: Robin Netherton, DISTAFF
Presider:
Robin Netherton
Beginnings and Endings: An Investigation of the Structure and Production of the
Birka Posaments
Jean Kveberg, Independent Scholar
he Canosa Gloves
Gale R. Owen-Crocker, Univ. of Manchester
Finding the hread: he Mystery of the Wellesley heseus Tapestry
Meredith Fluke, Wellesley College
293 FETZER 1045
Good for What Ales You: Alcohol in Medieval Medical Texts
Sponsor:
Medieval Brewers Guild
Organizer: Stephen C. Law, Medieval Brewers Guild/Univ. of Central
Oklahoma
Presider:
Stephen C. Law
he Rise of Beer in Mainstream Western Medicine in the Early Middle Ages
Max Nelson, Univ. of Windsor
Let’s Drink to Her: Alcohol and Women’s Health in the Trotula and the Works of
Hildegard of Bingen
heresa A. Vaughan, Univ. of Central Oklahoma
“Ale-Runes You Must Know”: Runic “Alu” Inscriptions
Stephen Pollington, Independent Scholar
93
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Fragmentology: he Life and Afterlives of Otto F. Ege
Sponsor:
Digital Editing and the Medieval Manuscript: Rolls and Fragments
(DEMMR/F)
Organizer: Elizabeth K. Hebbard, Univ. of New Hampshire
Presider:
Elizabeth K. Hebbard
Being Incomplete Outweighed Quality and Rarity in the Creation of the Ege
Portfolios: A Case Study
Judith H. Oliver, Colgate Univ.
Ege’s Problematic Altruism and the Fragmentation of Scholarly Labor in DH
Projects: he Harry Ransom Center’s Foliophiles and Defunct Medieval Fragments
Project
Elon Lang, Univ. of Texas–Austin
“Fifty Original Leaves” Example No. 8: Otto Ege and the Transmission of the
Wilton Processional
Alison Altstatt, Univ. of Northern Iowa
Ege in the Classroom: he Pedagogical Possibilities
Lisa Fagin Davis, Medieval Academy of America
294 FETZER 1060
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Writing Trouble: Emotional French Literary Reaction to the Reigns of Charles VI
and Charles VII
Organizer: Charles-Louis Morand Métivier, Univ. of Vermont
Presider:
Charles-Louis Morand Métivier
Poetic Expiration: Jean Gerson’s Deploratio studii parisiensis
Matthew Vanderpoel, Univ. of Chicago
Grieving in the Court of Charles the VI: Philippe de Mézières’s Livre de la vertu
du sacrement de mariage
Rachel Geer, Univ. of Virginia
Sturm und Drang. Weather Phenomena as Emotional Expressions and Propaganda
Tools in Michel Pintoin’s Chronicle
Christine Eckholst, Independent Scholar
295 FETZER 2016
In Honor of Caroline Palmer II: Romancing Material Culture: Falling in Love
with and in Medieval Manuscripts
Organizer: Elizabeth Archibald, Durham Univ.; Christopher Baswell,
Barnard College; Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Fordham Univ.
Presider:
Elizabeth Archibald
Touching the Past/Being Touched by the Past
Asa Simon Mittman, California State Univ.–Chico
English Trilingual Manuscripts: Still Waiting to Be Heard
Susanna Fein, Kent State Univ.
Pierced, Layered, Bent: Temporalities and the Manuscript Encounter
Christopher Baswell
296 FETZER 2020
New Research in Parish Church Art and Architecture in England and on the
Continent, 1100–1600 II
Organizer: Sarah Blick, Kenyon College
Presider:
Louise Hampson, Centre for the Study of Christianity and
Culture, Univ. of York
Much More han the Storage Room of a Church: he Function, Symbolism, and
Prestige of the Treasury Room in the Late Middle Ages
Claire LaBrecque, Univ. of Winnipeg
License and Conformity in the Parish Churches of the Parisian Cathedral Chapter
Lindsay S. Cook, Columbia Univ.
Totternhoe Clunch, Greensand, Oolitic Limestone: Using Local Materials in the
Medieval Churches of Bedfordshire
David H. Kennett, Independent Scholar
homas Loveday and homas Gooch: Two Sufolk Late Medieval Carpenters and
heir Surviving Works
Lucy Wrapson, Hamilton Kerr Institute, Univ. of Cambridge
297 FETZER 2030
“Ungelic is us”: Queer Old English Elegies
Organizer: Elan Justice Pavlinich, Univ. of South Florida
Presider:
Elan Justice Pavlinich
Inhuman Intimacies in Wulf and Eadwacer
Eliot Rosch-Eifert, Independent Scholar
94
Our Islands: Queering the Non-human in Anglo-Saxon Elegies
Jes Battis, Univ. of Regina
“Heofen Rece Swealg”: Pagan Tradition and the Ambiguous Afterlife in Beowulf
Harley Joyce Campbell, Univ. of South Florida
he Queer Art of Anger: Failure, Rage, and Relationships in Old English Elegies
Marjorie Housley, Univ. of Notre Dame
298 FETZER 2040
Beowulf
299 SCHNEIDER 1120
Materiality and Place in the Northern World II
Sponsor:
Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and
Manuscript Research
Organizer: Catherine E. Karkov, Univ. of Leeds
Presider:
Catherine E. Karkov
King of the Island(s): Arthur and Glastonbury Abbey
Geneviève Pigeon, Univ. du Québec–Montréal
Sanctus Locus, Sanctus Corpus: Saints, Relics, and Religious Devotion in TenthCentury England
Abigail G. Robertson, Univ. of New Mexico
Magic-Making and Place-Taking: Celtic Women in the Old Norse Sagas
Brianna McElrath Panasenco, Univ. of California–Berkeley
300 SCHNEIDER 1125
Medieval Song
Sponsor:
Organizer:
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Anna Kathryn Grau
“O si michi rethorica”: he Tradition and Transformation of a Latin Leich
Charles E. Brewer, Florida State Univ.
he Resonance of Borrowed Melody in Troubadour Song
Katie Chapman, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Oublie Tes Dolours: A New Garland Helps to Dispel Old Myths
Jane Alden, Wesleyan Univ.
95
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Presider:
Melissa Mayus, Western Michigan Univ.
Fear and Free-Will in the Monsters of Beowulf
Alex Ukropen, Univ. of New Mexico
Gender and the Dragon
Seth Hunter Koproski, Cornell Univ.
Beauty, Terror, and Shiny Objects in Beowulf
Peter Ramey, Northern State Univ.
301 SCHNEIDER 1130
Revisiting and Redeining Rome and Its Inluences: A Session in Honor of Judson
Emerick
Sponsor:
Claremont Consortium for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Organizer: Nancy van Deusen, Claremont Graduate Univ.
Presider:
Ellen Rentz, Claremont McKenna College
Emerick’s Early Medieval Rome
Erik hunø, Rutgers Univ.
he Pontiical of the Roman Curia and “Old” Roman Chant
James Borders, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Rome Has Fallen: Considering the Middle Ages between the Falls of Rome
Justin Ahlgren, Univ. of Dallas
Friday 3:30 p.m.
302 SCHNEIDER 1135
Geoinformatics: Challenges of Medieval Geodata and Digital Maps
Sponsor:
Medieval Association of Place and Space (MAPS)
Organizer: Matthew Boyd Goldie, Rider Univ.
Presider:
Matthew Boyd Goldie
Geodatabases Design for Medieval Islamic Maps: Azimuth, Altitude
Karen Pinto, Boise State Univ.; Kathleen M. Baker, Western Michigan Univ.
he Oxford Outremer Map and the Challenge of Translating Space
Tobias Hrynick, Fordham Univ.
Virtual Pilgrims, Virtual Maps: Using GIS to Understand Late Medieval “Representational Space”
Kathryne Beebe, Univ. of Texas–Arlington
Spatializing Information and Informatizing Space
Angela R. Bennett, Univ. of Nevada–Reno
303 SCHNEIDER 1145
French Romance
Presider:
Susan Hopkirk, Univ. of Toronto
Undercover Operations: he Cose Couverte of Amadas et Ydoine
Jenny Tan, Univ. of California–Berkeley
“Aprenez ille a coudre et ailer”: Lyrical Embroidery in Guillaume de Dole
Morgan Boharski, Univ. of Edinburgh
304 SCHNEIDER 1155
Death and Rebirth in the Pearl-Poet
Sponsor:
Pearl-Poet Society
Organizer: Kara Larson Maloney, Binghamton Univ.
Presider:
B. S. W. Barootes, Univ. of Toronto
Physical Origins, Spiritual Gifts: Virtue and the hreefold Boundary in the
Pearl-Poet
Michelle E. Parsons-Powell, Purdue Univ.
he Jeweler’s Rebirth: Non-Transformative Narrative in Pearl
William M. Storm, Eastern Univ.
Symbolic Death and Rebirth in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Mickey Sweeney, Dominican Univ.
Disigurement and the Dead: A Case for Common Authorship of the Cotton
Nero A.x Poems and Saint Erkenwald
Jessica Troy, Univ. of New Mexico
96
305 SCHNEIDER 1160
306 SCHNEIDER 1220
Beyond the Portraits: Chaucer and the Visual
Sponsor:
Chaucer MetaPage
Organizer: Susan Yager, Iowa State Univ.
Presider:
Elise E. Morse-Gagné, Tougaloo College
Dramatizing he Nun’s Priest’s Tale
Bernard Lewis, Murray State Univ.
Images of a Modern Chaucer
Susan Yager
Revisualizing the Chaucer MetaPage
Vaughn Stewart, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
307 SCHNEIDER 1225
Early Medieval Europe III: Intellectuals and the Wider World
Sponsor:
Early Medieval Europe
Organizer: Deborah M. Deliyannis, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Deborah M. Deliyannis
he Pentateuch Diagram in the Codex Amiatinus
Peter Darby, Univ. of Nottingham
Writings for “Alypius” in the Circle of Alcuin
Christopher A. Jones, Ohio State Univ.
he Pilgrim’s Reward: Early Medieval Conceptions of the Beneits of the Jerusalem
Pilgrimage
John Howe, Texas Tech Univ.
97
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Material Histories of Exchange II: Transmission of Dress and Ornament in
Byzantium and Beyond
Sponsor:
Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture
Organizer: Annie Montgomery Labatt, Univ. of Texas–San Antonio;
Heather Badamo, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Presider:
Annie Montgomery Labatt
Appealing to the Senses: Experiencing Adornment in the Early Medieval Mediterranean
Elizabeth Dospel Williams, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection/
George Washington Univ.
Ceremonial Arms and Armor: Fashioning Visual Charisma at the Mediterranean
Court
Heather Badamo
English Visions of the East in Textile and Floor Tile: Multicultural Imagery under
Henry III and Eleanor of Provence (ca. 1250)
Amanda Luyster, College of the Holy Cross
Friday 3:30 p.m.
308 SCHNEIDER 1245
he Western Iberian Kingdoms after 1143 II
Sponsor:
Instituto de Estudios Medievales, Univ. de Lén; Instituto de
Estudos Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
Organizer: María Dolores Teijeira Pablos, Instituto de Estudios Medievales,
Univ. de Lén; Alicia Miguélez Cavero, Instituto de Estudos
Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
Presider:
María Dolores Teijeira Pablos
Circulation of Musical Models in Central and Western Iberia: From Liturgical
Voice to the Troubadours (ca. 1100–1300)
Manuel Pedro Ferreira, Centro de Estudos de Sociologia e Estética Musical; Diogo
Alte da Veiga, Centro de Estudos de Sociologia e Estética Musical
Blas Fernández de Toledo (1372): A Bishop Promoter of the Arts in the Kingdoms
of Castile and Portugal
María Victoria Herráez Ortega, Univ. de Lén
Refugee Crisis? he Sephardic Diaspora in Portugal (1492–1506)
Pedro Martínez, Independent Scholar
309 SCHNEIDER 1255
Order out of Chaos: Conlict and Resolution in Medieval Culture
Sponsor:
Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance
Studies (TACMRS)
Organizer: Carolyn F. Scott, National Cheng Kung Univ.
Presider:
Brent Addison Moberly, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
he Contention and Resolution in Love in he Parliament of Fowls
Hasting G. Chen, National Taiwan Univ.
“With His Warcus Wylde”: Order out of Chaos in Sir Gowther and he King of Tars
Carolyn F. Scott
East-West Conlict Revisited: Kyng Alisaunder
Francis K. H. So, Kaohsiung Medical Univ.
310 SCHNEIDER 1265
Medieval Arabic Scholarship II: Medieval Arab(ic) Feminisms
Organizer: Maha Baddar, Pima Community College; Sally Abed, Univ. of
Utah
Presider:
Norma H. Richardson, Central Michigan Univ.
Female Agency within the Conines of the Medieval Harem
Maha Baddar
he Other Woman in the Arabian Nights: A Diferent Interpretation
Sally Abed
Alkhansaa and the Tradition of Pre-Islamic and Early Islamic Female Poets in the
Arabian Peninsula
Doaa Omran, Univ. of New Mexico
Female Intellectual Spaces in al-Andalus
Jessica Zeitler, Pima Community College
98
311 SCHNEIDER 1275
312 SCHNEIDER 1280
New Approaches to Drama Records: East Anglian Play Texts and Nearby Archives
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS)
Organizer: Matthew Sergi, Univ. of Toronto
Presider:
Matthew Sergi
he Conversion of Saint Paul: Can the Play Text and the Archival Records Have a
Mutually Illuminating Conversation?
James Stokes, Univ. of Wisconsin–Stevens Point
East Anglian Staging(s) of he Conversion of Saint Paul
Gordon Kipling, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Mayoral Entries in Late Sixteenth-Century Norwich: Shillings, Staging, and Civic
Pride
Colin Rowley, Univ. of Toronto
Kingmaking and Playmaking in Fifteenth-Century East Anglia: Records of Drama and Performance during the War of the Roses
John A. Geck, Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland
313 SCHNEIDER 1320
he Child in Medieval Romance III: he Abused Child
Sponsor:
Medieval Romance Society
Organizer: Robert Grout, Univ. of York
Presider:
Rachel E. Moss, Corpus Christi College, Univ. of Oxford
Where the Wild hings Are: Rethinking Childhood Anger and Romance
Yu-Ching Wu, Univ. at Bufalo
Havelok’s Sisters: Vulnerability and the Child Body
Eve Salisbury, Western Michigan Univ.
Medieval Children: Not a Very “Fair Game”?
Jean E. Jost, Bradley Univ.
99
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Secular Clergy and the Laity III: Episcopal Roles
Sponsor:
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops and Secular Clergy
in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Michael Burger, Auburn Univ.–Montgomery
Presider:
Kalani Craig, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Friendship, Queenship, and Investiture: he Function of Friendship between
Saint Anselm, Queen Matilda, and Countess Matilda of Tuscany
Hollie Devaney, Univ. of Hull
Conjuratio Concordiam? Intentionality and Sorcery in the Conlict between the
Bishop of Mende and the Lord Apcher
Jan K. Bulman, Auburn Univ.–Montgomery
“In my lands I will be pope, archbishop, bishop, archdeacon, and dean”: Secular
Princes and Prince-Bishops in Pre-Reformation Germany
Brian A. Pavlac, King’s College, Pennsylvania
314 SCHNEIDER 1325
Teaching Early Middle English (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Early Middle English Society
Organizer: Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
Presider:
Scott Kleinman, California State Univ.–Northridge
A roundtable discussion with Carla María homas, New York Univ.; Leslie Carpenter,
Fordham Univ.; Elizabeth Canon, Missouri Western State Univ.; and Meg Worley,
Colgate Univ.
Friday 3:30 p.m.
315 SCHNEIDER 1330
Cross-Cultural Studies of the Book in the Global Middle Ages II
Sponsor:
Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA), Univ. of
Birmingham; Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of Illinois–
Urbana-Champaign
Organizer: Eleonora Stoppino, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
Presider:
Eleonora Stoppino
Before and beyond the King’s Book: Reading the Material Remains of the Domesday
Survey
Carol Symes, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
English Books at a Scottish Court: he Books of Saint Margaret of Scotland (d. 1093)
Claire Harrill, Univ. of Birmingham
he Library of Anne de Graville (ca. 1490–1540): (A)Typical Collection?
Elizabeth L’Estrange, Univ. of Birmingham
Margaret Tudor (Wife of James IV) and Her Books
Emily Wingield, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
316 SCHNEIDER 1335
Reformation Discourse III: Recording and Strategizing the Reformation: History,
Biography, Polemic
Sponsor:
Society for Reformation Research
Organizer: Maureen hum, Univ. of Michigan–Flint
Presider:
S. Michael Malone, St. Louis Univ.
he Early John Knox and the Body of Christ
Rudolph P. Almasy, West Virginia Univ.
Monster or Reformer? Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and the Historical Anne Boleyn
Maureen hum
A 1513 Plea to Pope Leo X to Reform the Church
James Kroemer, Concordia Univ. Wisconsin
Discussion Leader: Erik Heinrichs, Winona State Univ.
317 SCHNEIDER 1340
Post-War Scholarship and the Study of the Middle Ages II: Zumthor
Sponsor:
Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Organizer: Fred Dulson, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Maureen C. Miller,
Univ. of California–Berkeley; R. D. Perry, Univ. of California–
Berkeley
Presider:
Michelle Ripplinger, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Mouvance, Motion, and the Experience of Poetic Form
Seeta Chaganti, Univ. of California–Davis
Paul Zumthor between Lyric and Narrative
David F. Hult, Univ. of California–Berkeley
100
he Place of the Medieval in Modern Hermeneutics: Zumthor, Jauss, and Gadamer
Benjamin A. Saltzman, California Institute of Technology
318 SCHNEIDER 1345
319 SCHNEIDER 1350
Women and/as Objects: Foreign Brides and Cultural Transmission II
Sponsor:
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Stanford Univ.
Organizer: Fiona J. Griiths, Stanford Univ.; Kathryn Starkey, Stanford Univ.
Presider:
Fiona J. Griiths
Blanche: From Castilian Infanta to Queen of France
Lucy K. Pick, Univ. of Chicago
Banners for New Ideas: Textiles as Ideal Medium for Cultural Transfer by Women
Stefanie Seeberg, Univ. zu Köln
Mother, Daughter, Brides and Psalters: Anglo-French-Norwegian Connections in
the Early hirteenth Century
Ragnhild M. Bø, Univ. i Oslo
320 SCHNEIDER 1355
hirty Years of Feasting and Fasting: A Roundtable on Caroline Bynum’s Holy
Feast and Holy Fast, 1987–2017 (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Hagiography Society
Organizer: Sara Ritchey, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Presider:
Neslihan Senocak, Columbia Univ.
A roundtable discussion with Barbara Newman, Northwestern Univ.; Sara S. Poor,
Princeton Univ.; Dyan Elliott, Northwestern Univ.; and Steven P. Marrone, Tufts Univ.
101
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Games and Visual Culture II
Sponsor:
Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris; Univ. of Wisconsin–
Madison
Organizer: Vanina Kopp, Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris; Elizabeth
Lapina, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Presider:
Vanina Kopp
Games and Artistic Intimations in Dante’s Commedia
Aniello Di Iorio, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
he Nobility of Losing: Chess and Cultural Crossings in Boccaccio
Akash Kumar, Univ. of California–Santa Cruz
Perpetual Play: Games, Storytelling, and Dissent in Sixteenth-Century Siena
Karina F. Attar, Queens College, CUNY
Medieval Play Studies: Early English Drama, Ludi, and Games
Nathan Kelber, Univ. of Maryland
321 SCHNEIDER 1360
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Military Orders and Crusades in Comparative Perspective: he Levant, Spain,
and the Baltic Region
Sponsor:
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence; Center for Medieval
and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Florida
Organizer: Mildred Budny, Research Group on Manuscript Evidence
Presider:
Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida
he Templars and the Confraternity of Belchite: A Comparison of Origins
Andrew Holt, Florida State College at Jacksonville
An Archaeology of the Military Orders in the Holy Land?
James G. Schryver, Univ. of Minnesota–Morris
Intraverunt terram horroris et vaste solitudinis: he Teutonic Order and Landscape Sacralization in the Crusade to Prussia
Gregory Leighton, Cardif Univ.
322 SCHNEIDER 2335
Knights, Squires, and (Mere) Gentlemen: Changing Relationships between
Knighthood and Nobility in Western Europe, ca. 1100–ca. 1400
Sponsor:
Seigneurie: he International Society for the Study of the
Nobility, Lordship, and Knighthood
Organizer: D’Arcy Jonathan D. Boulton, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
Peter W. Sposato, Indiana Univ.–Kokomo
he Emergence and Decline of Knightly Status as the Focus of Vernacular Didactic
Discourse on the Ideal Qualities and Behaviors of a Nobleman, ca. 1170–ca. 1380
D’Arcy Jonathan D. Boulton
“Pryvee and Apert”: he Evolution of a Consciousness of Gentility in he Wife of
Bath’s Tale, ca. 1385
Nicholas Dalbey, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
323 SCHNEIDER 2345
Medieval Literature as Children’s Literature: Studies in Adaptation II
Organizer: Bruce Gilchrist, Concordia Univ. Montréal
Presider:
Bruce Gilchrist
he Pleasure and Pain of Queen Vashti: A Medieval Judeo-Provençal Adaptation
of the “Book of Esther” for a Public Audience
Lisa Bevevino, Univ. of Minnesota–Morris
“Valentine and Orson” from Medieval French Romance to Chapbook to Picture Book
Johanna Denzin, Columbia College
Children’s Literature and Canonical Adaptation as Resistance Literature: he
Case of Spenser’s Faerie Queene
Charlotte Speilman, York Univ.
324 SCHNEIDER 2355
he Legacy of he Cult of Saint Swithun: In Honor of Michael Lapidge
Organizer: Jennifer Lorden, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Justin G. Park,
Yale Univ.; Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
Presider:
Katherine O’Brien O’Keefe, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Saint Swithun’s Healing Miracles and Medical Practice in Winchester
Rebecca Stephenson, Univ. College Dublin
102
Uncertain Judgment: Rethinking the Ordeal in Lantfred’s Translatio et miracula
s. Swithuni
Andrew Rabin, Univ. of Louisville
he Life of Saint Swithun in William Caxton’s Golden Legend
Judy Ann Ford, Texas A&M Univ.–Commerce
325 BERNHARD 106
326 BERNHARD 158
Honoring Joel Rosenthal II: hose Who Work
Sponsor:
Medieval Prosopography
Organizer: Amy Livingstone, Wittenberg Univ.; Caroline Barron, Royal
Holloway, Univ. of London
Presider:
Charlotte Newman Goldy, Miami Univ. of Ohio
Laboratores as Serfs in Anglo-Saxon England
Paul R. Hyams, Cornell Univ./Univ. of Oxford
Why Did the Knight, the Prioress, and the Ploughman Stay at the Tabard? he
Rise of Inns in Chaucer’s England
Martha Carlin, Univ. of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
he 1450 Purge of the English Royal Household
A. Compton Reeves, Ohio Univ.
Respondent: Joel T. Rosenthal, Stony Brook Univ.
327 BERNHARD 204
Posthuman Piers
Sponsor:
International Piers Plowman Society; Medieval Ecocriticisms
Organizer: William Rhodes, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Presider:
William Rhodes
How Should a Personiication Be
Alexis Kellner Becker, Univ. of Chicago
Edible Characters in Piers Plowman
Sarah Wood, Univ. of Warwick; Michael Calabrese, California State Univ.–Los
Angeles
he Will, he Flesh, and Langland’s Biopolitics
Matthew Brown, Texas Woman’s Univ.
103
Friday 3:30 p.m.
In Honor of Adelaide Bennett Hagens II: Signs of Patronage in Medieval Manuscripts
Sponsor:
Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.
Organizer: Jessica Savage, Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.; Judith
Golden, Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ.
Presider:
M. Alison Stones, Univ. of Pittsburgh
How Owner Portraits Work
Maeve Doyle, Bryn Mawr College
he Patroness Portrait of the Fécamp Psalter (ca. 1180): An Unknown Example of
Royal Artistic Commission in Angevin Normandy
Jesús Rodríguez Viejo, Univ. of Edinburgh
Patron Portrait as Creation Myth: On “Production Scenes” in Illuminated Manuscripts
Shannon L. Wearing, Univ. of California–Irvine
328 BERNHARD 205
Networks of Books and Readers in the Medieval Mediterranean II: Readers
Sponsor:
CU Mediterranean Studies Group
Organizer: Núria Silleras-Fernández, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Presider:
Núria Silleras-Fernández
Reading Petrarch’s Triumphs across the Medieval Mediterranean
Leonardo Francalanci, Univ. of Notre Dame
Corbaccio’s Ambiguity and Parody in Bernat Metge’s Lo somni
Pau Cañigueral Batllosera, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Reading, Copying, and Translating the Hebrew Sefer Josippon in Renaissance Italy
Nadia Zeldes, Ben-Gurion Univ. of the Negev
Friday 3:30 p.m.
329 BERNHARD 208
Medievalism and Immigration II
Sponsor:
International Society for the Study of Medievalism
Organizer: Amy S. Kaufman, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Presider:
Elizabeth Wawrzyniak, Marquette Univ.
Medievalism, Brexit, and the Myth of Nations
Andrew B. R. Elliott, Univ. of Lincoln
“I’m 20% Viking”: Englishness, Immigration, and the Public Reception of Historical DNA
Michael Evans, Delta College
330 BERNHARD 209
Asceticism and Philosophy in Medieval Asia Minor and Central and South Eastern
Europe
Sponsor:
Romanian Institute of Orthodox heology and Spirituality of
New York
Organizer: heodor Damian, Metropolitan College of New York
Presider:
Daniela Anghel, Romanian Institute of Orthodox heology
and Spirituality of New York
Interdisciplinary Endeavors in Gregory of Nazianzus’s Poetry
heodor Damian
he Ascetic Agenda of Nilus of Ancyra
Clair McPherson, General heological Seminary of the Episcopal Church
Radical Incarnation: he Body in the Hesychast Tradition
Alina N. Feld, General heological Seminary of the Episcopal Church
331 BERNHARD 210
Older Scots: Texts and Transmission
Sponsor:
Scottish Text Society
Organizer: Nicola Royan, Univ. of Nottingham
Presider:
Tim Machan, Univ. of Notre Dame
“Quhat awnteris þat thare befell”: Printing Sir Eglamour in Scotland
Mimi Ensley, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presenting Older Scots in the Twenty-First Century
Nicola Royan
104
332 BERNHARD 211
Stigmata: Bloody Wounds hat Matter II
Sponsor:
Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ.
Organizer: Catherine Mooney, Boston College
Presider:
Catherine Mooney
Who Could Bear the Stigmata? Some Late Medieval Views
Carolyn Muessig, Univ. of Bristol
he Stigmata of Blessed Helen of Hungary (d. ca. 1241): A Late Medieval Invention?
Gabor Klaniczay, Central European Univ.
Imitation and Feeling: Sorrow and Compassion in the Stigmata of Elizabeth of
Spalbeek
Mary Anne Gonzales, Univ. of Guelph
Respondent: Lezlie Knox, Marquette Univ.
Interpersonal Afairs
Sponsor:
Spenser at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Rachel E. Hile, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne;
Susannah B. Monta, Univ. of Notre Dame; Jennifer Vaught,
Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Presider:
William A. Oram, Smith College
“hat lothly uncouth sight / Of men disguiz’d in womanishe attire”: he Gender,
Politics, and Justice of Spenser’s Loathly Ladies
Megan Herrold, Univ. of Southern California
On Not Plucking Out the Heart of Amoret’s Mystery: Epistemological Graciousness
and Interpersonal Knowledge in the House of Busirane
Brad Tuggle, Univ. of Alabama
Five Familiar Letters: he Harvey-Spenser Correspondence
Joseph Loewenstein, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Closing Remarks
David Lee Miller, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
334 BERNHARD 213
he Faith in One’s Food: Food as an Aspect of Religious Proselytization and Polemic
Sponsor:
Mens et Mensa: Society for the Study of Food in the Middle
Ages
Organizer: John August Bollweg, College of DuPage
Presider:
Natalie E. Latteri, Univ. of New Mexico
he Meals and Manipulation of Margery Kempe
Katherine Gubbels, Memphis College of Art
he Problem with Pork: Anxiety and Consumption in Medieval Spain
Martha M. Daas, Old Dominion Univ.
Food and Religious Identity in Early Yiddish Epic
Margot B. Valles, Michigan State Univ.
105
Friday 3:30 p.m.
333 BERNHARD 212
335 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Trading with Inidels: Legal Approaches to Interfaith Commerce
Sponsor:
Medieval Academy of America
Organizer: Leor Halevi, Vanderbilt Univ.; Sara Lipton, Stony Brook Univ.
Presider:
Leor Halevi
Trading on Identity: Geniza Merchants and the Law
Jessica Goldberg, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Beyond Trade and Crusade: Venetian and Genoese Perspectives toward Trade with
the Inidel
Stefan Stantchev, Arizona State Univ.
he Iberian Paradox: Trade with Muslims and Legal Fluctuations from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic (Fourteenth–Fifteenth Century)
Giuseppe Marcocci, Univ. degli Studi di Tuscia
336 SANGREN 1710
For the Love of Linguistics and Literature: Papers on the Medieval Period
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Languages and Linguistics
Organizer: Andrew C. Troup, California State Univ.–Bakersield
Presider:
Paul A. Johnston, Jr., Western Michigan Univ.
Beowulf and Judith: Utilization of Umlaut among Translations and Folios
Jeanette Jacobsen, Leupp Schools
he Old English Digraph and Its Sound Correspondences: Using Early Middle
English Texts as Evidence
Gjertrud F. Stenbrenden, Univ. i Oslo
“My lover: do I dare call you so?”: Narrative Implicatures in An Orison of Our Lord
Margaret Hostetler, Univ. of Wisconsin–Oshkosh
Word-Foot Iambic Meter in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Geofrey Richard Russom, Brown Univ.
337 SANGREN 1720
Hell Studies: Hellish Remixes
Sponsor:
Societas Daemonetica
Organizer: Richard Ford Burley, Boston College
Presider:
Nicole Ford Burley, Boston Univ.
Sympathetic Satan Before Milton Remix: he Characterization of Satan and the
Harrowing of Hell in Christ and Satan and York Corpus Christi Plays
Alexis M. Milmine, Texas Tech Univ.
Upon the Wicked Stage: he Devil in English Drama From the Medieval Period
to Modernity
Laura Elizabeth Rice, HIDden heatre
he Undead Shoemaker: Confessional Conlict and the Afterlife in Breslau, 1591
Donald Fleming, Kent State Univ.
338 SANGREN 1730
Hildegard von Bingen: Bridges to Ininity
Sponsor:
International Society of Hildegard von Bingen Studies
Organizer: Pozzi Escot, New England Conservatory
Presider:
Conrad Herold, Hofstra Univ.
Possible Compositional Processes in the Works of Hildegard von Bingen
Charles Tarver, Independent Scholar
106
he Untempered Voice: Structural Functions in the Music of Hildegard von Bingen
Revealed by Unequal Temperaments
Matthew McConnell, First Baptist Church of North Adams
Hildegard in the Twenty-First Century: A Musical Essay Honoring Hildegard
Amy Hendrikson, Independent Scholar
“God has arranged all things in the world in consideration of everything else,”
Hildegard von Bingen
Shanon Sterringer, St. Anthony of Padua Church
339 SANGREN 1750
340 SANGREN 1920
Access and the Academy (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
BABEL Working Group
Organizer: Robin Norris, Carleton Univ.
Presider:
Richard H. Godden, Loyola Univ. New Orleans
he “Diagnosis” of Pregnancy and Academic Anxiety
Mary Rambaran-Olm, Univ. of Glasgow
Re-visualizing Medieval Studies
Anessa Kemna, St. Louis Univ.
Teaching and Access
Joshua Eyler, Rice Univ.
How to Use Content Warnings
Kaitlin Heller, Syracuse Univ.
341 LEE HONORS COLLEGE
Teaching Monasticism (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan
Univ.
Organizer: Susan M. B. Steuer, Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies,
Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Stefano Mula, Middlebury College
A panel discussion with Virginia Blanton, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City; Rabia
Gregory, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia; Colleen Maura McGrane, OSB, Benedictine
Sisters of Perpetual Adoration; Alcuin Schachenmayr, Pontiical Athenaeum Benedict
XVI. Heiligenkreuz; and Judith Sutera, OSB, Mount St. Scholastica.
107
Friday 3:30 p.m.
Topics in the Economic History of the Late Middle Ages
Presider:
David Sorenson, Allen G. Berman, Numismatist
Pepo degli Albizzi and the Wool Market in Fourteenth-Century Florence: Registers
of An Original Unedited and Unpublished Secret Diary
Lorenzo Schiavetta, Illinois State Univ.
Tuccio di Gennaio’s Wool Accounts: Double-Entry Book-Keeping and Triple-Entry
Commodity Accounting for Wool Acquisition in San Matteo, 1397–1399
Eleanor A. Congdon, Youngstown State Univ.
Mysticeti Mysteries Uncovered: he Use of Whale Baleen in Paris at the Turn of
the Sixteenth Century
Katherine Baker, Arkansas State Univ.
342 WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Medieval Electronic Scholarly Alliance (MESA): A Hands-On Workshop
Sponsor:
Medieval Electronic Scholarly Alliance (MESA)
Organizer: Timothy Stinson, North Carolina State Univ.
Presider:
Dorothy Carr Porter, Univ. of Pennsylvania
his workshop demonstrates basic MESA functionalities, discusses how to federate projects within MESA, and practices using MESA for research and pedagogical
purposes. No previous experience or technical expertise is required. Participants are
encouraged to bring their laptop computers enabled with WMU WiFi.
—End of 3:30 p.m. Sessions—
Friday evening
Friday, May 12
Evening Events
5:00 p.m.
WINE HOUR
Reception with hosted bar in honor of
the winner of the twenty-irst Otto
Gründler Book Prize
Valley III
Harrison 301
Eldridge 310
5:00 p.m.
Univ. of Aberdeen
Reception
Valley I
Shilling Lounge
5:00 p.m.
BABEL Working Group; Material
Collective
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard
President’s
Dining Room
5:15 p.m.
Society for the Study of
Disability in the Middle Ages
Business Meeting
Valley II
LeFevre Lounge
5:15 p.m.
Medieval Ireland Reception
Sponsored by the American Society
of Irish Medieval Studies (ASIMS)
Fetzer 1005
5:15 p.m.
Medieval Association of Place and
Space (MAPS)
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1030
5:15 p.m.
Medieval and Renaissance Drama
Society (MRDS)
Business Meeting with cash bar
Fetzer 1060
5:15 p.m.
Medica: he Society for the Study
of Healing in the Middle Ages
Reception with cash bar
Fetzer 2030
5:15 p.m.
Research Group on Manuscript
Evidence; Index of Christian Art,
Princeton Univ.
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard G10
108
International Arthurian Society,
North American Branch (IAS/NAB)
Reception with cash bar
Bernhard 210
5:15 p.m.
Franciscan Gathering
sponsored by the Franciscan Institute,
St. Bonaventure Univ.
Bernhard 211
5:15 p.m.
14th Century Society
Business Meeting
Bernhard 212
5:15 p.m.
Italian Art Society
Bernhard 213
Business Meeting and Reception with cash bar
5:15 p.m.
Vagantes Graduate Student
Conference
Business Meeting
Bernhard 215
5:30 p.m.
Coptic Stitch Binding (A Hands-On
Workshop)
Valley I
Ackley 104
Sponsor: Kalamazoo Book Arts Center (KBAC)
Organizer: Elizabeth C. Teviotdale, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider: Katie Platte, Kalamazoo Book Arts Center
his two-hour hands-on workshop, taught by the Kalamazoo
Book Arts Center’s Studio Manager, Katie Platte, introduces
participants to the traditional sewing technique known as Coptic
stitch binding, which they use in creating a bound book. Space is
limited, advance registration (to
[email protected]) is required,
and each participant pays a $10.00 materials fee.
5:30 p.m.
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, Fetzer 1035
and Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics, and
Fashion)
Exhibition
A display of reproduction textile and dress items, handmade using
medieval methods and materials. Items will include textiles, decorative treatments, garments, dress accessories, and more. Exhibitors
will demonstrate techniques and be available to discuss the use of
historic evidence in reproducing artifacts of material culture.
5:30 p.m.
AVISTA: he Association Villard de
Fetzer 2020
Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary
Study of Medieval Technology, Science,
and Art
Reception with cash bar
5:30 p.m.
UNICORN Virtual Museum of
Medieval Studies and Medievalism
Reception with hosted bar
109
Bernhard 107
Friday evening
5:15 p.m.
5:30 p.m.
International Alain Chartier Society;
Fifteenth-Century French Studies
Business Meeting
Bernhard 209
6:00 p.m.
Center for Medieval Studies,
Fordham Univ.
Reception with cash bar
Fetzer 2016
6:30 p.m.
Ibero-Medieval Association of North
America (IMANA)
Reception with cash bar
Fetzer lobby
6:30 p.m.
Manuscripts to Materials
Bernhard 208
Friday evening
Sponsor: Research Group on Manuscript Evidence;
Societas Magica
Organizer: David Porreca, Univ. of Waterloo
Presider: Jason Roberts, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Practical Magic: Making Magical Artifacts and Using hem
Frank Klaassen, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Responses: Claire Fanger, Rice Univ.; David Porreca; Marla
Segol, Univ. at Bufalo
6:30 p.m.
International Center of Medieval
Art (ICMA) Student Committee
Reception with cash bar
Bernhard
Brown & Gold
Room
7:30 p.m.
Performing Malory: Palomydes the
Sarasyn
Valley III
Stinson Lounge
Organizer: Alison Harper, Univ. of Rochester
Presider: Stei Delcourt, Univ. of Rochester
A readers’ theater performance with Kara Larson Maloney, Binghamton Univ.; Carolyn F. Scott, National Cheng Kung Univ.;
Kimberly Jack, Athens State Univ.; Patricia V. Lehman, Siena
Heights Univ.; John Lowell Leland, Salem International Univ.;
Bernard Lewis, Murray State Univ.; Derek Shank, Independent
Scholar; Paul R. homas, Brigham Young Univ.; Kyle Huskin,
Univ. of Rochester; Rebecca D. Fox, Western Michigan Univ.;
Anna E. Goodling, Independent Scholar; Emily Lowman, Univ.
of Rochester; Marjorie Harrington, Univ. of Notre Dame.
7:30 p.m.
Ibero-Medieval Association of North
America (IMANA)
Dinner (by invitation)
Fetzer 1055
8:00 p.m.
Esmoreit & Lippijn
Western Michigan Univ.
Gilmore heatre
Complex
$15.00 General Admission
110
$10.00 presale through online Congress registration
Shuttles leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) beginning at 7:15 p.m.
In new translations by Mandy L. Albert, and directed by Festival
founder Lofty Durham, this double bill features a contemporary
reimagining of a pair of plays from the ifteenth-century Middle
Dutch Van Hulthem manuscript. In Esmoreit, an evil villain and a
dreadful prophecy lead to a baby’s kidnap and a happy ending . . . in
Lippijn, someone gets a happy ending, but it’s not the husband . . .
International Sidney Society
Business Meeting with cash bar
Fetzer 1060
8:00 p.m.
Societas Magica
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard 208
8:00 p.m.
International Center of Medieval
Art (ICMA)
Reception with cash bar
Bernhard
Brown & Gold
Room
8:00 p.m.
Early Medieval Europe
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard
President’s
Dining Room
8:30 p.m.
Early Book Society
Business Meeting with cash bar
Fetzer 2030
9:00 p.m.
Univ. of Pennsylvania Press
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Harrison 302
9:00 p.m.
Brill Academic Publishers
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Eldridge 310
9:00 p.m.
Centre for Medieval and Early
Modern Studies, Univ. of Kent
Reception with hosted bar
Fetzer 2016
9:00 p.m.
Hill Museum & Manuscript
Library (HMML)
Reception with hosted bar
Fetzer 2020
9:30 p.m.
A Hands-On Introduction to Astrolabes: Valley III
Calculating Traditional Prayer Times in Eldridge 309
the Christian Monastery (A Workshop)
Organizer: Kristine Larsen, Central Connecticut State Univ.
Presider: Kristine Larsen
A hands-on workshop on the use of a medieval astrolabe to
calculate the Christian monastery’s traditional times of prayer.
he irst 50 participants will receive a cardboard astrolabe that
can be taken home.
111
Friday evening
8:00 p.m.
Saturday, May 13
Morning Events
7:00–9:00 a.m.
BREAKFAST
Valley Dining Center
8:00–10:30 a.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Bernhard Center
8:30 a.m.
Plenary Lecture II
Sponsored by the Medieval Institute,
Western Michigan Univ.
Presider: Jana K. Schulman, Western
Michigan Univ.
Bernhard
East Ballroom
College of Arts and Sciences Welcome
Presentation of the 2017 La corónica Book Award
Acknowledgement of the 2017 Congress, Edwards,
Gründler, Karrer, and Tashjian Travel Award Winners
he Donkey and the Boat: Rethinking Mediterrannean
Economic Expansion in the Eleventh Century
Chris Wickham, Univ. of Oxford
9:00–10:30 a.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Fetzer Center
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
Saturday, May 13
10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m.
Sessions 343–393
343 VALLEY III STINSON 306
he heory and Practice of Medieval Rhetoric
Sponsor:
Medieval-Renaissance Faculty Workshop, Univ. of Louisville
Organizer: Joseph Turner, Univ. of Louisville
Presider:
Andrew Rabin, Univ. Of Louisville
Cicero’s De oratore and Orator in Medieval England
Morris Tichenor, Univ. of Toronto
Personiication and Purgation in Skelton’s he Bowge of the Court
Evan Cheney, Univ. of Virginia
“Augustine, tace!”: Quieting Augustine in Geofrey of Vinsauf ’s Poetria nova
Joseph Turner
344 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
In Honor of Constance H. Berman I: Old Sources, New Histories (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Medieval Foremothers Society
Organizer: Erin L. Jordan, Old Dominion Univ.
Presider:
Erin L. Jordan
Women, Wealth, and Marriage
Barbara A. Hanawalt, Ohio State Univ.
Foremothers Obscured: When Chronicle and Charter Diverge
Jefrey A. Bowman, Kenyon College
Women, Men, and Medieval Monasticism
Sherri Franks Johnson, Louisiana State Univ.
112
Connie Berman’s Cistercian Contribution
Brian Patrick McGuire, Independent Scholar
he Use of Episcopal Visitation Records for the Study of Gender, Sexuality, and
Social History
Michelle Armstrong-Partida, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
345 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Piers Plowman and Disability
Sponsor:
International Piers Plowman Society
Organizer: Curtis Gruenler, Hope College
Presider:
Curtis Gruenler
Intersections of Disability and Sin in Piers Plowman
Dana Roders, Purdue Univ.
Must I Here-Wel to Do-Wel? Sensory Impairments in Piers Plowman
Laura Godfrey, Univ. of Connecticut
Dismodern Will
Richard H. Godden, Loyola Univ. New Orleans
346 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
347 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
homas Aquinas I
Sponsor:
homas Aquinas Society
Organizer: John F. Boyle, Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
Presider:
Paul Jerome Keller, OP, Athenaeum of Ohio
On the Separated Soul according to Saint homas Aquinas
Melissa Eitenmiller, Dominican House of Studies
he Purpose and Meaning of “Objections” in the Summa theologiae
Eric M. Johnston, Seton Hall Univ.
τό τί ήν είναι in Aquinas’s Commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics
Edward M. Macierowski, Benedictine College
113
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
he Syndergaard Sessions I: Ballads: Borders and Border-Crossings
Sponsor:
Kommission für Volksdichtung
Organizer: Richard Firth Green, Ohio State Univ.
Presider:
Richard Firth Green
Bounded by Speech: he Deinition of Topography in Ballad Romance
Andrew Richmond, Ohio State Univ.
Tristel-tree and Bracken-bush: Imaginary Greenwoods in Border Ballads
Marybeth Ruether-Wu, Cornell Univ.
A Game of Crows: Poe, Plagiarism, and the Ballad Tradition
Jennifer Wollock, Texas A&M Univ.
348 VALLEY I HADLEY 102
“Eald enta geweorc”: Tolkien and the Classical Tradition
Sponsor:
Dept. of Religious Studies and Philosophy, he Hill School
Organizer: John Wm. Houghton, Hill School
Presider:
John Wm. Houghton
he “Other” Classicism: Tolkien, Homer, and the Greek Novel
John R. Holmes, Franciscan Univ. of Steubenville
he Winnowing Oar: Odysseus, Frodo, and the Search for Peace
Victoria Holtz Wodzak, Viterbo Univ.
he Politics of Tragedy: Plato’s Athenian Atlantis, Tolkien’s Númenorian Atalantë,
and the Nazi Reich
Joshua Hren, George Fox Univ.
J. R. R. Tolkien and Plato’s Timaeus
Christopher T. Vaccaro, Univ. of Vermont
349 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Exile and Arcadia: Space and Sovereignty
Organizer: Will Eggers, Loomis Chafee School
Presider:
John P. Sexton, Bridgewater State Univ.
Woods Free from Peril: Exile and Utopia in Shakespeare’s As You Like It
John Morrell, Loomis Chafee School
Devil Dogs and Hobby Horses: Ritual and Community in he Witch of Edmonton
Jane Wanninger, Bard College at Simon’s Rock
Early English Exclusion, Exile, and the Other
Will Eggers
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
350 FETZER 1005
he Poetics of Rage: Gender, Anger, Form (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Dept. of English, Temple Univ.
Organizer: Carissa M. Harris, Temple Univ.; Sarah Baechle, Univ. of
Notre Dame
Presider:
Marjorie Housley, Univ. of Notre Dame
“Ides Aglaecwif ”: A New Perspective on Gender Relations through the Reading of
Women’s Anger in Anglo-Saxon Texts
Natalie M. Whitaker, St. Louis Univ.
Afective Anatomies: he Angry Womb in Late Medieval hought
Samantha Katz Seal, Univ. of New Hampshire
Prudence’s “Semblant of Wratthe” and the Limits of Chaucer’s Feminism
Paul Megna, Univ. of Western Australia
Anger in the Alehouse: Gendered Community, Genre, and Protest in the “Good
Gossips” Carols
Carissa M. Harris
he Letters of Margherita Datini and the Use of Anger as an Expression of Power
Nicole McLean, Univ. of Maryland
hat’s (Not) Funny: Medieval Laughter, Modern Rage
Tara Mendola, Independent Scholar
What Does It Mean to Be an Angry Activist Scholar?
Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
114
351 FETZER 1010
Warfare in the Middle Ages
Sponsor:
De Re Militari: he Society for Medieval Military History
Organizer: Valerie Eads, School of Visual Arts
Presider:
Peter Konieczny, Medievalists.net/Medieval Warfare
Papal War and Diplomacy on the Eve of the Council of Constance
Sharon Dale, Pennsylvania State Univ.–Erie, he Behrend College
he Woman Warrior Revisited: A Bechdel Test for Medieval Military History
Valerie Eads
he Italian Wars and the Military Revolution
Jay Roberts, Accelerated Schools of Overland Park
Tactics and Topography at the Battle of Poitiers, 1356
Cliford J. Rogers, United States Military Academy, West Point
352 FETZER 1040
Memory and Memory Aids in Twelfth-Century Cistercian Writing
Sponsor:
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan
Univ.
Organizer: Marvin Döbler, Ev. -luth. Landeskirche Hannovers
Presider:
Elias Dietz, OCSO, Abbey of Gethsemani
Memory and Mnemonic Devices in Bernard of Clairvaux’s and Aelred of Rievaulx’s
Sermons
Marvin Döbler
he Formation of Historical Memory in the Works of Aelred of Rievaulx
Marsha L. Dutton, Ohio Univ.; Marjory Lange, Western Oregon Univ.
Multiformi Disponens Distinctione: Rhetorical Structure and Mnemonic Devices
in homas the Cistercian’s Commentary on the Canticle
Ilinca Tanaseanu-Döbler, Georg-August-Univ. Göttingen
Monsters I: Material Monsters
Sponsor:
Monsters: he Experimental Association for the Research of
Cryptozoology through Scholarly heory and Practical Application (MEARCSTAPA); Societas Daemonetica
Organizer: Melissa Ridley Elmes, Lindenwood Univ.; Ana Grinberg, East
Tennessee State Univ.; Asa Simon Mittman, California State
Univ.–Chico
Presider:
Ana Grinberg
Saint Margaret and the Dragon: Representation and Ritual at Chartres Cathedral
Ashley Laverock, Savannah College of Art and Design
Framing an English King: he Function of Ambiguity and Monstrosity in the
Treatise of Walter de Milemete (Christ Church MS 92)
Caitlin DiMartino, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Material Monsters: Hides, Li Hisdeus, and Humans in Guillaume de Palerne
Cassidy hompson, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
115
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
353 FETZER 1045
354 FETZER 1060
Beyond Machaut: Other Fourteenth-Century French Literary and Musical Voices
Sponsor:
International Machaut Society
Organizer: Jared C. Hartt, Oberlin Conservatory of Music
Presider:
Benjamin Albritton, Stanford Univ.
What to Do with Philippe de Vitry’s Chapel de trois leurs de lis
Anna Zayaruznaya, Yale Univ.
Talking Statues, from Deguileville to Machaut
Julie Singer, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Machaut in heory: A (Somewhat) New Witness to the Libellus cantus mensurabilis
Karen M. Cook, Hartt School, Univ. of Hartford
355 FETZER 2016
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
Reading Magic West to East
Sponsor:
Societas Magica
Organizer: Jason Roberts, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Presider:
Claire Fanger, Rice Univ.
Eastern Magic in a Western Home: he Inluence of Iberian Translated Ghāyat
al-Hakīm on a Fictional Necromancer
Veronica Menaldi, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
East to West to East: Reading the Arabic Alchemical Tradition in Late Medieval
Cracow
Agnieszka Rec, Chemical Heritage Foundation
“Let hem Desiste from Hellenic Devilries”: he Specter of Greek Paganism in
the Anti-Magic heology of the Russian Orthodox Stoglav
Jason Roberts
356 FETZER 2020
A Feminist Renaissance in Anglo-Saxon Studies II
Organizer: Rebecca Stephenson; Univ. College Dublin; Robin Norris,
Carleton Univ.; Renée R. Trilling, Univ. of Illinois–UrbanaChampaign
Presider:
Rebecca Stephenson
he Birds and the Bedes: Race, Sexuality, and Gender in Bede’s De cantica canticorum and Historia ecclesiastica
Erik Wade, Rutgers Univ.
Rewriting Virginity in Aldhelm and the Old English Judith
Jill M. Fitzgerald, United States Naval Academy
Chaste Bodies and Virgin History: Bede, Æthelthryth, and the Implications of
Anglo-Saxon Virginity
Lisa M. C. Weston, California State Univ.–Fresno
357 FETZER 2030
Texts of the Exeter and Vercelli Books
Presider:
Megan Arnott, Western Michigan Univ.
Silences that Speak: he Efect of Manuscript Damage on Editions and Translations of Old English Poetry
Rachel Hanks, Univ. of Notre Dame
Abandonment and Promises: he Progression of Female Lyric Agency from
Heroides X to he Wife’s Lament
Graham O’Toole, Univ. of Connecticut
116
Teaching Women?: Two Case Studies from the Vercelli Book
Rebecca Hardie, Georg-August-Univ.-Göttingen
Grace as Divinely Given Wisdom in the Old English Elene
Melissa Mayus, Western Michigan Univ.
358 FETZER 2040
Malory’s Morte Darthur II
Presider:
Gania Barlow, Oakland Univ.
Fate, Justice, and Agency in Sir homas Malory’s Morte Darthur
Karen Hynes, Acadia Univ.
Sir homas Malory, heologian? heology of the Eucharist in the Grail Quest
Paul R. Rovang, Edinboro Univ.
“Ought he of right to be so good a knyght?”: Genealogy and Epistemology in
“he Tale of the Sankgreal”
David Smigen-Rothkopf, Fordham Univ.
359 SCHNEIDER 1120
360 SCHNEIDER 1125
Medieval Drama: Beyond Genres: Alan Knight in Memoriam
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS)
Organizer: Robert Clark, Kansas State Univ.
Presider:
Robert Clark
Openness to Comedy
Jody Enders, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Genre Trouble: “Medieval Genres” in the Later Renaissance
Mario B. Longtin, Western Univ.
Un Spectacle à Risque: he Mystère de saint Martin and Its Farce
Noah D. Guynn, Univ. of California–Davis
117
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
Chaucer’s Voices III: Anglocentric versus Eurocentric
Sponsor:
Chaucer Review
Organizer: Susanna Fein, Kent State Univ.; David Raybin, Eastern Illinois Univ.
Presider:
Susanna Fein
he Pardoner’s Trip to Rome, City of Relics, Indulgences, and Powerful Images
Mary Dzon, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
How to Die like a Saint: Modeling Holy Death for Wives in he Clerk’s Tale
Heidi Frame, Kent State Univ.
Harry Bailey and the Fantasy of the Foreign Wife
Lynn Shutters, Colorado State Univ.
he Wife of Bath and Boethius
Charles Wuest, Averett Univ.
361 SCHNEIDER 1130
In Memory of Jeremy duQuesnay Adams I: Community Building in the Middle Ages
Sponsor:
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Bruce Brasington, West Texas A&M Univ.; Lane J. Sobehrad,
Texas Tech Univ.
Presider:
Lane J. Sobehrad
Muhammad’s Catechism and the Monk Bahira in William of Tripoli’s Notita de
Machometo and De statu Sarrecenorum: A Dominican in the Latin East’s Peculiar
Life of the Prophet
Jeremy D. Pearson, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
Tropes hat Last: Giraldus Cambrensis and Literary Constructions of Wales
Sarah Jane Sprouse, Texas Tech Univ.
Communities in Learning: Augustine, the Bishop, and Early Augustinian Houses
Nancy van Deusen, Claremont Graduate Univ.
362 SCHNEIDER 1135
Painting in Dugento and Trecento Italy
Presider:
Gilbert Jones, Italian Art Society
he Painted Panel Cruciixes of the Early Franciscans as a Response to the Cathar
Heresy
Rebecca Hertling Ruppar, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Augustinians as Patrons and Saint Augustine as heir Patron in heir Early Manuscript Art
Krisztina Ilko, Univ. of Cambridge
Rothko’s Giotto
Stephen Watson, Univ. of Notre Dame
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
363 SCHNEIDER 1145
Twelve Angry Carolingians I: Anger Management
Sponsor:
SFB Visions of Community (VISCOM), FWF F42
Organizer: Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften; Cullen Chandler, Lycoming College
Presider:
Cullen Chandler
With Enemies Like hese . . .: Benedict of Aniane, Adalhard of Corbie and the
Perils of Contentio
Rutger Kramer
Sticks and Stones and Undertones: Florus of Lyon’s Strategic Abuse of Amalarius
of Metz
Irene van Renswoude, Huygens ING
Haimo of Auxerre: he Anger of an Exegete
homas A. Greene, Texas A&M Univ.–San Antonio
364 SCHNEIDER 1155
Gender at the Borders of Christendom
Sponsor:
Center for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Organizer: Devon R. Bealke, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider:
Oren Falk, Cornell Univ.
How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the King: Synthesis, Paradox, and
Cultural Integration in Late Viking Age Kingship, ca. 990–1050
Devon R. Bealke
118
Christian Women as Occupying Forces in the hirteenth-Century Book of Deeds
of James I of Aragon
Emma Snowden, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Not Transvestite, But Transgender: Early Byzantine Narratives of Transmen
Catherine Burris, Univ. of Central Missouri
Morphia’s Daughters: Matrilineal Social Ties in Twelfth-Century Jerusalem and
Antioch
K. A. Tuley, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
365 SCHNEIDER 1160
Ibero-Romance Languages before the Eleventh Century
Sponsor:
Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies (HSMS)
Organizer: Pablo Pastrana-Pérez, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Vicente Lled́-Guillem, Hofstra Univ.
Historia verdadera de los orígenes del español: Desenfoque y mitos
Francisco A. Marcos-Marín, Univ. of Texas–San Antonio
El problema de la interpretación de las grafías medievales en el estudio de la
lenición consonántica en castellano
César Gutiérez, Univ. of Arkansas–Little Rock
Los patrones sintácticos objeto + verbo y verbo + objeto en mil años de historia:
De Plauto a la Iberia del siglo VIII
Omar Velázquez-Mendoza, Univ. of Virginia
366
SCHNEIDER 1220
367 SCHNEIDER 1225
he Medieval Past
Presider:
Geofrey B. Elliott, Independent Scholar
homas Jeferson and the Continuity of the Anglo-Saxon Past
Michael Modarelli, Walsh Univ.
he Compromised Chronotope of Christminster: Hardy and Hopkins’s Incarnate
Past
Christopher Adamson, Emory Univ.
Fiction Turned Real: Edward William Lane’s Translations of he housand and
One Nights
Haythem Bastawy, Leeds Trinity Univ.
119
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
Monumental Failures
Sponsor:
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student
Committee
Organizer: Dustin Aaron, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
Presider:
Katherine Werwie, Yale Univ.
“What a nullity!”: Rejection, Decorum, and Historical Explanations in the Construction of San Juan de los Reyes (Toledo, Spain) in the Late Fifteenth, Seventeenth, and Twentieth Centuries
Costanza Beltrami, Courtauld Institute of Art
Representational Failure in the Cosmological Diagrams of the Breviari d’amor
Joy Partridge, Graduate Center, CUNY
Adoration and Erasure: he Cantigas de Santa Maria beyond Patronage
Christopher T. Richards, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
368 SCHNEIDER 1245
Royal Ritual and Representation
Sponsor:
Royal Studies Journal
Organizer: Valerie Schutte, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Valerie Schutte
La Belle Inconnue: Tomb Eigies, Mistaken Identities, and the Afterlives of the
Medieval Dead
Kavita Mudan Finn, Independent Scholar
Princely Penance: Royal Art, Agency, and Appropriation in Fourteenth-Century
Cyprus
Stephen J. Lucey, Keene State College
369
SCHNEIDER 1255
Christine and the Body
Sponsor:
International Christine de Pizan Society, North American Branch
Organizer: Benjamin M. Semple, Gonzaga Univ.
Presider:
Julia A. Nephew, Independent Scholar
he Material Landscape of Knowledge in the Chemin de long estude
Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Univ. of Toronto
From Her Safekeeping, from Her Mind, from Her Heart, from Her Womb: Birthing
Metaphors in Christine de Pizan’s Oeuvre
Berkeley Becker, Univ. of Toledo
Castrating Ovid: Christine de Pizan and the Reversal of Reproductive Violence
Caitlin Rose Brenner, Texas A&M Univ.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
370 SCHNEIDER 1265
Urban Economies in the Fourteenth Century
Sponsor:
14th Century Society
Organizer: Debra A. Salata, Lincoln Memorial Univ.
Presider:
Marie D’Aguanno Ito, American Univ.
Credit and Crisis: Catalan Jewish Women Moneylenders before and after the
Black Death
Sarah Ift Decker, Yale Univ.
he Seasonal Economic Patterns of a Mountain Town: Puigcerd̀ 1321–1322
Elizabeth Comuzzi, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Montpeller: A Mercantile Center in the Fourteenth Century
Debra A. Salata
371 SCHNEIDER 1275
Dante in History
Sponsor:
Dante Society of America
Organizer: Alison Cornish, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Presider:
Catherine Adoyo, Independent Scholar
Dante’s Exiles: Figures of Injustice or Figures of Hope?
Laurence E. Hooper, Dartmouth College
“he Whole Catastrophe”: Kinship and Tragic Transformation in the Commedia
Philip F. O’Mara, Bridgewater College
he Pope in Hell: Nicholas III
Dabney Park, Univ. of Miami
“A Mare Magnum for Adventure”: he Dante Studies of George Ticknor
Kathleen Verduin, Hope College
120
372 SCHNEIDER 1280
Teaching Marie de France (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Marie de France Society
Organizer: Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.
Presider:
Monica L. Wright, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
A roundtable discussion with Dorothy Gilbert, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Julie
Human, Univ. of Kentucky; Ann McCullough, Middle Tennessee State Univ.; Tamara
Bentley Caudill; Robin Hermann, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette; and Evelyn Birge
Vitz, New York Univ.
373 SCHNEIDER 1320
Making the English Book
Sponsor:
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale Univ.
Organizer: Raymond Clemens, Yale Univ.; Gina Marie Hurley, Yale Univ.;
Alexandra Reider, Yale Univ.
Presider:
James Eric Ensley, Yale Univ.
Making Chaucer in the “Un-English” Book
Megan Behrend, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Making “Hebrew” in English Books
Damian Fleming, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne
Medical Books: he Case of Takamiya 46 and BL Additional 17866
Jessica Henderson, Univ. of Toronto
Twelfth-Century Form and the Autograph Manuscript of Richard of Devises
Marisa Libbon, Bard College
374 SCHNEIDER 1325
121
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
Late Medieval Anticlericalism as the Staging Ground of the Protestant Reformation
Organizer: Albrecht Classen, Univ. of Arizona
Presider:
Albrecht Classen
Sola Fide in the Piers Plowman Tradition
Martin Laidlaw, Univ. of Dundee
he “Opus Arduum Valde”: An Anti-Clerical Commentary of the Apocalypse
from the Late Fourteenth Century
Christoph Galle, Phillips-Univ. Marburg
A Heathen Martyr and Regrets about Dead Saracens: Description of and Relections
on Killing and Corpses in Wolfram’s Willehalm
Magdalena Butz, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München
“Reddite ergo Quae Sunt Caesaris Caesari”: A Quotation from Matthew and Its
Fate in Medieval Anticlerical Discourse
Romedio Schmitz-Esser, Centro Tedesco di Studi Veneziani
375 SCHNEIDER 1330
Art and Liturgical Performance in Medieval and Early Modern Nunneries
Sponsor:
Société d’Études Interdisciplinaires sur les Femmes au Moyen
Âge et à la Renaissance (SEIFMAR)
Organizer: Mercedes Pérez Vidal, Univ. degli Studi di Padova
Presider:
Fiona J. Griiths, Stanford Univ.
Praying in Catalan Clarissan Monasteries: Books and Regulations on Liturgy and
Devotion (hirteenth–Sixteenth Century)
Araceli Rosillo-Luque, Arxiu-Biblioteca dels Franciscans de Catalunya
he “Coro delle Monache” at Santa Maria di Monteluce in Perugia
Julie Beckers, KU Leuven
Recovering the Liturgical Books and Disjecta Membra from the Dominican Nunneries
Northern Italy
Mercedes Pérez Vidal
376 SCHNEIDER 1335
Hagiography East and West
Presider:
Hope D. Williard, Univ. of Leeds/Univ. of Lincoln
Experience-Taking in Medieval and Byzantine Saints’ Lives: A Prerogative of the
Hagiographer
Peter Schadler, College of Charleston
Can the Basileus Be a Saint? he Ruler-Saint in Byzantium
Jef Brubaker, Univ. of Birmingham
he Structure of Embedded Argumentation in Medieval Ethiopian Hagiography
Felege-Selam Yirga, Ohio State Univ.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
377 SCHNEIDER 1340
he Eastern Mediterranean: History and Historical Texts
Presider:
Donald W. Wood, Independent Scholar
Translating the Holy Land: Interpreters and Pilgrimage during the Crusader Period
William S. Murrell, Vanderbilt Univ.
Memory and Forgetting, Loss and Commemoration: he “Templar of Tyre” and
the Fall of Acre, 1291
Jesse W. Izzo, Independent Scholar
Islamic Medieval Historiography: Al-Masudi’s Cultural History and Ibn Khaldun’s
Social History
Lillian Farhat, Independent Scholar
A Medieval Islamic Model of Statecraft: Ibn Khaldun’s Image of Leadership and
Authority in Classical Islam
Mustafa Banister, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Univ. Bonn
122
378 SCHNEIDER 1345
Material Religion in the Crusading World I: Communities of Devotion
Organizer: Siobhain Bly Calkin, Carleton Univ.; William J. Purkis, Univ.
of Birmingham
Presider:
Siobhain Bly Calkin
Holy Episcopal Footwear(!), or, A Study of the (Lost) Sandal Reliquary of San
Arderico di Palacio of Palencia (ca. 1125–1208)
Kyle C. Lincoln, Kalamazoo College
A Transforming Civic Landscape: Social Cohesion, Municipal Authority, and
Urban Change in Frankish Jerusalem
Anna Gutgarts, Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem
Material Devotion to the Cross in the Latin East, 1099–1187
William J. Purkis
379 SCHNEIDER 1350
New Research on the Disticha Catonis II
Organizer: W. Martin Bloomer, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
Julia A. Schneider, Univ. of Notre Dame
Misquoting Cato
Serena Connolly, Rutgers Univ.
he Distichs in Deventer
Andrew J. M. Irving, Rijksuniv. Groningen
he Disticha Catonis in the English Tradition
Nicole Eddy, Medieval Institute Publications/Arc Humanities Press/Univ. of
Notre Dame
Erasmus and the Last Medieval Cato
W. Martin Bloomer
SCHNEIDER 1355
Women and the Bible in the Middle Ages
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (SSBMA)
Organizer: James M. Matenaer, Franciscan Univ. of Steubenville
Presider:
Franz van Liere, Calvin College
Allegorical Matriarchs: Synagoga, Ecclesia, and heir Unusual Children in the
Toledo Bible moralisée
Sarah Andyshak, Univ. of Mary Hardin-Baylor
Understanding the Book of Ruth in Medieval Christian Commentaries and Middle
English Literature
Jane Beal, Univ. of California–Davis
Bravery and the Bible: Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe’s Contributions to
Evangelism
Gail Blick, Independent Scholar
Israel, Delilah, Jezebel, and Solomon’s Wives in Medieval Exegesis and Experience
Natalie E. Latteri, Univ. of New Mexico
123
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
380
381 SCHNEIDER 1360
Archaeology of the Medieval Iberian Peninsula: Another Way of Approaching
Sponsor:
Univ. Aut́noma de Madrid
Organizer: Fernando Valdés Fernández, Univ. Aut́noma de Madrid
Presider:
Fernando Valdés Fernández
Landscapes of Change in Toledo’s Region in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle
Ages (Sixth–Ninth Century): he Architecture Ensemble of “Los Hitos”
Jorge Morín de Pablos, Audema, Archaeology Division, Univ. de Castilla–La
Mancha; Jose Raḿn González de la Cal, Escuela de Arquitectura de Toledo
Pla de Nadal (Valencia, Spain): A New Architectonical Representation of Power in
the Early Medieval Iberian Peninsula (Eighth Century)
Isabel Sánchez Ramos, Institut d’études avancées de Paris
Secondary Mosques in al-Andalus: he Case of Córdoba
Carmen González Gutiérrez, Univ. de Ćrdoba
he Islamic Inluence in América: Hernán Cortés and His Capital
Rodrigo O. Tirado Salazar, Univ. Aut́noma de Madrid
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
382 SCHNEIDER 2345
Devotional Luxury, Literary Necessity
Sponsor:
Harvard English Dept. Medieval Colloquium
Organizer: Helen Cushman, Harvard Univ.; Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
Presider:
Anna Kelner, Harvard Univ.
Un-Break My Heart: Metaphoric Luxury, Afect, and Performance in Devotional
Lyrics
Annika Pattenaude, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Gawain’s Social Piety and Green Garbage
Casey Ireland, Univ. of Virginia
Devotional Content and Manuscript Form: Material Metaphors and Aesthetic
Status in the Katherine Group
Jenny C. Bledsoe, Emory Univ.
Forms of Luxury: Devotional Necessity in the Late Medieval Book of Hours
Jessica Brantley, Yale Univ.
383 SCHNEIDER 2355
Creating and Transforming the Image of Saints
Sponsor:
Dept. of Medieval Studies, Central European Univ.
Organizer: Gerhard Jaritz, Central European Univ.
Presider:
Gerhard Jaritz
Evolving Identities: he Connections between Royal Patronage of Dynastic
Saints’ Cults and Secular Literature in the Twelfth Century
Stephen Pow, Central European Univ.
Congress Travel Award Winner
Transformations of a Saint: Saint Foy and Her Cults
Kathleen Ashley, Univ. of Southern Maine
Danish Saints as a Visual Weapon against the Lutherans: Wall Paintings from the
Eve of the Reform
Martin Wangsgaard Jürgensen, Nationalmuseet
124
384 BERNHARD 106
Material Lydgate
Sponsor:
Organizer:
Lydgate Society
Alaina Bupp, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder; Timothy R. Jordan,
Ohio Univ.–Zanesville
Presider:
Timothy R. Jordan
“Wiche . . . I Fownde Depicte Ones on a Walle”: Translation in Lydgate’s Dance
of Death
Elizaveta Strakhov, Marquette Univ.
Presentation Materials: Presentation Images and Readerly Authority in Lydgate’s
Books
Alaina Bupp
What’s the Matter with Writing? Late Medieval Necromancy, Lydgate, and Digital
Manuscripts
Bridget Whearty, Binghamton Univ.
Respondents: Lisa H. Cooper, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison, and Andrea DennyBrown, Univ. of California–Riverside
385 BERNHARD 158
386 BERNHARD 204
Barbarians and Barbarian Kingdoms I: Deining Barbarians
Organizer: Jonathan J. Arnold, Univ. of Tulsa
Presider:
Jonathan J. Arnold
Barbarians or Bandits? Ethnography and Empire in Rome’s Later Danubian
Borderland
Timothy C. Hart, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
he “Gothic Question”: Exploring a Sixth-Century Debate on the Legitimacy and
Barbarity of Ostrogothic Italy
Brian Swain, Kennesaw State Univ.
Digging Up Barbarians in Nineteenth-Century France
Bonnie Efros, Univ. of Florida
125
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
1402: A Roundtable
Organizer: R. D. Perry, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Lucas Wood, Indiana
Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Fred Dulson, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Videmus nunc per speculum in enigmate: Jean Gerson’s hree Mirrors
Daisy Delogu, Univ. of Chicago
In Praise of Peace and the Limits of the Peaceable Kingdom
Matthew W. Irvin, Sewanee: he Univ. of the South
Hoccleve’s English Christine
R. D. Perry
Oaths, Plots, and the Memory of 1402 in England
Spencer Strub, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Literary Debate and a Debate about Literature: he “Querelle du Roman de la rose”
Helen J. Swift, St. Hilda’s College, Univ. of Oxford
(Un)fortunate Isles: French Chivalry’s Canary Gamble
Lucas Wood
387 BERNHARD 208
In a Word, Philology: Etymology, Lexicography, Semantics, and More in Germanic
Organizer: Adam Oberlin, Atlanta International School
Presider:
Tina Boyer, Wake Forest Univ.
A Medieval Gutnish Text? Language in the “Statues of St. Catherine’s Guild” 1443
Seán D. Vrieland, Københavns Univ.
Promiscuous Preverbal Ge-: he Old English Preix as a Lexicographical and
Semantic Problem
homas P. Klein, Idaho State Univ.
Alliterative Anarchy, or, he (Un)fettered Formula
Adam Oberlin
Gersum: Old Norse Inluence on Middle English Lexis
Brittany Schorn, Univ. of Cambridge
388 BERNHARD 209
he Robert T. Farrell Lecture
Sponsor:
American Society of Irish Medieval Studies (ASIMS)
Organizer: James Lyttleton, Independent Scholar
Presider:
Brian Ó Broin, William Paterson Univ.
Living on the Frontiers: Reassessing Fourth- and Fifth-Century Ireland
Elva Johnston, Univ. College Dublin
Creating the Irish and the English: Identity Formation in Early Medieval Ireland
and Britain
Patrick Wadden, Belmont Abbey College
Respondent: James G. Schryver, Univ. of Minnesota–Morris
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
389 BERNHARD 210
Atmospheric Medievalisms/Medieval Atmospheres (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies
Organizer: Myra Seaman, College of Charleston
Presider:
Myra Seaman
Anglo-Saxon Atmospheres
Edward J. Christie, Georgia State Univ.
he Water Subtext of he Book of the Duchess
Brantley L. Bryant, Sonoma State Univ.
An Atmosphere of Anxiety in Late Medieval English Drama
Christina M. Fitzgerald, Univ. of Toledo
he Air of Fiction
Julie Orlemanski, Univ. of Chicago
Racialized Sound
Molly Lewis, George Washington Univ.
Airing Out the Senses
Richard Newhauser, Arizona State Univ.
126
390 BERNHARD 211
Medieval Bridesmaids: Wedding, Bedding, and Bad Behavior in Romance
Sponsor:
Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM)
Organizer: Matthew O’Donnell, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Alison Langdon, Western Kentucky Univ.
Love on the Battleield: Interfaith Attraction and Conversion in hree Middle
English Romances
Elizabeth Melick, Kent State Univ.
Marriage, Mimicry, and Murder: Unwilling Wives and Feminine Feigning in
Bevis of Hampton
Elizabeth A. Williamsen, Minnesota State Univ.–Mankato
Lady Guinevere’s Lover: Bloody Sheets and Bloody Bedchambers in Malory’s
Morte Darthur
Matthew O’Donnell
391 BERNHARD 212
Sidneian Endings and Reinventions
Sponsor:
International Sidney Society
Organizer: Nandra Perry, Texas A&M Univ.
Presider:
Brad Tuggle, Univ. of Alabama
“Love Is Not Love”: A Lyric Exchange among Pembroke, Wroth, and Shakespeare
Mary Ellen Lamb, Southern Illinois Univ.–Carbondale
Endings and Reinventions in Wroth’s Pamphilia to Amphilanthus
Ilona Bell, Williams College
he Defense of Astrophil and Stella
Roger Kuin, York Univ.
Millennials and Medieval Studies (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Goliardic Society, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Maggie Myers, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Maggie Myers
A roundtable discussion with Eric Gobel, Western Michigan Univ.; Caleb Molstad, Western
Michigan Univ.; Karen Soto, Western Michigan Univ.; Jillian Patch, Western Michigan Univ.
393 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Fair Unknowns (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Arthuriana
Organizer: Dorsey Armstrong, Purdue Univ./Arthuriana
Presider:
Dorsey Armstrong,
What’s So Interesting About Fair Unknown Romances in Germanic Arthurian Literatures?
Joseph M. Sullivan, Univ. of Oklahoma
Rescued from the Archives: he Fair Unknown on CBS TV in 1951: Mr. I. Magination’s “Sir Gareth, Knight of the Round Table”
Kevin J. Harty, La Salle Univ.
Jay Gatsby as the Fair Unknown: Arthurian Resonances in Fitzgerald
Christopher A. Snyder, Mississippi State Univ.
(Dis)abling the Fair Unknown: Disability and Gender in Malory’s “Alexander the Orphan”
Tory V. Pearman, Miami Univ. Hamilton
Natural Nobility and Fair Unknowns
Ryan Naughton, Arizona State Univ.
127
Saturday 10:00 a.m.
392 BERNHARD 213
Saturday, May 13
Lunchtime Events
Saturday lunchtime
11:30 a.m.– 1:30 p.m. LUNCH
Valley Dining Center
11:30 a.m.
UNICORN Virtual Museum of
Medieval Studies and Medievalism
Business Meeting
Bernhard 107
11:45 a.m.
Societas Magica
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1055
Noon
SALVI (Septentrionale Americanum
Latinitatis Vivae Institutum): North
American Institute for Living Latin
Studies
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1010
Noon
International Marie de France Society
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1030
Noon
International Machaut Society
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1035
Noon
Pearl-Poet Society
Business Meeting
Fetzer 1060
Noon
AVISTA: he Association Villard de
Schneider 1125
Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary
Study of Medieval Technology, Science,
and Art
Business Meeting
Noon
Tolkien at Kalamazoo
Business Meeting
Bernhard 106
Noon
De Re Militari: he Society for
Medieval Military History
Business Meeting
Bernhard 210
Noon
International Medieval Sermon
Studies Society
Business Meeting
Bernhard
Faculty Lounge
128
Saturday, May 13
1:30 p.m. –3:00 p.m.
Sessions 394–445
394 VALLEY III STINSON 306
he Medieval Reception of Augustine of Hippo I
Organizer: homas Clemmons, Catholic Univ. of America
Presider:
homas Clemmons
he Winding Road of Political Augustinism: Saint Augustine in the Carolingian
Councils
Michael Edward Moore, Univ. of Iowa
Augustine’s De doctrina and heological Method in Hugh of Saint-Victor
Reginald M. Lynch, OP, Univ. of Notre Dame
Lady Wisdom and Christology in Augustine and Peter Lombard
Allison Zbicz Michael, Catholic Univ. of America
395 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Performances of Marie de France: Yonec
Sponsor:
International Marie de France Society
Organizer: Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.
Presider:
Ed Ouellette, Air Univ.
Performances with Simonetta Cochis, Transylvania Univ.; Yvonne LeBlanc, Independent
Scholar; Walter A. Blue, Hamline Univ.; and Dorothy Gilbert, Univ. of California–
Berkeley.
396 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
397 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
Central Europe before Luther
Sponsor:
Center for Austrian Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Organizer: Jan Volek, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider:
Jan Volek
Seasons of Discontent: Moravia as a Battleground for Central European Supremacy
Lisa Scott, Univ. of Chicago
he Discipline of hieves: Disputing the Observant Legacy before Luther
Jamie McCandless, Kennesaw State Univ.
Luther’s Relationship with Medieval heology: he Case of Gabriel Biel
Candace L. Kohli, Northwestern Univ.
129
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Barbarians and Barbarian Kingdoms II: Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Matters
Organizer: Jonathan J. Arnold, Univ. of Tulsa
Presider:
Bonnie Efros, Univ. of Florida
Barbarians and the Problem of Exile in Late Antiquity
Samuel Cohen, Sonoma State Univ.
Sacred Flesh and Christian Understanding of Christ in Merovingian Gaul
A. E. T. McLaughlin, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Gregory of Tours and Augustinian Inluence in Gaul
Allen E. Jones, Troy Univ.
398 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
homas Aquinas II
Sponsor:
homas Aquinas Society
Organizer: John F. Boyle, Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
Presider:
Robert Barry, Providence College
he Lost Meaning of “Inclinatio” in Aquinas’s Account of Natural Law
Sean B. Cunningham, Catholic Univ. of America
he Historicity of the Human Person in the homistic Treatises De statibus
Mark K. Spencer, Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
Teleology and the Good in Inanimate Nature
Susan Waldstein, Ave Maria Univ.
399 VALLEY I HADLEY 102
Reading Aloud the French of England (A Workshop)
Organizer: Laurie Postlewate, Barnard College
Presider:
Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Fordham Univ.
Le Voyage de saint Brandan by Benedeit
Alice M. Colby-Hall, Cornell Univ.
Estoire des Engleis by Gaimar
Nicole Clifton, Northern Illinois Univ.
La Lumere as Lais by Pierre d’Abernon of Fetcham
Maureen B. M. Boulton, Univ. of Notre Dame
La Vie du prince Noir by Chandos Herald
D’Arcy Jonathan D. Boulton, Univ. of Notre Dame/Univ. of Toronto
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
400 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
Conversions: Transformations in the Vices and Virtues in Late Medieval England
Sponsor:
Conversions: Medieval and Modern Working Group, Duke
Univ.
Organizer: Jessica Hines, Duke Univ.
Presider:
Amy N. Vines, Univ. of North Carolina–Greensboro
Humility in he Showings of Julian of Norwich
Grace Hamman, Duke Univ.
Identifying Sufering: Changing Models of Compassion and Identiication in
Fifteenth-Century England
Jessica Hines
he Multi-Dialogic Grammar of Avarice in Book V of Gower’s Confessio amantis
Jessica D. Ward, Univ. of North Carolina–Greensboro
401 FETZER 1005
Teaching Hoccleve (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Hoccleve Society
Organizer: Danielle Bradley, Rutgers Univ.
Presider:
David Watt, Univ. of Manitoba
A Pedagogical Gambit: Framing Hoccleve as the Anti-Chaucer
Nicholas Myklebust, Regis Univ.
Hoccleve and the Rehearsal of Emotion
Stephanie Trigg, Univ. of Melbourne
Hoccleve’s Hand
William A. Quinn, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
130
Teaching Hoccleve’s Regiment of Princes in the Great Books Curriculum
Elon Lang, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Teaching the Regiment in Various Contexts
Siobhain Bly Calkin, Carleton Univ.
402 FETZER 1010
Tolkien and Language
Sponsor:
Tolkien at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Brad Eden, Valparaiso Univ.
Presider:
Brad Eden
“O’er the Moon, Below the Daylight”: Tolkien’s Blue Bee, Pliny, and the Kalevala
Kristine Larsen, Central Connecticut State Univ.
Music: he One Language in Which the Noldor Were Not Fluent
Eileen Marie Moore, Cleveland State Univ.
Elvish Practitioners of the “Secret Vice”
Andrew Higgins, Independent Scholar
Tolkien and Constructed Languages
Dean Easton, Independent Scholar
403 FETZER 1040
404 FETZER 1045
Career Diversity for Medievalists: Insights from outside the Academy (A Panel
Discussion)
Sponsor:
CARA (Committee on Centers and Regional Associations,
Medieval Academy of America)
Organizer: Sarah Davis-Secord, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider:
Michael A. Ryan, Univ. of New Mexico
A panel discussion with Suzann K. Gallagher, Naval Criminal Investigative Service;
Kate Mertes, Mertes Editorial Services; Alyssa Nayyar, Independent Scholar; and
Dayanna Knight, Viking Coloring Book Project.
131
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Pseudo-Bernard: he Writers, Works, and Readers
Sponsor:
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan
Univ.
Organizer: Ann W. Astell, Univ. of Notre Dame
Presider:
Ann W. Astell
Major Questions in the Study of Pseudo-Bernard Works as Exempliied by the
Instructio sacerdotalis and the Tractatus de statu virtutum
Elias Dietz, OCSO, Abbey of Gethsemani
On Pseudo-Bernard’s Tractatus de praecipuis mysteriis nostrae religionis
Joshua Lim, Univ. of Notre Dame
Pseudo-Bernard’s Tractatus de statu virtutum in Translation: Composition, Content,
and “Bernardine” hemes
Breanna J. Nickel, Univ. of Notre Dame
405 FETZER 1060
Emerging Approaches: New Research in Machaut Studies
Sponsor:
International Machaut Society
Organizer: Jared C. Hartt, Oberlin Conservatory of Music
Presider:
Jared C. Hartt
Queering Machaut: Sexual Poetics in the Voir Dit
Charlie Samuelson, King’s College London
he Dit dou Lyon Landscape Miniature in Ms. C: More han Meets the Eye
Margaret Goehring, New Mexico State Univ.–Las Cruces
Machaut’s Poetic Destour as heory
Anne-Hélène Miller, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
406 FETZER 2016
International Gower
Sponsor:
Gower Project
Organizer: Eve Salisbury, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Kim Zarins, California State Univ.–Sacramento
Lyrical Gower: he Confessio amantis and the Dits amoureux
Ricardo Matthews, Univ. of California–Irvine
From Constance to M.I.A.: Linguistic Subjectivity and Cultural Identity
Shyama Rajendran, George Washington Univ.
Avoiding the False Proit: Gower and the International Business of Salvation
Craig E. Bertolet, Auburn Univ.
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
407 FETZER 2020
In Memory of Jeremy duQuesnay Adams II: History Itself (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Joan of Arc Society/Société Internationale de
l’étude de Jeanne d’Arc
Organizer: Gail Orgelinger, Univ. of Maryland–Baltimore County
Presider:
Gail Orgelinger
A roundtable discussion with Kelly DeVries, Loyola Univ. Maryland; Lane J. Sobehrad,
Texas Tech Univ.; and Dorsey Armstrong, Purdue Univ./Arthuriana (“Dinner Parties in
Latin: A Short Tribute to Jeremy duQuesnay Adams”).
408 FETZER 2030
Merovingians and heir Neighbors
Sponsor:
Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Medieval Northwestern Europe
Organizer: Deanna Forsman, North Hennepin Community College
Presider:
Heather M. Flowers, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
From the Desert Fathers to Columban Monasticism: Early Medieval Notions of
Work, Sustenance, and Subsistence in Ireland and Merovingian Gaul
Claire Adams, Harvard Univ.
Saints’ Lives in Seventh-Century France and Ireland
John Higgins, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Respondent: Deanna Forsman
132
409 FETZER 2040
Literary, Artistic, and Cultural Approaches to Friendship in Late Medieval Iberia
Sponsor:
Ibero-Medieval Association of North America (IMANA)
Organizer: Sol Miguel Prendes, Wake Forest Univ.
Presider:
Sol Miguel Prendes
Four Hispanic Examples of Friendship and Its European Correlatives: Libro de
Alexandre, Libro de caballero Zifar, El Conde Lucanor, Celestina
Adam Alberto Vázquez Cruz, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Social Networks in Late Medieval Iberia: What Letters Tell Us about Writers and
heir Readers
Gemma Pellissa Prades, Independent Scholar
Friends in Life and Death: Sociopolitical Status and Funerary Constructions in
Fifteenth-Century Castile
Holly Sims, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
410 SCHNEIDER 1120
411 SCHNEIDER 1125
Records of Early English Drama, North-East
Sponsor:
Dept. of English Studies, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Mark C. Chambers, Durham Univ.
Presider:
Alexandra Johnston, Records of Early English Drama
“Lo, he merys; Lo, he laghys”: Humor and the Shepherds in the York and Towneley
Plays
Jamie Beckett, Durham Univ.
Men of the Cloth and Men in Drag: Ecclesiastical Patronage of the “Other” in
Late Medieval Durham
Mark C. Chambers
he Distinctiveness of Yorkshire West Riding Rushbearings
Ted McGee, Univ. of Waterloo
“I will speak as liberal as the North”: Performances in Northumberland
Suzanne Westfall, Lafayette College
133
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Maternity and Paternity: heories of Authorship
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Organizer: Sarah Wilma Watson, Univ. of Pennsylvania; Elizaveta Strakhov,
Marquette Univ.
Presider:
Elizaveta Strakhov
Familial Reproduction in the Auchinleck: Maternity’s Response to Paternal Inluence
Kimberly Tate Anderson, Florida State Univ.
Father Chaucer’s Wise Children: Fifteenth-Century Poets and the Fictions of
Patrilineal Descent
Samantha Katz Seal, Univ. of New Hampshire
“In thy wombe it wyll be swete”: Queer Production in Capgrave’s Life of Saint
Katherine
Caitlyn McLoughlin, Ohio State Univ.
412 SCHNEIDER 1130
Medieval Sidekicks I
Sponsor:
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Melissa Filbeck, Texas A&M Univ.
Presider:
Melissa Filbeck
Patronio: Paradigm of the Medieval Sidekick
Paul E. Larson, Baylor Univ.
Historicizing the “Magical Negro” Sidekick in Robin Hood: Prince of hieves
(1991) and Robin Hood: Men in Tights (1993)
Samantha Chesters, Univ. of Houston
Saintly Sidekicks in the South English Legendary
Scott Kleinman, California State Univ.–Northridge
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
413 SCHNEIDER 1135
Latinitas Viva I: Poetria et Paedagogia: Medieval Latin Teaching and Teaching
Medieval Latin
Sponsor:
Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study; SALVI (Septentrionale
Americanum Latinitatis Vivae Institutum): North American
Institute for Living Latin Studies
Organizer: Diane Warne Anderson, Univ. of Massachusetts–Boston
Presider:
Justin Slocum Bailey, Indwelling Language
Mens sola loco non exulat: de exiliis ab Ovidio et Petrarca ad nostrae aetatis
poetas argumentum
Matthew M. McGowan, Fordham Univ.
Tu lux, tu veritas, tu es . . . Palinurus? Doctrina Christiana, Inspiratio Classica et
Virgilius in Phillipide Gulielmi Britonis
Gregory P. Stringer, Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study/Burlington High
School
Carmina Paedagogica: Latin Poetry as “Comprehensible Input” in the Medieval
and Modern Classroom
Diane Warne Anderson
O Tempora! O Mores! Challenges facing Medievalists in Understanding Latin
Mark Pearsall, Glastonbury High School/Univ. of Connecticut
414 SCHNEIDER 1145
Twelve Angry Carolingians II: Not Angry, Just Disappointed
Sponsor:
SFB Visions of Community (VISCOM), FWF F42
Organizer: Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften; Cullen Chandler, Lycoming College
Presider:
Martin A. Claussen, Univ. of San Francisco
“Not Just Stultitia, but Outright Nequitia!”: heodulf of Orléans and His Contemporaries on Stupidity
Carine van Rhijn, Univ. Utrecht
Debating Vanity: Alcuin’s Chastisements concerning Clothing
Valerie L. Garver, Northern Illinois Univ.
“For Priests Are Found to Be Insipid”: Hildemar of Corbie and the Corporal
Punishment of Monastic Priests
Maximilian McComb, Cornell Univ.
134
415 SCHNEIDER 1155
Monsters II: Immaterial Monsters
Sponsor:
Monsters: he Experimental Association for the Research of
Cryptozoology through Scholarly heory and Practical Application (MEARCSTAPA)
Organizer: Richard Ford Burley, Boston College; Nicole Ford Burley, Boston
Univ.; Asa Simon Mittman, California State Univ.–Chico
Presider:
Richard Ford Burley
Dead Poet’s Society: Didactic Hauntings in the Old French Dits of Watriquet de
Couvin
Stefanie Goyette, New York Univ.
Taci, Maladetto Lupo! Quieting the Cursed Wolf of Pagan History in Dante’s Inferno
Jim Miranda, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
he Presence of the Immaterial: Intentional and Unintentional Cultural Resonances
in the Ghost Stories of Caesarius of Heisterbach
Stephanie Victoria Violette, Univ. of New Mexico
416 SCHNEIDER 1160
417 SCHNEIDER 1220
Dwelling in the Anglo-Saxon Landscape II: Life, Death, and Wellbeing
Sponsor:
Dept. of Archaeology, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Sarah J. Semple, Durham Univ.
Presider:
Helen Foxhall Forbes, Durham Univ.
Mortuary Topography and Landscape Perception in Early Medieval Southern
England and the near Continent: A Multi-scalar Approach
Kate Mees, Durham Univ.
he Past and the Construction of Identity in the Landscape of Anglo-Saxon England
Adam Goodfellow, Durham Univ.
“Her Own Place . . . Still Remembered”: Goscelin’s Saintly Architects and the
Anglo-Saxon Landscape
Sarah Sutor, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
135
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Space and Limits in Aljamiado Literature
Sponsor:
Center for Inter-American and Border Studies, Univ. of Texas–
El Paso
Organizer: Matthew V. Desing, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
Presider:
Matthew V. Desing
Imagined Space and Social Networks in Aljamiado Literature
Robert Hultgren, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
From the Tormes Tanneries to the Puerta de Elvira: Celestina’s Morisca Daughters
Andrea Nate, Truman State Univ.
Art and Authority in the Poema de Yuçuf
Andrea Pauw, Univ. of Virginia
Endless Space and Ininite Darkness: Alexander the Great’s Quest for Immortality
in the Rekontamiento del rey Alisandre
Priya Ananth, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
418 SCHNEIDER 1225
Law and Legal Culture in Anglo-Saxon England I
Sponsor:
Medieval-Renaissance Faculty Workshop, Univ. of Louisville
Organizer: Andrew Rabin, Univ. of Louisville
Presider:
Rolf H. Bremmer, Jr., Univ. Leiden
he Literary Art of the Legal Preface from Æthelberht to Cnut
Anya Adair, Yale Univ.
Narratives of Resistance: Principled Dissent and the Political Subjects of the Old
English Boethius
Hilary E. Fox, Wayne State Univ.
he Decalogue in Anglo-Saxon England: Alfred’s Laws and After
Stefan Jurasinski, College at Brockport
419 SCHNEIDER 1245
Anonymous Anglo-Saxon Saints’ Lives
Sponsor:
Anglo-Saxon Hagiography Society (ASHS)
Organizer: Johanna Kramer, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia; Robin Norris,
Carleton Univ.
Presider:
Johanna Kramer
he Education of Andreas
Megan Gilge, Independent Scholar
Barley Loaves and the Beholders of the Lord: Preaching Apostolic Witness in
Blickling XV and Ælfric’s Catholic Homilies I.26
Kevin R. Kritsch, McNeese State Univ.
Hagiography in Encyclopedic Notes
Kees Dekker, Rijksuniv. Groningen
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
420 SCHNEIDER 1255
Historiographical Perspectives on Christine de Pizan Scholarship
Sponsor:
International Christine de Pizan Society, North American Branch
Organizer: Benjamin M. Semple, Gonzaga Univ.
Presider:
Benjamin M. Semple
Christine Reads Women’s History: “Antiphrasis” in the Lamentations of “Math/eolus”
Linda Burke, Elmhurst College
Christine de Pizan and “héologie Française”
Margaret M. Gower, Loyola Marymount Univ.
Historicization of Literature, or Literarization of History? Christine de Pizan in
the Light of Contemporary Emotions heory
Charles-Louis Morand Métivier, Univ. of Vermont
421 SCHNEIDER 1265
Space-Time Continuum and Medieval Manuscripts
Sponsor:
Manuscript Technologies Forum Interest Group, he English
Association
Organizer: Elaine M. Treharne, Stanford Univ.
Presider:
Benjamin Albritton, Stanford Univ.
Medieval Manuscripts and Microiche: he Ethics of Residual Media
Matthew T. Hussey, Simon Fraser Univ.
Interpreting the British History across Time: Trojan Genealogies in Welsh Manuscripts
Georgia Henley, Harvard Univ.
136
Conceptual Dimensions and Physical Realities as Structural Elements of Texts
homas A. Bredehoft, Chancery Hill Books and Antiques
Response: Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
422
SCHNEIDER 1275
heology and Philosophy
Sponsor:
Dante Society of America
Organizer: Alison Cornish, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Presider:
Laurence E. Hooper, Dartmouth College
“And that bending is love”: Dante’s Exposition of Aristotle’s Desire
Leonardo Chiarantini, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
“he Face hat Most Resembles Christ”: he Matter Of Motherhood for Dante’s
Holy Family
Christiana Purdy Moudarres, Yale Univ.
he Geometer’s Trinitary Ontology of Dante’s Terza Rima
Catherine Adoyo, Independent Scholar
Spherical Radiation, Astral Determinism, and Philosophical Happiness in Dante’s
Convivium
Roberto Casazza, Univ. de Buenos Aires
423 SCHNEIDER 1280
424 SCHNEIDER 1320
New Research in Medieval Germanic Studies I: Love and Gender
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Germanic Studies (SMGS)
Organizer: Tina Boyer, Wake Forest Univ.
Presider:
Claire Taylor Jones, Univ. of Notre Dame
Iwein’s Sexless Marriage: Competition between Homosocial? and Heterosexual
Relationships in Hartmann von Aue’s Iwein
Jonathan Seelye Martin, Princeton Univ.
Food, Wine, Love, and Power in Tristrams saga ok Ísöndar
Joshua Davis, Wake Forest Univ.–Vienna
Living in Shame? Courtly Masculinity and Foolishness in Die halbe Birne
Olga V. Trokhimenko, Univ. of North Carolina–Wilmington
he Second Cross-Dresser in Ulrich’s Frauendienst: A New English Translation
and Interpretation of the Otto von Buochowe Episode
James Frankki, Cerritos College
137
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Digital Reconstructions: Italian Buildings and heir Decorations
Sponsor:
Italian Art Society
Organizer: Amy Gillette, St. Joseph’s Univ.; Kaelin Jewell, Temple Univ.
Presider:
Amy Gillette and Kaelin Jewell
Geographic Data from the Inscriptions of the Late Antique Roman Forum
Gregor Kalas, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
A Digital Model and Virtual Reconstruction of the Norman Palace in Palermo:
New Tools for New Understandings of Medieval Spaces
Ruggero Longo, Independent Scholar
Historic Architecture and Digital Modeling: A Reconstruction of the Choir
Screen at Santa Chiara, Naples
Lucas Giles, Duke Univ.
Splendors of Collaboration: Late Medieval Italian Choir Books and Google’s
Digital Materialism
Bryan Keene, J. Paul Getty Museum
425 SCHNEIDER 1325
he Syndergaard Sessions II: Ballads: Sources and Analogues
Sponsor:
Kommission für Volksdichtung
Organizer: Richard Firth Green, Ohio State Univ.
Presider:
Sandra B. Straubhaar, Univ. of Texas–Austin
he (Pregnant) Mouse Freed from the Gallows: he Mabinogi, Branch hree,
“Manawydan uab Llyr”
homas D. Hill, Cornell Univ.
Blinded by the Fairy Queen: Punishment in “Tam Lin” and Helga þáttr Þórissonar
Kristen Mills, Haverford College
“he Widow of Westmoreland’s Daughter” and Poggio Bracciolini’s Facetiae
Richard Firth Green
426 SCHNEIDER 1330
Persecution, Punishment, and Purgatory I: Historical Explorations
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Certiicate Program, Graduate Center, CUNY
Organizer: Steven Kruger, Queens College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Presider:
Esther Bernstein, Graduate Center, CUNY
Punishing the Blasphemous in the Time of Dante: In Canto and in the Courtroom
Melissa E. Vise, New York Univ.
“Motherworldly” Memento Mori: Lessons from the Grave in he Awntyrs of
Arthure at the Terne Wathelyne
Kara M. Stone, Fordham Univ.
he Cant/Can’t of Simulated Pilgrimage: Bodily Damage, Separation, and Weakness
in the York Plays
Jennie Friedrich, Univ. of California–Riverside
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
427 SCHNEIDER 1335
Shifting Shape and Changing Form I
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Studies Program, Purdue Univ.
Organizer: Jessica L. Auz, Purdue Univ.; Aidan M. Holtan, Purdue Univ.
Presider:
Jessica L. Auz
he Translation of Transformation: Body Schema in the Anglo-Norman Bisclavret
and Old Norse Bisclarets ljóð
Andrea Whitacre, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Transformation in Twelfth-Century Terms: Succubi, Shape-Shifters, and Sacramental
Encounters in Clerical Latin Narratives
Lindsey Zachary Panxhi, Oklahoma Baptist Univ.
Physical Transformations in William of Palerne: Shape-Shifting as Social Mobility
Gretchen Geer, Univ. of Connecticut
428 SCHNEIDER 1340
Signs of Identity, Marks of Otherness: New Approaches to Visual Culture I
Sponsor:
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale
(CESCM); International Medieval Society, Paris
Organizer: Vincent Debiais, Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation
médiévale
Presider:
Vincent Debiais
A Bishop of War: Remembering Crusading Identity in the Cathedral of Le Puy
homas Lecaque, SUNY–Orange
138
William Marshal and Usama ibn Munqidh: Cross-Cultural Status Markers
Steven Isaac, Longwood Univ.
War on Fashion: he Use of Images and Marginalization against Fashion Phenomena
in the Twelfth and hirteenth Century
Tina Anderlini, Independent Scholar
Image, Sequence, Narrative: he Marks and Signs of Identity in the Illuminated
Manuscripts of the heophilus Legend
Jerry Root, Univ. of Utah
429 SCHNEIDER 1345
Jewish Identity in Medieval Passion Plays
Presider:
Kelly E. Hall, Program for Aloat College Education (PACE),
U.S. Navy
Text as Image: A Consideration of Bonaventure’s Meditations on the Life of Christ as a
Source for Performances of Jewish Identity in the Late Medieval French Passion Plays
Denise O’Malley, Independent Scholar
Religious Instruction through heatres in Medieval French and German Cities:
he Depiction of Redemption and Jewish Deviance in Passion Plays
Carlotta Lea Posth, Univ. of Tübingen
430 SCHNEIDER 1350
431 SCHNEIDER 1355
he Transmission and Reception of Medieval Commentaries and Sermons: In
Memory of Steven Cartwright
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (SSBMA)
Organizer: James M. Matenaer, Franciscan Univ. of Steubenville
Presider:
Eileen F. Kearney, St. Xavier Univ.
Richard FitzRalph’s Sermon Defensio curatorum
Bridget Riley, Univ. of Reading
Job as Divine Bachelor: Scholastic Disputatio in the Scriptum super Iob ad litteram
of homas Aquinas
Evan R. Williams, Univ. of St. homas, Houston
he Sufering of Job and the End of the Lord: Christ and Salvation in the Super
Iob of Albertus Magnus
Franklin T. Harkins, School of heology and Ministry, Boston College
139
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Women and Manuscripts
Sponsor:
Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History
Organizer: Judith Sutera, OSB, Magistra Publications
Presider:
Judith Sutera, OSB
Textual Ingestions: Eating and Imitation in the “Afective Literacies” of the Ancrene
Wisse
Maybelle Leung, York Univ.
he Clothilde Missal: A Medieval Reverie in War-Torn France
Lynley Anne Herbert, Walters Art Museum
Read Her Like a Book
Catherine Keene, Southern Methodist Univ.
432 SCHNEIDER 1360
Light and Darkness in Medieval Art, 1200–1450 I
Sponsor:
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Stefania Gerevini, Bocconi Univ.; Tom Nickson, Courtauld
Institute of Art
Presider:
Nancy hompson, St. Olaf College
Darkened by the Light: Black Madonnas Illuminated
Elisa A. Foster, Henry Moore Institute
“Sculpture Subtiles”: Light, Optics, and the Aesthetics of Relief
Christopher R. Lakey, Johns Hopkins Univ.
he homas Aquinas Panel in Pisa and the Light of Truth
Martin Schwarz, Univ. of Chicago
433 SCHNEIDER 2345
Afective Transformations
Sponsor:
Harvard English Dept. Medieval Colloquium
Organizer: Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
Presider:
Erica Weaver
Elegiac Bubbles: Ecstatic Memory in Alcuin’s Poetry
Peter Buchanan, New Mexico Highlands Univ.
Not a Wonder, Not Yet a Sign: Stones and Bones in the Old English Seven Sleepers
Danielle Ruether-Wu, Cornell Univ.
Afraid for hat Fair Sight: Sympathetic Vision in he Dream of the Rood
Jennifer Lorden, Univ. of California–Berkeley
On the Hegelian Spirit of Anglo-Saxon Literature: Why Becoming Matters
Patricia Dailey, Columbia Univ.
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
434 SCHNEIDER 2355
Teaching the Edda and Sagas in the Undergraduate Classroom: Strategies and
Approaches (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Ilse Schweitzer VanDonkelaar, Grand Valley State Univ.
Presider:
Rachel S. Anderson, Grand Valley State Univ.
Using Tolkien as a Gateway to the Edda and Sagas in the Undergraduate Classroom
Lee Templeton, North Carolina Wesleyan College
“I advise you, Loddfafnir, to take this council”: Teaching College Writing and
Research Using the Eddas
Gregory L. Laing, Harding Univ.
Teaching Germanic Mythology 101
Johanna Denzin, Columbia College
Material Culture and Norse Mythology
Ilse Schweitzer VanDonkelaar
435 BERNHARD 106
In Honor of Constance H. Berman II: Medieval Women’s History: Past, Present,
and Future
Sponsor:
Medieval Foremothers Society
Organizer: Erin L. Jordan, Old Dominion Univ.
Presider:
Amy Livingstone, Wittenberg Univ.
Challenging the Received Wisdom on Medieval Nuns
Jane Tibbetts Schulenburg, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
140
Men’s Houses, Women’s Houses: Rethinking Sex Segregation in Monastic Life
Fiona J. Griiths, Stanford Univ.
Digitizing the Medieval Woman: Towards a Feminist Edition of the Cartulary of
Prémontré
Yvonne Seale, SUNY–Geneseo; Heather Wacha, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
436 BERNHARD 158
Space, Place, and Disability (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Joshua Eyler, Rice Univ.
Presider:
Tory V. Pearman, Miami Univ. Hamilton
“Fooles that Goon in Goddis Weys”: Mental Disability and Moral Personhood in
Late Medieval Literature
Julie Paulson, San Francisco State Univ.
“Mobile as Wishes”: Disability, Intersubjectivity, and Community in the Liber
confortatorius
Danielle Allor, Rutgers Univ.
he Grave’s a Fine and Private Place: Death and the Embodied Anglo-Saxon Subject
Leah Pope, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Disability in the Village: Household Care in Late Medieval France
Aleksandra Pfau, Hendrix College
437 BERNHARD 204
438 BERNHARD 205
Exercising Authority and Exerting Inluence I: “Seulete suy et seulete vueil estre” (Alone
am I, and alone I wish to remain): he Perils and Promise of Medieval Widowhood
Sponsor:
Royal Studies Network
Organizer: Zita Eva Rohr, Macquarie Univ.
Presider:
Zita Eva Rohr
Widows Unite! Multigenerational Widowhood in Elite Families
Linda E. Mitchell, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City
Navigating (Treacherous) Transitions: Joan of Navarre as a Case Study for the
Opportunities and Challenges of Royal Widowhood
Elena Woodacre, Univ. of Winchester
A Dowager Gone Rogue: Isabel of Portugal, Queen of Castile (r. 1447– 1454)
Núria Silleras-Fernández, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
141
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Occult Capitals of Islam
Sponsor:
Societas Magica
Organizer: Matthew Melvin-Koushki, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
Presider:
Nicholas G. Harris, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Baghdad, the City of Jupiter
Liana Saif, Univ. catholique de Louvain
What Did it Mean to Be a Magician in al-Baqillani’s Baghdad? he Social Implications
of the Discourse on Magic
Mushegh Asatryan, Univ. of Calgary
Lettrism at Sultan Barquq’s Court and Beyond: Cairo as Occult Capital at the
Turn of the Fifteenth Century
Noah D. Gardiner, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
“Here Art-Magick Was First Hatched”: Shiraz as Occult-Scientiic Capital of the
Persian Cosmopolis
Matthew Melvin-Koushki
439 BERNHARD 208
Customary Law in the Fourteenth Century
Sponsor:
14th Century Society
Organizer: Elizabeth Papp Kamali, Harvard Law School
Presider:
Wendy J. Turner, Augusta Univ.
From Custom to Law and Back Again in Medieval Spain: Exploring the Emergence
of the Observancias in Aragon
Jennifer Speed, Univ. of Dayton
Between Customs and Royal Law: Forest Administration in Fourteenth-Century
Normandy
Danny Lake-Giguère, Univ. de Montréal
Mapping Customary Law in the Fourteenth Century
Ada Maria Kuskowski, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
440 BERNHARD 209
Medievalism and Pedagogy
Sponsor:
Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM)
Organizer: Audrey Becker, Marygrove College
Presider:
Audrey Becker
Play, Games, and the Medieval World: Teaching Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s he
White Company
Robert Sirabian, Univ. of Wisconsin–Stevens Point
Teaching Westeros: Medieval Studies, Medievalism, and George R. R. Martin
Carol Jamison, Armstrong State Univ.
“Medieval” Rhetoric, ISIS, and the Syrian Refugee Crisis: A Lesson for Teaching
Political Medievalisms in the Undergraduate Classroom
Erin S. Lynch, Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
“Have you ever heard of Robin Longstride?”: Anachronism, Authenticity, and
Teaching Robin Hood
Christian Sheridan, Bridgewater College
441 BERNHARD 210
he Annual Journal of Medieval Military History Lecture
Sponsor:
De Re Militari: he Society for Medieval Military History
Organizer: Valerie Eads, School of Visual Arts
Presider:
L. J. Andrew Villalon, Independent Scholar
Holy Warriors, Worldly War: Military Religious Orders and Secular Conlict
Helen J. Nicholson, Cardif Univ.
Respondent: heresa M. Vann, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
442 BERNHARD 211
Digital Medieval and Medieval Studies: How to Write for the Web (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
Applied Research Centre in the Humanities
Organizer: Simon Forde, Medieval Institute Publications/Arc Humanities
Press
Presider:
Anne Nolan, Medieval Institute Publications/Arc Humanities
Press
A workshop led by Peter Konieczny, Medievalists.net/Medieval Warfare.
142
443 BERNHARD 212
he Sidneys and the Sister Arts
Sponsor:
International Sidney Society
Organizer: Nandra Perry, Texas A&M Univ.
Presider:
Timothy D. Crowley, Northern Illinois Univ.
Familiar Sonnets? Astrophil and Stella and the Ars Dictaminis
Andrew Strycharski, Florida International Univ.
Mary Wroth and the Female Baroque
Gary Waller, Purchase College
Desire, Artistic Representation, and the Limits of Agency in Sidney’s Astrophil
and Stella
Kathleen Hines, Southern Methodist Univ.
444 BERNHARD 213
Reconsidering he Second Nun’s Tale
Organizer: Emily McLemore, Oregon State Univ.
Presider:
Tara Williams, Oregon State Univ.
Transforming Space in Chaucer’s Hagiographies
Gina Marie Hurley, Yale Univ.
A Marian Cecilia in Chaucer’s Second Nun’s Tale
Mary Beth Long, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
Woman as Weapon: Wielding Cecilia in Chaucer’s Second Nun’s Tale
Emily McLemore
he Second Nun’s Tale: he Serious Capability and “Bisynesse” of Comedy
John Zedolik, Duquesne Univ./Chatham Univ.
445 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
—End of 1:30 p.m. Sessions—
3:00–4:00 p.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
143
Fetzer Center
Bernhard Center
Saturday 1:30 p.m.
Know(en), Biknow(en), Knowelich(en): Piers Plowman and the Poetics of Epistemology
Sponsor:
International Piers Plowman Society
Organizer: Tekla Bude, Oregon State Univ.
Presider:
Tekla Bude
Ininity and the Ininite: Temporality and the Measure of Faith in Piers Plowman
Stephanie L. Batkie, Sewanee: he Univ. of the South
Piers Plowman and the End of Knowing
Jennifer Sisk, Univ. of Vermont
Lifetimes of Learning in Piers Plowman
Alastair Bennett, Royal Holloway, Univ. of London
Saturday, May 13
3:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m.
Sessions 446–496
446 VALLEY III STINSON 306
he Medieval Reception of Augustine of Hippo II
Organizer: homas Clemmons, Catholic Univ. of America
Presider:
Allison Zbicz Michael, Catholic Univ. of America
From Principium to Primitas: Bonaventure’s Reception of Augustine’s Trinitarian
Doctrine
James Paul Krueger, Trinity School at Meadow View
Augustine and Aquinas on the Gifts of the Holy Spirit
Gregory M. Cruess, Univ. of Notre Dame
Exemplum and Sacramentum: heology of the Word in Saints Augustine and
Bonaventure
Shane M. Owens, Catholic Univ. of America
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
447 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
he Versatile Marie de France
Sponsor:
International Marie de France Society
Organizer: Tamara Bentley Caudill, Tulane Univ.
Presider:
Ann McCullough, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Misconceptions and Issues of Deception in Marie de France’s Lanval?
Anne Caillaud, Grand Valley State Univ.
he Birds and the Bees: Animals and Gender in Marie de France
Susan Hopkirk, Univ. of Toronto
Marie in English Verse: Challenges and Opportunities
Ron Cook, Independent Scholar
448 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
Embedding Professional Skills in Medieval Graduate Programs (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Applied Research Centre in the Humanities
Organizer: Simon Forde, Medieval Institute Publications/Arc Humanities
Press
Presider:
Simon Forde
A roundtable discussion with Sarah Davis-Secord, Univ. of New Mexico; Kristina
Markman, Univ. of California–Los Angeles; Lynn Ransom, Schoenberg Institute for
Manuscript Studies, Univ. of Pennsylvania Libraries; and Laura Morreale, Fordham Univ.
449 VALLEY II LEFEVRE LOUNGE
he Gospels
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (SSBMA)
Organizer: James M. Matenaer, Franciscan Univ. of Steubenville
Presider:
Bridget Riley, Univ. of Reading
Gospel Miracles in the Ethopoeiae of Nikephoros Basilakes
Craig A. Gibson, Univ. of Iowa
he Venerable Bede and the Gospel Writers
Paul Hilliard, Univ. of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary
he Resurrection of Jesus in Bonaventure’s Commentary on Luke
Aaron Canty, St. Xavier Univ.
144
450 VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
homas Aquinas III
Sponsor:
homas Aquinas Society
Organizer: John F. Boyle, Univ. of St. homas, Minnesota
Presider:
Paul Gondreau, Providence College
he Rationality of Faith: Aquinas and Bonaventure
Carl N. Still, St. homas More College, Univ. of Saskatchewan
Spiritual Beauty and Ugliness in Aquinas’s Ethics
Michael J. Rubin, Univ. of Mary Washington
Aquinas on the Episcopacy as a State of Perfection
Michael G. Sirilla, Franciscan Univ. of Steubenville
451 VALLEY I HADLEY 102
Mediterraneanizing the North Atlantic: Transmission, Translation, and Textuality
(A Panel Discussion)
Organizer: Nahir I. Otaño Gracia, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Samantha Pious, Univ. of Pennsylvania
A panel discussion with Daniel Armenti, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst (“‘Mes or
laissons lor loi ester’: Conlicting Legal Institutions in Chrétien de Troyes’s Philomena”);
Georgia Henley, Harvard Univ.; and Nahir I. Otaño Gracia.
452 VALLEY I SHILLING LOUNGE
453 FETZER 1005
Academic heft (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Lindy Brady, Univ. of Mississippi; Damian Fleming, Indiana
Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne; Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
Presider:
M. Breann Leake, Univ. of Connecticut
A roundtable discussion with Marjorie Harrington, Univ. of Notre Dame; Joey
McMullen, Centenary Univ.; David F. Johnson, Florida State Univ.; M. Jane Toswell,
Western Univ.; and Alexandra Reider, Yale Univ.
145
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
he Idea of the Garden in Medieval Literature
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Organizer: Shannon Gayk, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Shannon Gayk
Paradise Not Lost or Longed-For: he Phoenix’s Garden as Heaven’s Earth
Evelyn Reynolds, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
An Apology for Medicine in Walahfrid Strabo’s De cultura hortorum
Jared Johnson, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
On the Prettiness of Flowers, or, Ornamentation in the Medieval Garden
Isabel Stern, Rutgers Univ.
Response: Lynn Staley, Colgate Univ.
454 FETZER 1010
Asterisk Tolkien
Sponsor:
Tolkien at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Brad Eden, Valparaiso Univ.
Presider:
Kristine Larsen, Central Connecticut State Univ.
he “hird Spring”: New Discoveries and Connections
Brad Eden
“He came alone, and in bear’s shape”: Tolkien’s Attempt at Correcting the hwarting
of Bodvar Bjarki
Michael David Elam, Regent Univ.
Landscape as Character in he Lord of the Rings
Robert Dobie, La Salle Univ.
Tolkien’s Monsters: An Asterisk in His Translation of Beowulf
Yvette Kisor, Ramapo College
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
455 FETZER 1040
he Cistercian and Monastic Inspiration for the Reformation: On the Occasion
of the Five-Hundredth Anniversary of Luther’s heses
Sponsor:
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Aage Rydstrøm-Poulsen, Kalaallit Nunaata Univ.
Presider:
Marvin Döbler, Ev. -luth. Landeskirche Hannovers
“Bernhardus ist uber alle Doctores in Ecclesia, wenn er predigt . . .” (Martin Luther)
Aage Rydstrøm-Poulsen
he Two Monasteries of Grimma and heir Impact on the Lutheran Reformation
Rose Marie Tillisch, Strandmarkskirken
“I here but follow the holy Bernard of Clairvaux in his book On Consideration”
Else Marie Wiberg Pedersen, Aarhus Univ.
he “Case” Fuerstenfeld (Campus Principum) and Luther’s heses
Klaus Wollenberg, Hochschule für angewandte Wissenschaften München
456 FETZER 1045
Monsters III: Monstrous Acts of Heroism (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Medieval Northwestern Europe;
Monsters: he Experimental Association for the Research of
Cryptozoology through Scholarly heory and Practical Application (MEARCSTAPA)
Organizer: Deanna Forsman, North Hennepin Community College; Asa
Simon Mittman, California State Univ.–Chico
Presider:
Deanna Forsman
A roundtable discussion with Ilan Mitchell-Smith, California State Univ.–Long
Beach; David Michael Hennessy, San Francisco State Univ. ; Tina Boyer, Wake Forest
Univ.; Ana Grinberg, East Tennessee State Univ.; and Larissa Tracy, Longwood Univ.
457 FETZER 1060
Perspectives on Machaut’s First Book (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
International Machaut Society
Organizer: Jared C. Hartt, Oberlin Conservatory of Music
Presider:
Anne-Hélène Miller, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
A roundtable discussion with Lawrence M. Earp, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison; Tamsyn
Rose-Steel, Johns Hopkins Univ.; and Jared C. Hartt.
Respondent: Domenic Leo, Duquesne Univ.
146
458 FETZER 2016
Gower and Games (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Gower Project
Organizer: Eve Salisbury, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider:
Eve Salisbury
Gower’s Games: Making Play Serious Since 1381
William Rogers, Univ. of Louisiana–Monroe
Love Games: Somnolence and Sex
Jefery G. Stoyanof, Spring Hill College
Playing with the Text: Gower’s Games through Computer-Assisted Analysis
Kara L. McShane, Ursinus College
Grammar, Game, and How to Read Gower’s Latin: A Modest Proposal
Stephanie L. Batkie, Sewanee: he Univ. of the South
Morality Games in John Gower’s Confessio amantis
Kim Zarins, California State Univ.–Sacramento
459 FETZER 2020
Medieval Form and Medieval Knowledge
Sponsor:
Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley
Organizer: Evan Wilson, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Presider:
Evan Wilson
Formal Iconicity and Rupture in the Late Medieval Stanza
Jack Dragu, Univ. of Chicago
Multicursal Reading: Old English Poetry as Ergodic Literature
Michael Matto, Adelphi Univ.
Language Hybridity and Mirabilia in the Middle English Letter of Alexander to
Aristotle
Verity Walsh, Stanford Univ.
Illuminated Manuscripts
Presider:
Caroline D. Eckhardt, Pennsylvania State Univ.
heories of Language and the Visual Presentation of the Text in Insular Manuscripts
Eleanor Jackson, Univ. of York
Romance Made Holy: Integrating UCB 106 into the Codicological History of the
Lancelot-Grail Cycles
Louisa Kirk, Univ. of California–Berkeley
A Man of His Time: A Temporal Reading of the Zodiac Man in Two Surgical
Manuscripts
Sara Öberg Strådal, Univ. of Glasgow
147
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
460 FETZER 2030
461 FETZER 2040
Borders of Learning: Frontiers of Clerical Poetry in Medieval Iberia
Sponsor:
Center for Inter-American and Border Studies, Univ. of Texas–
El Paso
Organizer: Matthew V. Desing, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
Presider:
Matthew V. Desing
Entre clerecía y juglaría: la comicidad en algunos poemas de Gonzalo de Berceo
Rocío Rubio Moiŕn, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
El Poema de Fernán González: ¿en los márgenes del mester de clerecía?
Pablo Ancos, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
he Frontiers of the Body: A Method for Learning
Álvaro Garrote Pascual, Cornell Univ.
“Al cielo sin escalera”: anticlericalismo y sátira social en el cancionero cuatrocentista
Yoel Castillo Botello, Georgetown Univ.
462 SCHNEIDER 1120
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Everybody’s (Gender) Hurts: Gendered Experiences of Pain
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Organizer: Alicia Spencer-Hall, Univ. College London
Presider:
Alicia Spencer-Hall
“Siker ich”: Narrative Dominance as Assault in Sir Degaré
Hannah M. Christensen, Univ. of Chicago
Punishing Amazon Transgressions: Slander, Dismemberment, and Death in the
Romans Antiques
Elizabeth S. Leet, Washington Univ. in St. Louis
Human and Trans-human Experiences of Pain in the Late Middle Ages
Jonah Coman, Univ. of St. Andrews
463 SCHNEIDER 1125
Memories of Medieval Drama in Shakespeare’s Plays
Organizer: Rosemary O’Neill, Kenyon College; Kurt Schreyer, Univ. of
Missouri–St. Louis
Presider:
Rosemary O’Neill
“At Feastiuals / On Ember Eues, and Holydayes”: Pericles and the Medieval Saint Play
Gina M. Di Salvo, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
Shakespeare’s Stage Commentators and Choric Devices: How Medieval, How Early
Modern?
Michael Anthony Ingham, Lingnan Univ.
Horses and Harries: Medieval Depictions of Virtue and Vice in 1 Henry IV
Ann Hubert, St. Lawrence Univ.
“Spirits of peace, where are ye?”: heatrical Recusancy in All Is True
Kurt Schreyer
464 SCHNEIDER 1130
Medieval Sidekicks II: Sidekicks in Medieval Romance
Sponsor:
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Melissa Filbeck, Texas A&M Univ.
Presider:
Melissa Filbeck
Rereading Lunete: he Sidekick as Alternative Text
Kaitlin L. Browne, Eastern Michigan Univ.
148
Ideological Sh(r)ift in he Tale of Gamelyn: Adam as Sidekick, Confessor, and
Enabler
Robert Shane Farris, Northeastern State Univ.–Tahlequah
Valorizing the “Fals” Steward in Amis and Amiloun
Maia Farrar, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
465 SCHNEIDER 1135
Latinitas Viva II: Ars Docendi Viva: Live Teaching Demonstrations of an Alive
Medieval Latin (Performances)
Sponsor:
Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study; SALVI (Septentrionale
Americanum Latinitatis Vivae Institutum): North American
Institute for Living Latin Studies
Organizer: Diane Warne Anderson, Univ. of Massachusetts–Boston
Presider:
Diane Warne Anderson
Elementa per Elementa: An Embodied Pedagogy Performance of Hildegard of
Bingen’s Causae et Curae
Justin Slocum Bailey, Indwelling Language
Old Testament, New Tricks: Teaching Latin with the Vulgate
Nancy Llewellyn, Wyoming Catholic College
Respondent: Gregory P. Stringer, Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study/Burlington
High School
466 SCHNEIDER 1145
467 SCHNEIDER 1155
Exploring the Early Medieval Economy: From Macro to Micro
Sponsor:
Framing the Late Antique and Early Medieval Economy
(FLAME)
Organizer: Lee Mordechai, Princeton Univ.
Presider:
Alan Stahl, Princeton Univ.
he FLAME Project: Visualizing Transnational Medieval Economic Networks
Lee Mordechai
Fraternal Enemies Reconciled: History, Numismatics, and Archaeology
Andrei Gandila, Univ. of Alabama–Huntsville
he Monetary Economy of Early Medieval Syria in Its Mediterranean Context
Jane Sancinito, Univ. of Pennsylvania
he Monetary Economy of the Byzantine Islands between Late Antiquity and the
Early Middle Ages
Luca Zavagno, Bilkent Univ.
149
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Twelve Angry Carolingians III: Being Angry
Sponsor:
SFB Visions of Community (VISCOM), FWF F42
Organizer: Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften; Cullen Chandler, Lycoming College
Presider:
Julie A. Hofmann, Shenandoah Univ.
Heretical and Orthodox Emotions according to Claudius of Turin and Jonas of
Orléans
Kelly Gibson, Univ. of Dallas
Upsetting Agobard’s Apple-Cart: Motivations for Writing the Adversum dogma Felicis
Cullen Chandler
False Hope and Real Fear in Nithard’s Libri historiarum
Courtney M. Booker, Univ. of British Columbia
468 SCHNEIDER 1160
A Text by Any Other Name: Rewritings, Reworkings, and Manipulations of Medieval
Iberian Texts
Sponsor:
Ibero-Medieval Association of North America (IMANA)
Organizer: David Arbesú, Univ. of South Florida
Presider:
David Arbesú
From Great Muslim Warriors to Good Christian Subjects: Converting the Legend
of the Infantes of Lara between the hirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
Marcelo E. Fuentes, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Libro de Troya, Estoria de Troya y General estoria: (Re)escrituras y recepción de
la materia troyana alfonsí en los siglos XIII y XIV
Ricardo Pichel Gotérrez, Univ. de Alcalá/Univ. de Santiago de Compostela
Textual Alteration and Philosophical Appropriation: he Peculiar Case of
Dominicus Gundissalinus in Toledo
Nicola Polloni, Durham Univ.
469 SCHNEIDER 1220
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Persecution, Punishment, and Purgatory II: Methodological Considerations
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Certiicate Program, Graduate Center, CUNY
Organizer: Steven Kruger, Queens College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Presider:
Alexander Baldassano, Graduate Center, CUNY
Towards an Understanding of the Medieval Surveillant Imaginary
Sylvia Tomasch, Hunter College, CUNY
Confessionals and Punishment Rituals in the Swiss Confederacy
Noah Shuster, New School
Ritual Violence/heatrical Terminus
Christopher Swift, New York City College of Technology, CUNY
470 SCHNEIDER 1225
Law and Legal Culture in Anglo-Saxon England II
Sponsor:
Medieval-Renaissance Faculty Workshop, Univ. of Louisville
Organizer: Andrew Rabin, Univ. of Louisville
Presider:
Jay Gates, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Considering the Dialogue of Ecgberht as an Early Witness to Anglo-Saxon Legal
History
Kristen Carella, Assumption College
Law and Lawlessness in the Case of the “Peterborough Witch”
Alexandra Bauer, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Sir Roger Twysden and the Editio Princeps of the Leges Henrici primi
Rebecca Brackmann, Lincoln Memorial Univ.
471 SCHNEIDER 1245
Gender in Anonymous Anglo-Saxon Saints’ Lives
Sponsor:
Anglo-Saxon Hagiography Society (ASHS)
Organizer: Johanna Kramer, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia; Robin Norris,
Carleton Univ.
Presider:
Matthew T. Hussey, Simon Fraser Univ.
Undermining Masculine Authority: Reading Saint Christopher in the Beowulf
Manuscript
S. C. homson, Ruhr-Univ. Bochum
150
Ambivalent Asceticism: Mary of Egypt and the Desert
Irina A. Dumitrescu, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Univ. Bonn
Freudian Confessions: he History of Gender, Power, and Sex in the Old English
Life of Mary of Egypt
April Graham, Rutgers Univ.
472 SCHNEIDER 1255
Barbarians and Barbarian Kingdoms III: Byzantines Perspectives
Organizer: Jonathan J. Arnold, Univ. of Tulsa
Presider:
Edward M. Schoolman, Univ. of Nevada–Reno
Novella 11: Memory and Imperial Propaganda in the Build Up to the Gothic War
Alexander Sarantis, Aberystwyth Univ.
he Fine Line between Fear and Courage in Book III of Procopius’s Vandalic Wars
Michael E. Stewart, Univ. of Queensland
Procopius’s Vandal Wars and the Limits of Autocracy
Danielle Reid, Cornell Univ.
473 SCHNEIDER 1265
474 SCHNEIDER 1275
Style, Tragedy, Irony, and Death
Sponsor:
Dante Society of America
Organizer: Alison Cornish, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Presider:
Kathleen Verduin, Hope College
Dante’s hree Styles Revisited: Constructio
Wuming Chang, Brown Univ.
Dante’s Retrospective Illumination of Irony: he Inferno
James T. Chiampi, Univ. of California–Irvine
Dantean Contradictions: “Cangrande” on Tragedy, and Satan as Both Active and
Inactive
Henry Ansgar Kelly, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Studying Death with Dante: he Vita nuova and Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess
Aparna Chaudhuri, Harvard Univ.
151
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Hoccleve at Play
Sponsor:
International Hoccleve Society
Organizer: Danielle Bradley, Rutgers Univ.
Presider:
Elon Lang, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Does his Stress Make Me Look Fat? Awkwardness in homas Hoccleve’s Verse
David Watt, Univ. of Manitoba
Funny Money in Hoccleve’s Begging Poems
Taylor Cowdery, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
Play Wor(l)ds: Form, Style, Play at Work in the Ballades of Good Company
Travis Neel, Ohio State Univ.
Hoccleve Ludens: Playing with De ludo scaccorum in the Regiment of Princes
Amanda Walling, Univ. of Hartford
475 SCHNEIDER 1280
Obscured by the Alps: Medieval Italian Architecture and the European Canon
Sponsor:
Italian Art Society
Organizer: Erik Gustafson, George Mason Univ.
Presider:
Erik Gustafson
he Church of San Lorenzo in Verona: A “Hapax” in the Romanesque Architectural
Context in Europe
Angelo Passuello, Univ. Ca’ Foscari Venezia
Italian Octagonal Piers and Late Medieval Anti-Classical Modernism
Evan W. Grey, Institute of Fine Arts, New York Univ.
Enlightened by the Alps: Reconsidering the Role of Northern Tradition on Frederick
II’s Architecture in Southern Italy
Francesco Gangemi, Bibliotheca Hertziana
Beyond the Gilded Frame: Connectivity of Sacred Space in Medieval Rome
Catherine R. Carver, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
476 SCHNEIDER 1320
New Research in Medieval Germanic Studies II: Philology and Text
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Germanic Studies (SMGS)
Organizer: Adam Oberlin, Atlanta International School
Presider:
Adam Oberlin
Steganography, or, How to Hide the Act of Hiding
Erik Born, Cornell Univ.
Reveling in Bodily Inabilities: he Beguine Mystics, the Cycle of Imitatio Christi,
and the Imperfect Body
Adrienne Noelle Merritt, Occidental College
Old Norse Ekphrasis and the Classical Tradition
Jonas Wellendorf, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Evaluating English Translations of the Old Saxon Hêliand
Marc Pierce, Univ. of Texas–Austin; Collin Brown, Univ. of Texas–Austin
477 SCHNEIDER 1325
Medieval Medicine
Presider:
Albrecht Classen, Univ. of Arizona
Women’s Medicine in the Late Eleventh-Century MS Bodley 130
Bethany Christiansen, Ohio State Univ.
Stones, Saints, and Friars: he Popular Transmission of Classical Pharmacology
via Mendicant Texts
Nichola Harris, SUNY–Ulster
Complex Cases: Mixed Diagnoses of Loss of Mind in Medieval Miracles
Leigh Ann Craig, Virginia Commonwealth Univ.
Charms and Medicine in Medieval Wales: heir Social and Intellectual Context
Katherine Leach, Harvard Univ.
478 SCHNEIDER 1330
Dwelling in the Anglo-Saxon Landscape III: Materiality and Image
Sponsor:
Dept. of Archaeology, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Sarah J. Semple, Durham Univ.
Presider:
David Petts, Durham Univ.
Hidden Gems: Boxes and heir Contents in Seventh-Century Anglo-Saxon England
152
Katie Haworth, Durham Univ.
Deus ex Machina: Anglo-Saxon Male Beauty, Divine Bodies, and Machine Aesthetics
Tristan Lake, Durham Univ.
he Image of the Past: Reassembling Identities through Roman Objects in Early
Anglo-Saxon Society
Indra Werthmann, Durham Univ.
479 SCHNEIDER 1335
Shifting Shape and Changing Form II
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Studies Program, Purdue Univ.
Organizer: Jessica L. Auz, Purdue Univ.; Aidan M. Holtan, Purdue Univ.
Presider:
Adrianna Radosti, Purdue Univ./Arthuriana
Metamorphosis and Diference in the Prose Merlin
Rachel Kapelle, Willamette Univ.
he Sorcerer in the Binary: A Bi-Gendered Merlin in Le Morte Darthur
Margaret Sheble, Purdue Univ.
Long, Cool Woman (with a Snake Tail): Jean d’Arras’s Manipulation of the Serpentine in the Roman de Melusine
Kirsten Lopez, Univ. of Edinburgh
480 SCHNEIDER 1340
481 SCHNEIDER 1345
Greater than the Sum of Our Arts: he Multitasking Life of the Lone Medievalist
(A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Lone Medievalist
Organizer: John P. Sexton, Bridgewater State Univ.
Presider:
John P. Sexton
A roundtable discussion with Geofrey B. Elliott, Independent Scholar; Megan E.
Hartman, Univ. of Nebraska–Kearney ; Leah Haught, Univ. of West Georgia; Andrew
M. Pfrenger, Kent State Univ.–Salem; and Kisha G. Tracy, Fitchburg State Univ.
153
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Signs of Identity, Marks of Otherness: New Approaches to Visual Culture II
Sponsor:
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale
(CESCM); International Medieval Society, Paris
Organizer: Vincent Debiais, Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation
médiévale
Presider:
Steven Isaac, Longwood Univ.
Inscribed Capitals in French Romanesque Cloisters: Monastic Identity and
Bounding Space
Kristine Tanton, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Mitre, Crozier, and Ring: Representations of Benedictine Abbots in the Late
Middle Ages
Anne Heath, Hope College
hink the Other through the Image: Anti-Jewish Discourse in the Medieval Manuscript
Pamela Nourrigeon, Univ. de Poitiers
Edwards Memorial Travel Award Winner
he Construction of the Identity of Islamic Societies throughout the Arts: Encounters and Confrontations in Late Medieval Mediterranean (Twelfth–Fifteenth
Centuries)
María Marcos Cobaleda, Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa
482 SCHNEIDER 1350
Speaking of Holy Women: Narratives, Interpretations, Traditions
Sponsor:
Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History
Organizer: Judith Sutera, OSB, Magistra Publications
Presider:
Judith Sutera, OSB
“Clamor Validus” versus “Feminae Fragilitas”: Hrotsvit of Gandersheim on the
Agency of Women
Caroline Jansen, Western Michigan Univ.
“As Others and Sparkling”: he Transmission of Pain, Desire, and Futurity in
Medieval and Early Modern Christian Mysticism
Stephanie Camacho-Van Dyke, California State Univ.–Fullerton
“Þe speche of God”: A Re-Assessment of the Double-Voicedness of Mystic Speech
in he Book of Margery Kempe
Jasmin Miller, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Univ. of California, Berkeley Graduate Student Prize Winner
Her Body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost: Why Margery Kempe is a Better “Virgin”
Katharine Beaulieu, Lakehead Univ.
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
483 SCHNEIDER 1355
Imitatio Mariae in the Meditationes vitae Christi Traditions across Europe
Sponsor:
Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group
Organizer: Leah Buturain Schneider, Univ. of Southern California; Laura
Saetveit Miles, Univ. i Bergen
Presider:
Laura Saetveit Miles
Responsive Imitation: Mary’s Sufering in Renaissance Castile
Jessica A. Boon, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
“Take Ensaumple of Marye”: A Consideration of Nicholas Love’s Ave Maria Meditation
Joseph Morgan, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Imitatio Mariae in the Book of Margery Kempe
James Noble, Univ. of New Brunswick
Enacting the “Devout Imagination” in Imitatio Mariae
Leah Buturain Schneider
484 SCHNEIDER 1360
Light and Darkness in Medieval Art, 1200–1450 II
Sponsor:
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA)
Organizer: Stefania Gerevini, Bocconi Univ.; Tom Nickson, Courtauld
Institute of Art
Presider:
Nancy hompson, St. Olaf College
“Swords Shining in the Ears of Virgins”: Light and Lighting in Muslim and
Christian Iberia
Tom Nickson
Deciphering the Axis Mundi: Light, Water, and heir Relection on Pre- and
Early Ottoman Anatolia
Federica Broilo, Univ. degli Studi di Urbino “Carlo Bo”
Light Matters: he Cappella Portinari in Sant’ Eustorgio, Milan
Stefania Gerevini
154
485 SCHNEIDER 2345
Material Religion in the Crusading World II: Creating the Sacred
Organizer: Siobhain Bly Calkin, Carleton Univ.; William J. Purkis, Univ.
of Birmingham
Presider:
William J. Purkis
Possession: Symbolic Objects, Sacred Treasure, and the Material Foundations of
Chivalric Knighthood
Nicholas L. Paul, Fordham Univ.
Becoming One? Passion Relics, Human Bodies, and Christian Negotiations of Loss
Siobhain Bly Calkin
Bodying Forth: Relics and the (Re)creation of the Absent Body in the Old French
Miracles de Nostre Dame
Jane Sinnett-Smith, Univ. of Warwick
Intimacy and Abundance: Textile Relics and Eastern Fabrications in European
Collections after 1204
Anne E. Lester, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
486 SCHNEIDER 2355
Interoperable Manuscripts for Research and Teaching (A Workshop)
Sponsor:
International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF)
Organizer: Benjamin Albritton, Stanford Univ.
Presider:
Benjamin Albritton
his workshop—led by Laney McGlohon, Stanford Univ., and Alexandra Bolintineanu,
Univ. of Toronto—focuses on discovery of interoperable resources, building collections
of resources for teaching and research, and the use of tools that support these activities.
No programming experience is expected or required.
487 BERNHARD 106
155
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Topographies and Geographies of Anchoritism
Sponsor:
International Anchoritic Society
Organizer: Michelle M. Sauer, Univ. of North Dakota
Presider:
Michelle M. Sauer
he Anchoritic Topography of Pearl: How the Poem’s Spaces Reveal the Dreamer
as a Failed Anchoress
Brittany Claytor, Purdue Univ.
From Prison and Exile to Anchorhold: Liminality in the Lives of the Anchoress
Sisters Loretta and Annora de Briouze
Hilary Pearson, Univ. of Oxford
Topographical Relections in he Book of Margery Kempe
Fumiko Yoshikawa, Hiroshima Shudo Univ.
488 BERNHARD 158
Male Virginity
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of Homosexuality in the Middle Ages
(SSHMA)
Organizer: Graham N. Drake, SUNY–Geneseo
Presider:
Graham N. Drake
Celibacy and Chastity: Exploring Male Virginity in Middle English Texts
Kelly Kennedy, Univ. of North Dakota
Heroic Male Virginity
Susannah Chewning, Union County College
Spanish Virgins: Saint Pelagius and His Brethren
Felipe Rojas, Univ. of Chicago
489 BERNHARD 204
Magic Circles: Material, Ritual, Social
Sponsor:
Societas Magica
Organizer: David Porreca, Univ. of Waterloo
Presider:
Frank Klaassen, Univ. of Saskatchewan
“Walk Like an Egyptian”: Magic Circles in Ancient Egypt from Mehen to Ouroboros
Mark Roblee, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Magic Circles: What’s Inside? What’s Outside? (PGM, Picatrix, Munich Handbook)
David Porreca
John of Morigny and His Circle
Claire Fanger, Rice Univ.
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
490 BERNHARD 205
Exercising Authority and Exerting Inluence II: Unleashing the Power Within:
Reassessing Royal and Elite Domestic Spaces
Sponsor:
Royal Studies Network
Organizer: Zita Eva Rohr, Macquarie Univ.
Presider:
Elena Woodacre, Univ. of Winchester
he Truth Is Rarely Pure and Never Simple: “Discreet Dissimulation” in Late
Medieval Female Households and Courts
Zita Eva Rohr
Mary Stuart: Poor Princess, or Rock of Convictions?
James H. Dahlinger, SJ, Le Moyne College
Respondent: Lisa Benz, Independent Scholar
491
BERNHARD 208
Before and after 1348: Prelude and Consequences of the Black Death
Sponsor:
14th Century Society
Organizer: Monica H. Green, Arizona State Univ.
Presider:
Monica H. Green
Mongolian Deportation Practices and the Demographic Impact of the Conquest
of North China
Christopher P. Atwood, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Symptom-Addition as heoretical Strategy: Evidences of Plague in hirteenthCentury Chinese Medical Sources
Robert P. W. Hymes, Columbia Univ.
he Black Death in the Territory of the Ulus of Jochi and the Russian Principalities
Timur Khaydarov, Kazan National Research Univ.
156
492 BERNHARD 210
Medieval Military Technology
Sponsor:
De Re Militari: he Society for Medieval Military History
Organizer: Valerie Eads, School of Visual Arts
Presider:
Jay Roberts, Accelerated Schools of Overland Park
he Implications of hom Richardson’s he Tower Armoury in the Fourteenth
Century for the Study of Military Technology
Kelly DeVries, Loyola Univ. Maryland
War Rides a Red Horse: Changes in the Scale of Western European Warfare in the
Late Medieval Period
John Lovett, Texas Christian Univ.
Full Iron Horses: he First Fifteenth-Century Metal Bards
Marina Viallon, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Spain’s hirteenth-Century Law Code and (Incidental) Military Treatise, the Siete
Partidas
L. J. Andrew Villalon, Independent Scholar
493 BERNHARD 211
494 BERNHARD 212
he Van Dorsten Lecture
Sponsor:
International Sidney Society
Organizer: Nandra Perry, Texas A&M Univ.
Presider:
Donald Stump, St. Louis Univ.
Playing, Singing, Speaking hings
Gavin Alexander, Univ. of Cambridge
495 BERNHARD 213
Boethius’s De consolatione philosophiae: Reception, Translations, and Inluence
Sponsor:
International Boethius Society
Organizer: Philip Edward Phillips, Middle Tennessee State Univ.
Presider:
Philip Edward Phillips
Chancing Analogic hought in Boethius’s De consolatione philosophiae
Lucia Treanor, FSE, Grand Valley State Univ.
Chaucer’s Boethian Humility: Escaping Celebrity in Boece and he House of Fame
Gillian Adler, Saint Peter’s Univ.
“Jewels in a Crown of Lead”: he Consolatory Structure of Coleridge’s Boethian
Biographia literaria
Anthony G. Cirilla, Niagara Univ.
Respondent: Noel Harold Kaylor, Jr., Troy Univ.
157
Saturday 3:30 p.m.
Translation and Comparative Literature
Presider:
Charles-Louis Morand Métivier, Univ. of Vermont
Trickstan, Some Marginal Tristan Texts as Catalysts for the Transgressive Traits of
the Hero
María Cristina Azuela Bernal, Univ. Nacional Aut́noma de México
Courtly Anger, Beastly Violence, and the Animal-Afective Prosthetic
Curtis homas, Hillcrest High School
Chaucer’s “Fetis” Rose and de Lorris’s French Inadequacy
Maude Vachon-Roy, Simon Fraser Univ.
Fortune’s Scars: Jean de Meun and Dante’s Manfred(i)
Molly Bronstein, Univ. of California–Berkeley
496 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Langland’s Women
Sponsor:
Gender and Medieval Studies Group; International Piers Plowman
Society
Organizer: Sarah Wilma Watson, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Swansea Univ.
Lady Mede’s Reading Lesson
Michelle Ripplinger, Univ. of California–Berkeley
“Yet hadde I levere wedde no wyf to-yeere”: Dame Studie as Shrew
Matthew W. Irvin, Sewanee: he Univ. of the South
Langland’s Working Women: he Disappearance of Women’s Labor from the
A-Text
Katelyn Jaynes, Univ. of Connecticut
Respondent: Elizabeth Robertson, Univ. of Glasgow
Saturday, May 13
Evening Events
5:00 p.m.
ALE AND MEAD TASTING
Reception with hosted bar
Valley III
Harrison 301
Eldridge 310
Saturday evening
Sponsored by the Medieval Brewers Guild; AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study
of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art; and the Medieval
Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
5:00 p.m.
International Boethius Society
Business Meeting and Reception
with hosted bar
Bernhard 213
5:15 p.m.
Lydgate Society
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson Lounge
5:15 p.m.
Society for Medieval Feminist
Scholarship (SMFS)
Business Meeting and Reception
with hosted bar
Fetzer 1045
5:15 p.m.
A Feminist Renaissance in
Anglo-Saxon Studies
Business Meeting with cash bar
Fetzer 1060
5:30 p.m.
Society for Beneventan Studies
Business Meeting
Valley III
Stinson 306
5:30 p.m.
Society for Medieval Languages
and Linguistics
Business Meeting
Fetzer 2030
5:30 p.m.
Monsters: he Experimental
Bernhard 211
158
Association for the Research of
Cryptozoology through Scholarly
heory and Practical Application
(MEARCSTAPA)
Business Meeting
International Christine de Pizan
Society, North American Branch
Business Meeting
Bernhard 212
5:30 p.m.
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript
Library, Yale Univ.
Reception with hosted bar
Bernhard G10
6:00 p.m.
Italians and Italianists at
Kalamazoo
Business Meeting
Valley III
Eldridge 309
6:30 p.m.
International Center of Medieval
Art (ICMA)
Board Meeting
Bernhard 159
7:00 p.m.
Center for Cistercian and Monastic
Studies, Western Michigan Univ.
Dinner with cash bar
(by invitation)
Bernhard
President’s
Dining Room
8:00 p.m.
Floris and Blanchelour
Pneuma Ensemble
Dulcitius, or Sex in the Kitchen
Poculi Ludique Societas (PLS)
Gilmore heatre
Complex
$15.00 General Admission
$10.00 presale through online Congress registration
Shuttles leave Valley III (Eldridge-Fox) beginning at 7:15 p.m.
It’s “Toronto night” at the festival! Toronto’s Pneuma Ensemble
shares a period musical presentation of the irst extant romance
in English, before the venerable PLS performs Colleen Butler’s
new translation of Hrosvit’s tenth-century tragicomedy about
the Roman emperor lured into carnal embrace with cookware.
159
Saturday evening
5:30 p.m.
8:00 p.m.
Annus Mirabilis
Fetzer 1005
Sponsor: Societas Fontibus Historiae Medii Aevi Inveniendis,
vulgo dicta, “he Pseudo Society”
Organizer: Kavita Mudan Finn, Independent Scholar
Presider: Elizabeth J. Nielsen, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Anchor-kitties: New Origins of Ancrene Wisse
Emily R. Huber, Franklin & Marshall College
From Gongan to Gungan: he Surprising Medieval Roots
of Star Wars
Nathan E. H. Fayard, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville; Timothy
J. Nelson, Univ. of Arkansas–Fayetteville
A New Medieval Source for Shakespeare’s Greatest Tragedy
Mary Douglas Edwards, Pratt Institute
Remote broadcast in Fetzer 1010
8:00 p.m.
International Porlock Society
Business Meeting with cash bar
Fetzer 2016
10:00 p.m.
DANCE
with cash bar
Congress badge required
Bernhard
East Ballroom
Sunday, May 14
Morning Events
7:00–9:00 a.m.
BREAKFAST
Valley Dining Center
8:00–10:30 a.m.
COFFEE SERVICE
Fetzer Center
Bernhard Center
Sunday, May 14
8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.
Sessions 497–536
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
497 VALLEY III STINSON 306
New Approaches to the Helfta Nuns and heir Contemporaries
Sponsor:
Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group
Organizer: Catherine Annette Grisé, McMaster Univ.
Presider:
Barbara Zimbalist, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
God in the Book: Rethinking Corporeality in the Helfta Mystics
Jessica Barr, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Anselmian Atonement heory and Bridal Mysticism: he Purgatorial Piety of the
Nuns of Helfta
Anna Harrison, Loyola Marymount Univ.
“Ir Heimlich Freunde”: Friendship among Women in Medieval German Convents
Robin K. Pokorski, Northwestern Univ.
Respondent: Barbara Newman, Northwestern Univ.
160
498 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Medieval Polytemporality: Pasts in the Present
Organizer: Chris Africa, Univ. of Iowa Libraries
Presider:
Chris Africa
“For the ay-lastande life that lethe shalle neuer”: Allegories of Time in Saint
Erkenwald
Richard Bergen, Univ. of British Columbia
Malory’s Proto-Medievalism and Its Afterlives
Gania Barlow, Oakland Univ.
From Tars to Targaryen: Re-Coding Medieval Race
homas Blake, Austin College
Polytemporalities in Machiavelli’s Prince (1513–15)
Alison K. Frazier, Univ. of Texas–Austin
499 FRIDAY, MAY 12, 5:15 P.M. VALLEY II GARNEAU LOUNGE
he Manly Priest: A Discussion of Jennifer hibodeaux’s Society for Medieval
Feminist Scholarship Prize Winning Book (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Organizer: Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
Presider:
Liz Herbert McAvoy, Swansea Univ.
A roundtable discussion with Hugh M. homas, Univ. of Miami; Marita von Weissenberg,
Xavier Univ.; and Derek Neal, Nipissing Univ.
Session 499 takes place at 5:15 p.m. on Friday, May 12, in Valley II Garneau Lounge.
500 FETZER 1005
Old English Religious Texts after the Norman Conquest
Sponsor:
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Organizer: Dylan M. Wilkerson, Univ. of Toronto
Presider:
Roy M. Liuzza, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
he Afterlife of the Old English Homily: A Poema Morale for a New Audience
Leslie Carpenter, Fordham Univ.
Twelfth-Century Glosses and Revisions in a Manuscript of Ælfric’s Homilies
Stephen Pelle, Univ. of Toronto
Contemplating Connections: Old English in Twelfth-Century English Verse
Carla María homas, New York Univ.
501 FETZER 1010
161
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
he Practical Medicine of Medieval Surgeons and Physicians
Sponsor:
Medica: he Society for the Study of Healing in the Middle Ages
Organizer: William H. York, Portland State Univ.
Presider:
William H. York
Mineral Water Treatments in Late Medieval Italy
Beth Petitjean, St. Louis Univ.
he Propriety of Practical Medicine
Kira L. Robison, Univ. of Tennessee–Chattanooga
Hildegard’s Healing Landscape
Helga Ruppe, Western Univ.
502 FETZER 1040
he Intersection of Material and Spiritual Culture in Medieval Monasticism
Sponsor:
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Daniel Marcel La Corte, St. Ambrose Univ.
Presider:
Paul E. Lockey, St. Mary’s School of heology, Univ. of St.
homas, Houston
Lessons from the Cloister? he Location of the Monastic School in Early Benedictine
Monasticism
Matthew Ponesse, Ohio Dominican Univ.
Aquatic Spirituality: he Aqua-culture and Spirituality in the hought of the
Early Cistercians.
Daniel Marcel La Corte
Reading Aelred of Rievaulx’s Architectural Metaphors by the Letter
Jason Crow, Louisiana State Univ.
503 FETZER 1045
Alfonso al-Hakīm: Signiicance and Impact of Alfonso X of Castile’s Exchanges
with the Islamic World
Sponsor:
Ibero-Medieval Association of North America (IMANA)
Organizer: Marcelo E. Fuentes, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities; Veronica
Menaldi, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider:
Veronica Menaldi
Arabic Authority in Biblical History in the General estoria
Erik Ekman, Oklahoma State Univ.
Reading the Siete Partidas Transconfessionally
Gregory S. Hutcheson, Univ. of Louisville
Alfonso X’s Geographical Ideas: Arabic Sources and Castilian Legacy
Luis Miguel dos Santos, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Caliphs and Kingship: Calila e Dimna and the Transmission of Islamic Political
heory to Christian Kingdoms under Alfonso X
Robey Clark Patrick, Ohio Wesleyan Univ.
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
504 FETZER 1060
Layered Meanings, Layered Functions: Metalwork and Gems in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Laura J. Whatley, Auburn Univ.–Montgomery
Presider:
Laura J. Whatley
Elite Jewelry in Central Europe around the Millennium and the Impact of Fatimid
Egypt: he Montieri Brooch
John Mitchell, Univ. of East Anglia
Dressed to the Nines: Pearls and Spiritual Morality in Pearl, Cleanness, and Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight
Dalicia K. Raymond, Univ. of New Mexico
Jeweled Objects and the Transference of Sovereign Power
Jennifer A. Ailles, Palm Beach State College
162
505 FETZER 2016
Body and Soul in Medieval Visual Culture I
Organizer: Judith Soria, “Orient et Méditerranée”, CNRS; Jennifer Lyons,
Ithaca College
Presider:
Judith Soria
Jesus and Lunatics in Early Christianity: Healing the Body and Soul
Bertrand Billot, Univ. de Paris I–Panthéon-Sorbonne
In Vasis Fictilibus: Gold and Clay in San Vittore Ciel d’Oro in Milan
Rachel Danford, Loyola Univ. Maryland
Depictions of Body and Soul as Mirror in the Visio Philiberti
Christine Kralik, OCAD University
506 FETZER 2020
Transformations in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages I: Restructuring the
World
Sponsor:
Dept. of History, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Helen Foxhall Forbes, Durham Univ.
Presider:
Sarah J. Semple, Durham Univ.
Restructuring Early Christianity: Chains of Succession and Epistolary Networks
in Eusebius of Caesarea
James Corke-Webster, Durham Univ.
Creating Kingdoms: Burials and Landscape in Northeast England AD 300–800
Brian Buchanan, Durham Univ.
Riding the Currents of Power: he Patriarchate of Jerusalem from Antiquity to
the Crusades
Daniel Reynolds, Univ. of Birmingham
507 FETZER 2030
Hagiography
Sponsor:
Platinum Latin
Organizer: B. Gregory Hays, Univ. of Virginia; Danuta Shanzer, Univ. Wien
Presider:
David T. Gura, Univ. of Notre Dame
he Silence of Saint Cassian
B. Gregory Hays
Eutropius of Orange at the Heavenly Bar
Graham Barrett, St. John’s College, Univ. of Oxford/Univ. of Lincoln
Female Friendship and the Rule of Caesarius of Arles
Hope D. Williard, Univ. of Leeds/Univ. of Lincoln
508 FETZER 2040
163
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
Scottish History: New Approaches, New Questions
Sponsor:
Centre for Scottish Studies, Univ. of Guelph
Organizer: Marian Toledo Candelaria, Centre for Scottish Studies, Univ.
of Guelph
Presider:
Marian Toledo Candelaria
New Approaches to Early Medieval Scotland
Martin Goldberg, National Museums Scotland
All the Duke’s Daughters: Women and Marriage in the First Duke of Albany’s
Political Agenda
Shayna Devlin, Univ. of Guelph
509 SCHNEIDER 1160
he Schematization of Time
Organizer: Arthur Hénaf, École Pratique des Hautes Études
Presider:
Sarah Griin, Kellogg College, Univ. of Oxford
Aging beyond Death: Reconciling Ages of Man and Ages of the World
Anna Fore Waymack, Cornell Univ.
Visualizing Time and Space in the Chronologia magna of Paolino Veneto: Use and
Development of Tabular and Synoptic Forms in Medieval World Historiography
Nadine Holzmeier, FernUniv. in Hagen
he Visualization of Time in Fifteenth-Century Illustrated, Printed World Chronicles
Stephan Boll, Univ. Stuttgart
510 SCHNEIDER 1220
Medievalists in the Midwest: Promoting Resources, Collaboration, and Intercollegiality across Universities (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Indiana Medieval Consortium
Organizer: Andrea Whitacre, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Arielle McKee, Purdue Univ.
Medieval Resources at the Lilly Library
Kristin Browning Leaman, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Ricketts Fragments at the Lilly Library
Emerson Storm Fillman Richards, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
he Sublime and the Scrufy: Medieval Resources at the Newberry Library
Christopher D. Fletcher, Newberry Library
Virtually Local: Connecting Regional Scholars through the Digital Humanities
Amanda Visconti, Purdue Univ. Libraries
Programming and Resources at the Notre Dame Medieval Institute
Megan J. Hall, Univ. of Notre Dame
511 SCHNEIDER 1225
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
Settlement and Landscape I: Technological Approaches to the Medieval in the
Modern
Organizer: Vicky McAlister, Southeast Missouri State Univ.; Jennifer L.
Immich, Metropolitan State Univ. of Denver
Presider:
Terry Barry, Trinity College Dublin, Univ. of Dublin
Socio-economic Changes in the Landscape of Early Medieval Ireland ca. 300–1000
John Tighe, Trinity College Dublin, Univ. of Dublin
Lordly Landscapes: Exploring Castle Siting in the Midlands of Ireland with GIS
and Archaeological Survey
Jennifer L. Immich
Lines in the Landscape? he Expansion and Contraction of the Mac Carthaigh
Riabhach
Margaret Smith, St. Louis Univ.
164
512 SCHNEIDER 1245
Purity: Early Medieval Perspectives I
Sponsor:
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften
Organizer: Veronika Wieser, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften; Albrecht Diem, Syracuse Univ.
Presider:
Rutger Kramer, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften
Resistance to Desire and Its Paradoxical Efect
Inbar Graiver, Tel Aviv Univ.
Hildemar’s Queer Anxieties
Albrecht Diem
he Double Lock within Monasteries, Tenth–Eleventh Centuries
Isabelle Cochelin, Univ. of Toronto
513 SCHNIEDER 1255
Alfred and His Circle
Sponsor:
Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture
Organizer: Benjamin Weber, Princeton Univ.; Jill M. Fitzgerald, United
States Naval Academy
Presider:
Jill M. Fitzgerald
he Alfredian Exemplar of Beowulf
Craig Davis, Smith College
Interacting with Alfred’s Soliloquies
Michael Treschow, Univ. of British Columbia–Okanagan
Alfred and the Liberal Arts
Benjamin Weber
514
SCHNEIDER 1265
Manuscript Context for Early Anglo-Saxon, Caroline, and Germanic Verse
Organizer: Bruce Gilchrist, Concordia Univ. Montréal
Presider:
Bruce Gilchrist
What’s Hrabanus Got to Do with the Exeter Book Christ?
Carolin Esser, Univ. of Winchester
he Wisdom Tradition
Tifany Beechy, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Healing Verse: Anglo-Saxon Metrical Remedies and Manuscript Evidence of Use
Richard Scott Nokes, Troy Univ.
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
165
515 SCHNEIDER 1275
Islamic Magic: Texts and/as Objects
Sponsor:
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence; Societas Magica
Organizer: Liana Saif, Univ. catholique de Louvain
Presider:
Liana Saif
Books as Robots: Authorship and Agency in Islamicate Alchemical Manuscripts
Nicholas G. Harris, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Approaching Shams al-maʿārif al-kubrá through Early Manuscripts: MSS Arabe
2650–51 in the Bibliothèque nationale de France
Edgar Francis, IV, Univ. of Wisconsin–Stevens Point
Legible Signs? Cyphers, Talismans, and the heologies of Early Islamic Sacred Writing
Travis Zadeh, Yale Univ.
Respondent: Noah D. Gardiner, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
516 SCHNEIDER 1280
Music and Liturgy I
Sponsor:
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Daniel J. DiCenso
Clerics Sing up to Exaudi nos, and the Women to the End (with Cauda): Performance
Practice at Nivelles in the Later Middle Ages
Margot E. Fassler, Univ. of Notre Dame
Exile, Preaching, and Prophecy in the ‘s-Hertogenbosch Liturgy for John the
Evangelist
Catherine Saucier, Arizona State Univ.
Song and Death: Late Medieval Rituals to Accompany Death and the Dying
Miriam Wendling, KU Leuven
517 SCHNEIDER 1320
Resplendent Pain
Sponsor:
International Medieval Society, Paris
Organizer: Valerie M. Wilhite, Univ. of the Virgin Islands
Presider:
Valerie M. Wilhite
Pain, Rapture, and Community in the Life of Saint Douceline
Meghan Nestel, Arizona State Univ.
Painful Demons: Performance and Embodiment in Medieval Drama
Andreea Marculescu, Univ. of Oklahoma
“Jo sui tols desnaturés!”: Pain and the Medicalization of Lovesickness in the
hirteenth-Century Roman de silence
Sarah Gillette, Western Michigan Univ.
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
518 SCHNEIDER 1325
Spectatorship and Observation in the Medieval Arts
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Workshop, Univ. of Chicago
Organizer: Carly B. Boxer, Univ. of Chicago; Samuel Lasman, Univ. of
Chicago
Presider:
Carly B. Boxer and Samuel Lasman
Spies Like Us: Tristan and Isolde’s Hidden Observers
Beth Woodward, Univ. of Chicago
166
Ceremony and the Beholders at Reims Cathedral (ca. 1230): Seeing and Participating
in the Coronation of the King
Gili Shalom, Tel-Aviv Univ.
To Be Seen: he Politics of Gaze and Observation
Kathrin Gollwitzer-Oh, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Ad Orientem: Seeing Christ’s Back in the Early Medieval Ascension
Nancy hebaut, Univ. of Chicago/Institut national d’histoire de l’art
519 SCHNEIDER 1330
Lucan and Medieval England: Writing War, ca. 1100–ca. 1500
Organizer: Daniel Davies, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Daniel Davies
War Worse than Civil? William the Conqueror’s Sons in Twelfth-Century Latin
Historiography
Jacqueline M. Burek, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Decapitation, Self-Relection: he View from the Spheres in Lucan, Boccaccio,
and Chaucer
Kara Gaston, Univ. of Toronto
A Traitorous Lucan: Representing Dissent in Later Medieval Chronicles
Leah Klement, California Institute of Technology/Huntington Library
Lucan, Lydgate, and Division: Rome, hebes, and England
R. D. Perry, Univ. of California–Berkeley
520 SCHNEIDER 1335
Oathtaking and Oathbreaking in Middle and Early Modern English Literature
Organizer: Laura Clark, Baylor Univ.
Presider:
Laura Clark
Camelot, Cornwall, and the Pentecostal Oath: Regenerating and Degenerating
Words and Deeds in Malory’s Morte Darthur
Elizabeth Fredericks, Valparaiso Univ.
“Here is my glove”: Introductory Speech Acts and Trial By Combat in Le Morte
Darthur
Aubrey Morris, Baylor Univ.
Murderous Brigands and Cannibal Jokes: Swearing and Equivocal Oaths in the
Second Shepherds’ Play
Mark Burde, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Under the Grene Wode Tre: he Trystell Tree, the Truth Test, and Yeomen Proit in
A Gest of Robin Hode
Megan Woosley-Goodman, Francis Marion Univ.
521 SCHNEIDER 1340
167
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
Rex timore perterritus: he Early Irish Saints with and against the Secular Authorities
Organizer: Brian Ó Broin, William Paterson Univ.
Presider:
Bridgette Slavin, Medaille College
Marcher Saints: Territorial Claims across Medieval Borders
Brian Ó Broin
Saint Adomnán, Iona, and the Political Nature of Cáin Adomnáin
Courtney Selvage, Univ. of Toronto
Monastic Sites of Irish Saints in the Isle of Man: Suppressed and Revered
Valerie Dawn Hampton, Western Michigan Univ.
522 SCHNEIDER 1345
he Idea of Luxury and the Role of the Object
Organizer: Andrew Sears, Univ. of California–Berkeley; Laura R. Tillery,
Univ. of Pennsylvania
Presider:
Andrew Sears
Economies of Luxury in the Mabinogi
Audrey Becker, Marygrove College
he Functional Role of Luxury: Considering Utility in the Grandes Heures of
Philip the Bold
Maggie S. Crosland, Courtauld Institute of Art
Material Anxiety: Pendants and Sumptuary Law in the Late Middle Ages
Sophie Ong, Rutgers Univ.
523 SCHNEIDER 1350
Approaching Methods on How to Read Science in Medieval Literature
Organizer: Antje Wittstock, Univ. Siegen
Presider:
Michaela Wiesinger, Univ. Wien
Historical Linguistics and the Digital Humanities: Digitally Reading Early New
High German Medical Incunabula
Jenny Robins, Ludwig-Maximilians-Univ. München
he Macer Floridus and Its German Adaptations
Beatrice von Lüpke, Eberhard Karls Univ. Tübingen
Reading Alchemical Knowledge in Medieval Literature
Antje Wittstock
524
SCHNEIDER 1355
hrough a Medieval Looking Glass: Reading Eustache Deschamps’s Miroir de
mariage
Organizer: Deborah M. Sinnreich-Levi, Stevens Institute of Technology
Presider:
Deborah M. Sinnreich-Levi
he Miroir de mariage and the Vernacular Debate between the Vita Contemplativa and Vita Activa
Margriet Hoogvliet, Rijksuniv. Groningen
Reconstructing Female Voices to Speak about Women: A Comparison Between
Eustache Deschamps’s Miroir de mariage and Geofroy de la Tour Landry’s Livre
pour l’enseignement de ses illes
Delphine Mercuzot, Bibliothèque nationale de France
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
525 SCHNEIDER 1360
he Five Senses in Premodern English Literature
Organizer: Angela Heetderks, Oberlin College
Presider:
Julianne Sandberg, Wheaton College
Ocular Proof and Auricular Assurance: What Leads to the Failure of the Senses in
Othello and King Lear?
Amrita Dhar, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Conscience, Rhetoric, Act: Donne and Aural Richness
Joshua Held, Trinity International Univ.
Seeing Saint Lucy: Eyesight and the Memory of the Sacred Virgin in William
Shakespeare and John Donne
Susan Dunn-Hensley, Wheaton College
168
526 BERNHARD 106
he Medieval History of Attention (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Michael J. Raby, McGill Univ.
Presider:
Michael J. Raby
heaters of Distraction: (Lapsed) Attention in Late Anglo-Saxon England
Erica Weaver, Harvard Univ.
What Is Meant by “Hir Entente”?
Sarah Powrie, St. homas More College
“Vox in choro, mens in foro”: Attention, Distraction, and Prayer
Alastair Bennett, Royal Holloway, Univ. of London
“Reade this agayne”: British Library, Harley MS 2251 and Evidence of Systematized
Attention
Alison Harper, Univ. of Rochester
527 BERNHARD 158
Medievalism and Disability (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Society for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Joshua Eyler, Rice Univ.
Presider:
John P. Sexton, Bridgewater State Univ.
Urs Graf ’s Daughter Courage: Violence and Disability in Late Medieval Europe
Jess Genevieve Bailey, Univ. of California–Berkeley
A Visual Database for Medieval Disability
Christopher Baswell, Barnard College
Impaired in Camelot: An Analysis of Ableism in Hal Foster’s Prince Valiant
Tirumular Narayanan, California State Univ.–Chico
Trope or Truth? Medievalism and the Ubiquity of Disability
Kisha G. Tracy, Fitchburg State Univ.
Life Was Like hat: he Grotesque Medieval in the Modern Imagination
Elizabeth Wawrzyniak, Marquette Univ.
528 BERNHARD 204
Murder, Translation, and Translator: Elisha Kent Kane and the Libro de buen amor
Sponsor:
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Paul E. Larson, Baylor Univ.
Presider:
Donald J. Kagay, Univ. of Dallas
Meaning, Music, and Mirth in Elisha Kent Kane’s Rendering of the Libro de buen
amor
Carlos Hawley, North Dakota State Univ.
Between Translatio and Betrayal: Meditations on Translating Medieval Literature
Emily C. Francomano, Georgetown Univ.
“Love’s truest troth’s ictitious”: On Value in the Libro de buen amor
Simone Pinet, Cornell Univ.
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
169
529
BERNHARD 205
Beguines and the Transformations of Urban Piety on the Eastern Periphery of
Late Medieval Christendom
Sponsor:
Lollard Society
Organizer: Michael Van Dussen, McGill Univ.
Presider:
Julia Verkholantsev, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Henry Harrer’s Tractatus contra beghardos: he Polish and Czech Dominican
Response to Early Fourteenth-Century Heresies
Tomasz Gałuszka, Univ. Papieski Jana Pawła II w Krakowie
he Bohemian Beguines Lost in Oblivion
Pavlína Cermanová, Centrum medievistických studií
he Inquisitor at Work: John of Schwenkenfeld, O.P., and His Inquiry into the
Beguines in Świdnica
Paweł Kras, Katolicki Univ. Lubelski Jana Pawła II
530 BERNHARD 208
he Knightly Lifecycle
Sponsor:
Cardif School of History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardif Univ.
Organizer: Helen J. Nicholson, Cardif Univ.
Presider:
Helen J. Nicholson
Exercises in Arms: he Physical and Mental Combat Training of Knights in the
Late Middle Ages
Pierre Gaite, Cardif Univ.
he Knights Hospitaller on Rhodes and Malta: he Pious Knight’s Slave
Nicholas McDermott, Cardif Univ.
William Marshal and Don Pedro de Granada Venegas Compared: he “Flower”
of English Chivalry and a Morisco Knight of Alcántara (d. 1643)
Elizabeth Ashcroft Terry, Austin College
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
531 BERNHARD 209
Voice, Song, and Silence in Medieval England (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Taylor Cowdery, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill; Spencer
Strub, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Presider:
Spencer Strub
Verging on Voice: Late Medieval Manuscripts and the Aural Horizon
Andrew Albin, Fordham Univ.
he Inner Touch: Medieval Music, Synaesthesis, and Interoception
Tekla Bude, Oregon State Univ.
Quantum Silence and Transvestite Metaphysics
M. W. Bychowski, George Washington Univ.
Rhetorical Virtue
Anna Kelner, Harvard Univ.
Speaking in Person
Fiona Somerset, Univ. of Connecticut
he Voice of the Sluggard: Impersonated Interiorities in Pastoral Literature
Claire M. Waters, Univ. of California–Davis
170
532 BERNHARD 210
Female Friendship in Medieval Literature I
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Organizer: Usha Vishnuvajjala, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Usha Vishnuvajjala
Female Friendship and Female Audiences in Chaucer’s Legend of Good Women
Cynthia Turner Camp, Univ. of Georgia
Female Friendship in Middle English Romance
Melissa Ridley Elmes, Lindenwood Univ.
Female Friendships in the Medieval Alehouse: Obscenity, Peer Education, and
Gendered Community in Alewife Poems
Carissa M. Harris, Temple Univ.
Response: Karma Lochrie, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
533 BERNHARD 211
Medieval Philosophy I: Scholastic Metaphysics and Epistemology
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Organizer: Jason Aleksander, National Univ.
Presider:
Milo Crimi, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
he Debates on the Primacy of the Principle of Non-Contradiction in the QuestionCommentaries on Aristotle’s Metaphysics, ca. 1273–ca. 1330
Danila Maslov, Lomonosov Moscow State Univ.
Pierre d’Ailly on Sine Quibus Non and Genuine Eicient Causes
Zita Toth, Fordham Univ.
Adam of Wodeham on the Introspective Cognition of One’s Mental States
Lydia Deni Gamboa, Univ. Nacional Aut́noma de México
534 BERNHARD 212
Gendering Wisdom: Sex, Gender, and the Play of Proverbs in Early Wisdom
Traditions (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Early Proverb Society (EPS)
Organizer: Karl Arthur Erik Persson, Signum Univ.
Presider:
Karl Arthur Erik Persson
A roundtable discussion with Ilana Sasson, Sacred Heart Univ.; Nancy Mason
Bradbury, Smith College; Brian O’Camb, Indiana Univ. Northwest; Stacy S. Klein,
Rutgers Univ.; and Chase Padusniak, Princeton Univ.
535 BERNHARD 213
171
Sunday 8:30 a.m.
Boundaries and Borderlands
Sponsor:
Brepols
Organizer: Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough, Durham Univ.
Presider:
Elizabeth Archibald, Durham Univ.
“Hálogaland, Whose Inhabitants Often Live Together with the Finnar”: NorseSámi Relations in the Arctic Borderlands
Eleanor Rosamund Barraclough
Bishops, Revenants, and Walrus Skulls: Christianity on the Margins in Norse Greenland
Rosalind Bonté, Brepols Publishers
Borders and Boundaries in the Conversion of Germany under the Carolingians
John-Henry Clay, Durham Univ.
A Reassessment of the “Exile” heme in Old English Poetry
Harriet Soper, Univ. of Cambridge
536 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Assembling Arthur (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Leah Haught, Univ. of West Georgia,; Leila K. Norako, Univ.
of Washington–Seattle
Presider:
Leah Haught and Leila K. Norako
he Efect of Caxton’s Modiications to the Morte Darthur on Listening Audiences
David Eugene Clark, Sufolk County Community College
Beginning and Ending with Arthur: Compilation Practices of Arthurian Romance
in Fifteenth-Century Manuscripts
Rebecca Pope, Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Kent
Gawain’s Mythic Penis: Castration Anxiety and the Problems of Mastery in Sir
Gawain and the Green Knight
James C. Staples, New York Univ.
Assembling Malory’s Arthur: How Was/Is the “Text” of the Morte Darthur
Assembled?
D. homas Hanks, Jr., Baylor Univ.
Response: “Constellations” and Arthurian Assemblages
Sarah M. Anderson, Princeton Univ.
Discussant: Arthur Bahr, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sunday, May 14
10:30 a.m.–noon
Sessions 537–574
537 VALLEY III STINSON LOUNGE
Female Friendship in Medieval Literature II
Sponsor:
Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Organizer: Usha Vishnuvajjala, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider:
Karma Lochrie, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Models of Female Friendship in the Lives of Saints
Andrea Bofa, York College, CUNY
Love and Friendship in the Twelfth Century
Stella Wang, Harvard Univ.
Sisters, Eroticism, and the Red Cat: Homosocial Female Bonds in Troubadour
Poetry
Leslie Anderson, Tulane Univ.
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
538 VALLEY III ELDRIDGE 309
hinking with Medieval hought
Sponsor:
Program in Medieval Studies, Princeton Univ.
Organizer: Sara S. Poor, Princeton Univ.
Presider:
Sara S. Poor
Paganism, the Orient, and the West: Wolfram von Eschenbach against the Clash
of Civilizations
Patric Di Dio Di Marco, Stanford Univ.
Medieval Personiications as Engines of hought
Katharine Breen, Northwestern Univ.
Baptizing History: Fluid Historicity Medieval and Modern
Chase Padusniak, Princeton Univ.
172
539 FETZER 1005
Archaeology of Production and Power in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Pam J. Crabtree, New York Univ.
Presider:
Pam J. Crabtree
How Are Economic Resources Transformed into Power?
David Yoon, American Numismatic Society
Rural Production and City-State Formation in Medieval Lucca
Taylor Zaneri, New York Univ.
Clay Pans and Pita Bread in Early Medieval Europe (Sixth to Seventh Century),
from Spain to Eastern Europe
Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida
Cows versus Cod: Contextualizing a Medieval Commercial Fishery in Iceland
Frank J. Feeley, Graduate Center, CUNY
540 FETZER 1010
Materia Medica: Plants, Animals, and Minerals in Healing
Sponsor:
Medica: he Society for the Study of Healing in the Middle Ages
Organizer: William H. York, Portland State Univ.
Presider:
Linda Ehrsam Voigts, Univ. of Missouri–Kansas City
Origins and Ingredients: A Comparison of Early Medieval Remedies
Claire Burridge, Univ. of Cambridge
he Use of the Mandrake in the Early Middle Ages for the Gout, for the Conception,
and as an Anesthetic
Arsenio Ferraces-Rodríguez, Univ. da Coruña
Memory and Materia Medica in Avicenna’s Canon of Medicine: An Attempt at the
Reconstruction of the Inner Logic of Application
Shahrzad Irannejad, Johannes Gutenberg-Univ. Mainz
541 FETZER 1040
Cistercian Abbeys of Brittany
Sponsor:
Ancient Abbeys of Brittany Project; Center for Cistercian and
Monastic Studies, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Claude L. Evans, Univ. of Toronto–Mississauga
Presider:
K. Paul Evans, York Univ.
Les abbayes cisterciennes de Bretagne au XIIe siècle: Lieux de prières et sentinelles
politiques
Joëlle Quaghebeur, Univ. de Bretagne Sud-Lorient
Acceptation et refus de la modernité stylistique dans l’architecture cistercienne:
L’exemple de la Bretagne
Yves Gallet, Univ. Bordeaux Montaigne
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
173
542 FETZER 1045
Ibero-Medieval Studies Tomorrow: Developing New Materials and Pedagogical Approaches to Introduce the Rich Variety of Medieval Iberian Cultures (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Ibero-Medieval Association of North America (IMANA);
North American Catalan Society
Organizer: John August Bollweg, College of DuPage
Presider:
Emily C. Francomano, Georgetown Univ.
A roundtable discussion with Emily S. Beck, College of Charleston; Linde M.
Brocato, Univ. of Memphis; Mark D. Johnston, DePaul Univ.; Gregory Kaplan, Univ.
of Tennessee–Knoxville; Isidro J. Rivera, Univ. of Kansas; and Maureen Russo
Rodríguez, Schreiner Univ.
543 FETZER 1060
No Entry: Impenetrable Architecture in Medieval Art
Organizer: Danny Smith, Stanford Univ.; Lora Webb, Stanford Univ.
Presider:
Danny Smith and Lora Webb
One Does Not Simply Walk into the Heavenly Jerusalem: he Visualization of
Access and Restriction on Early Christian Sarcophagi
Beatrice Leal, Univ. of East Anglia
Ars Memorativa, Reliquaries, and the Performance of Grief: Interaction of Image
and Text in the Berlin Veldeke Manuscript (mfg 282)
Robert Forke, Stanford Univ.
Reading the Choir Stalls of Amiens Cathedral as an Enclosed Garden
Emogene S. Cataldo, Columbia Univ.
544 FETZER 2016
Body and Soul in Medieval Visual Culture II
Organizer: Judith Soria, “Orient et Méditerranée,” CNRS; Jennifer Lyons,
Ithaca College
Presider:
Jennifer Lyons
he Dialectic of Body and Soul in Medieval Funeral Art (1200–1500)
Robert Marcoux, Univ. Laval
Fleshy Books, Soulful Writing, and Medieval Identity in the Flemish Last Judgment
Fresco at Albi
Elizabeth M. Sandoval, Ohio State Univ.
Mediators of Body and Soul: Representations of Plants as Physical and Spiritual
Medicine
Sarah R. Kyle, Univ. of Central Oklahoma
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
545 FETZER 2020
Transformations in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages II: New Methodologies
and Approaches
Sponsor:
Dept. of History, Durham Univ.
Organizer: Helen Foxhall Forbes, Durham Univ.
Presider:
James Corke-Webster, Durham Univ.
From Group to Subject: Rethinking Identity in the Early Middle Ages
Guy Halsall, Univ. of York
Gregory of Tours, Religious Authority, and Modern Sociology
Christopher Guyol, SUNY–Geneseo
Calabria, AD 400–900: Early Medieval? Late Antique? Byzantine?
Helen Foxhall Forbes
174
546
FETZER 2030
Across Boundaries: Traditions, Texts, Ideas
Sponsor:
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection; Platinum
Latin
Organizer: B. Gregory Hays, Univ. of Virginia; Danuta Shanzer, Univ. Wien
Presider:
B. Gregory Hays
he Functions of Natural Description in the Poetry of Venantius Fortunatus
Michael Roberts, Wesleyan Univ.
When the Greeks Were Arabs: Genealogy and the Transfer of Knowledge in al-Kindī
Coleman Connelly, Ohio State Univ.
Arabica Exemplaria: William of Tyre’s Use of Christian Arabic Historiography
Julian Yolles, Harvard Univ.
547 FETZER 2040
he Matter of Ornament
Organizer: Ashley Jones, Univ. of Florida
Presider:
Ashley Jones
Material Presence and Painted Ornament in Carolingian Gospel Books
Beth Fischer, Univ. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
Mediating the Earthly and Sacred: he Play of Ornament in Liturgical Objects
from Saint-Denis
Gerry Guest, John Carroll Univ.
Ornament as Interface: he Signiicance of Ornament in Intercultural Encounters
Johannes von Müller, Warburg Institute/Max Weber Stiftung, Bonn
Ornament’s Matter and Painting’s Fiction in the Chapels of Charles IV
Allison McCann, Univ. of Pittsburgh
548 SCHNEIDER 1220
Making History: Biographical Imperatives in Constructing “Robin Hood”
Sponsor:
International Association for Robin Hood Studies (IARHS)
Organizer: Lorraine Kochanske Stock, Univ. of Houston
Presider:
Lorraine Kochanske Stock
Vindicating Marian: he Inluence of Mary Wollstonecraft in homas Love Peacock’s
1822 Maid Marian
Sadie Hash, Univ. of Houston
Robin Hood with Disney Stood: A New Biography of the Outlaw in 1950s Hollywood
homas Rowland, Wentworth Military Academy College
Robin Hood’s Postmodern Rhizomatic Biography
Mikee Delony, Abilene Christian Univ.
Rewriting History and Legend: Ridley Scott’s Robin Hood
Laura Blunk, Cuyahoga Community College
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
175
549 SCHNEIDER 1225
Settlement and Landscape II: Textual Approaches to the Medieval in the Modern
Organizer: Vicky McAlister, Southeast Missouri State Univ.; Jennifer L.
Immich, Metropolitan State Univ. of Denver
Presider:
Jennifer L. Immich
Approaching the Medieval in Comic: How the Adventures of an Arthurian
Knight are Appropriated for a Contemporary Audience
Annegret Oehme, Univ. of Washington–Seattle
Hive Minds: Interdisciplinarity in Research and Pedagogy
Lahney Preston-Matto, Adelphi Univ.
America’s “Poisoned Landscape”: Medievalism and the Alt-right
Mary A. Valante, Appalachian State Univ.
550 SCHNEIDER 1245
Purity: Early Medieval Perspectives II
Sponsor:
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften
Organizer: Veronika Wieser, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische
Akademie der Wissenschaften; Albrecht Diem, Syracuse Univ.
Presider:
Albrecht Diem
Ideologies of Death and Salvation at Early Medieval Saints’ Shrines
Veronika Wieser
Make Carthage Great Again: he Council of Carthage of 525, Episcopal Authority,
and Monastic Privileges
Merle Eisenberg, Princeton Univ.
Liturgical Purity and Political Polemic in Ninth-Century Lyons
Graeme Ward, Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der
Wissenschaften
551 SCHNEIDER 1255
Hunting for the Animal Subject in Anglo-Saxon England (A Roundtable)
Organizer: Matthew E. Spears, Cornell Univ.
Presider:
Matthew E. Spears
A roundtable discussion with Benjamin Weber, Princeton Univ.; Heather M. Flowers,
Minnesota State Univ.–Mankato; Danielle Ruether-Wu, Cornell Univ.; Kaitlin Griggs,
Carleton Univ.; and Robert Stanton, Boston College.
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
552 SCHNEIDER 1265
Bodies and Communities in Anglo-Saxon England
Sponsor:
Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Columbus State Univ.
Organizer: Shannon Godlove, Columbus State Univ.
Presider:
Shannon Godlove
he Disembodied Patron in the Encomium Emmae reginae
Emily Butler, John Carroll Univ.
Grief and the Grave: Change and Community Obligation to the Dead Body in
Anglo-Saxon England
A. Aversa Sheldon, Univ. of Oxford
176
553 SCHNEIDER 1275
Conlicting Forms: Europe 1300–1500
Organizer: Zachary E. Stone, Univ. of Virginia
Presider:
Elizaveta Strakhov, Marquette Univ.
Political Posters in Late Medieval England: An Archaeology of Form
Sonja Drimmer, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Art under Siege in Fourteenth-Century France
Christina Normore, Northwestern Univ.
Semiotics on the Battleield
Daniel Davies, Univ. of Pennsylvania
We Need to Talk about the Schism
Zachary E. Stone
554 SCHNEIDER 1280
Music and Liturgy II
Sponsor:
Musicology at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Anna Kathryn Grau, DePaul Univ.; Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul
Univ.; Daniel J. DiCenso, College of the Holy Cross
Presider:
Joseph Dyer, Independent Scholar
Dynamic Parallelism in the Psalms and Gregorian Chant
William Peter Mahrt, Stanford Univ.
On the Notion of Hexachordal Function in Medieval Music heory and Practice
Stefano Mengozzi, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
he Art of Psalm Paraphrase in Early Frankish Oices
Benjamin Brand, Univ. of North Texas
555 SCHNEIDER 1320
he Second Sex: Women and Power in Old Norse-Icelandic Literature
Sponsor:
New England Saga Society (NESS)
Organizer: Andrew M. Pfrenger, Kent State Univ.–Salem
Presider:
Marjorie Housley, Univ. of Notre Dame
Draumkonur as Dream Anima
Suzanne Valentine, Hásḱli Íslands
Maðr þóttumk ek mensskr til þessa: Reclaiming Gender and Genealogy in he
Waking of Angantyr
William Biel, Univ. of Connecticut
Með leynilegri ást: Love, Marriage, and Authorial Agenda in he Saga of Viglund
the Fair
Andrew M. Pfrenger
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
177
556 SCHNEIDER 1325
Gray Matter: Brains, Diseases, and Disorders
Organizer: Deborah horpe, Univ. of York
Presider:
Aleksandra Pfau, Hendrix College
Treatment of Learning Disabilities and Other Mental Health Issues in Medieval
English Medicine and Law
Wendy J. Turner, Augusta Univ.
Madness, Nightmares, Melancholy: Exceptional Mental States in Medieval Commentaries on Aristotle’s De somno
Agnes Karpinski, Univ. des Saarlandes
Attention and Distraction in Medieval hought
Eliza Buhrer, Loyola Univ. New Orleans
557 SCHNEIDER 1330
Math in Medieval Literature
Organizer: Michaela Wiesinger, Univ. Wien
Presider:
Christine Cooper-Rompato, Utah State Univ.
Who Reads Mathematical Texts? he German Arithmetical Manuscripts in the
Austrian National Library
Christina Jackel, Univ. Wien
“Of a Certain Magnitude”: Aristotle and the Size of Sublimity
Valerie Allen, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Logico-Mathematical Descriptions of Ininity in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
Selena Erkizan, Ege Univ.
he “Algorism” in Medieval German Literature
Michaela Wiesinger
558 SCHNEIDER 1335
Technical Communication in the Middle Ages
Organizer: M. Wendy Hennequin, Tennessee State Univ.
Presider:
M. Wendy Hennequin
Medical Maths, or, How I Learned to Love a Graph
Elise Williams, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto
Restoring Continuity: How Readers and Writers Remedied Terminological Flaws
in Constantine the African’s Translations
Brian Long, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Begging Poems as Business Writing: From Chaucer to Hoccleve to the Poet Laureate
Mary Frances Zambreno, Elmhurst College
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
559 SCHNEIDER 1340
Revisiting Alphonsine Historiography and Legislation
Organizer: Yolanda Iglesias, Univ. of Toronto; David Navarro, Texas State
Univ.–San Marcos
Presider:
Peter Mahoney, Stonehill College
New Approaches to Siete Partidas and the 1272 Revolt of the Nobles
Yolanda Iglesias and David Navarro
“Los Sabios Antiguos”: he Sources of Alfonso X’s Las Siete Partidas
Matthew Orsag, Univ. of Toronto
“Foolish Belief ”: he Status of Muslims and Jews under the Reign of Alfonso X
Sandra Fildes, Univ. of Toronto
178
560 SCHNEIDER 1345
Lettered Bodies: heorizing Epistolarity in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Elise Broaddus, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
Presider:
Elise Broaddus
How Did Heloise Respond to Abelard’s Historia calamitatum in Her First Letter?
Deborah Fraioli, Simmons College
Letter-Writing and Collecting as Performing and Shaping Sanctity in Late Medieval
Italy
Austin Powell, Catholic Univ. of America
Hypermediation and the Dictaminal Letter
Jonathan M. Newman, Missouri State Univ.
561 SCHNEIDER 1350
Neighboring Languages and Cross-Cultural Exchange: Persian/Arabic, French/
English
Organizer: Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Univ. of Toronto
Presider:
Suzanne Conklin Akbari
heater of Letters
Karla Mallette, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Arabic in English and French
Shokoofeh Rajabzadeh, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Middle English/Arabic
Shazia Jagot, Syddansk Univ.
562 SCHNEIDER 1355
Speaking of Soth and Slaughter: Pragmatic Meaning in the Middle Ages
Organizer: Eric Bryan, Missouri Univ. of Science and Technology
Presider:
Alexander Ames, Univ. of South Carolina–Columbia
Repetition, Class, and the Unnamed Speakers of Beowulf
Michael R. Kightley, Univ. of Louisiana–Lafayette
Killing Each Other like Civilized People? Verbal Jousting in Tristrams saga
Emily Reed, Univ. of Sheield
Verbal Aggression and Pragmatic Meaning in Old Norse Sagas
Eric Bryan
563 SCHNEIDER 1360
179
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
he Medieval University Today
Organizer: M. Jane Toswell, Western Univ.
Presider:
Lindy Brady, Univ. of Mississippi
Who’s the Boss: Philology, Philosophy, or heory?
Haruko Momma, Institute for Advanced Study, Univ. of Notre Dame
he Politics of the Liberal Arts, hen and Now
Edward L. Risden, St. Norbert College
Ed-Tech Abelard: Classroom Innovation and Medievalism
Richard Utz, Georgia Institute of Technology
Respondent: M. Jane Toswell
564 BERNHARD 106
he End of Merlin
Sponsor:
Société Internationale des Amis de Merlin
Organizer: Anne Berthelot, Univ. of Connecticut
Presider:
Barbara Miller, Univ. at Bufalo
Merlin’s End in the Premiers faits du roi Arthur: A True Fairytale
Anne Berthelot
Merlin’s Triumphant End in the Middle English Romance Of Arthour and of Merlin
Kathryn Walton, York Univ.
Merlin’s Suspension in Graal héâtre, by Florence Delay and Jacques Roubaud
Florence Marsal, Univ. of Connecticut
A Saint or a Devil: Maugis and Merlin’s Ends
Kathleen Jarchow, Univ. of Connecticut
565 BERNHARD 158
Victorian Medievalism: Translation and Adaptation
Organizer: Daniel C. Najork, Arizona State Univ.
Presider:
Daniel C. Najork
“A Vision Rather han a Dream”: Adaptation of Structure and Self in News from
Nowhere
Amber Dunai, Texas A&M Univ.–Central Texas
Fixed Forms in the Kelmscott Penitential Psalms
Arthur J. Russell, Case Western Reserve Univ.
Translation and Adaptation from Medieval to Modern in a Victorian Illuminated
Manuscript
William Diebold, Reed College
Women in the East: Exoticism and Healing in Sir Beues of Hamtoun and Ivanhoe
Sarah Star, Univ. of Toronto
566 BERNHARD 204
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
he Crusades through the Nexus of Text and Nonlinguistic Representations
Sponsor:
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Paul E. Chevedden, Univ. of Texas–Austin
Presider:
Donald J. Kagay, Univ. of Dallas
he Crusade’s East-West Nexus: Toledo-Tarragona-Rome-Antioch-Jerusalem
Lawrence J. McCrank, Independent Scholar
he Early Crusades Schematized: From Text to Image
Paul E. Chevedden
Beatus Manuscripts during the Reign of Alfonso VIII of Castile and Leonor of
England: A Response to the Fall of Jerusalem?
Rose Walker, Independent Scholar
567 BERNHARD 205
(Reformation in Faith and [Feeling) Like Saints]
Sponsor:
Lollard Society
Organizer: Michael Van Dussen, McGill Univ.
Presider:
Michael Van Dussen
he Wordes of Poule
Michael Sargent, Queens College, CUNY
Hilton on Paul
Fiona Somerset, Univ. of Connecticut
180
“[H]o so haþ clene afectioun in his soule”: Conservative Afectivity and the Middle English Meditiationes de passione Christi
Ryan Perry, Univ. of Kent
Love: Is It More than a Feeling?
Robyn Malo, Purdue Univ.
568 BERNHARD 208
Education and Society: Schools, Teachers, and Pupils in the Medieval World
Organizer: Sarah B. Lynch, Angelo State Univ.
Presider:
Sarah B. Lynch
Fosterage versus Schooling and Social Dynamics of Education in Medieval Iceland
Ryder Patzuk-Russell, Univ. of Birmingham
System for Teaching: On the Pedagogical Project of Peter Lombard’s Sentences
Robert J. Porwoll, Univ. of Chicago
he Devil’s School: Paradigms of Teaching in Cynewulf ’s Juliana
Christina M. Heckman, Augusta Univ.
Teachers, Students, and Schools in Visigothic Iberia
Mark Lewis Tizzoni, Angelo State Univ.
569 BERNHARD 209
Premodern Futurities: Speculative Objects and Prognostication in the Medieval World
Organizer: Carly B. Boxer, Univ. of Chicago; Jack Dragu, Univ. of Chicago;
Luke Fidler, Univ. of Chicago
Presider:
Carly B. Boxer, Jack Dragu, and Luke Fidler
Historical Fiction or Prose Fantasy? Arthurian Fantasies of Tomorrow
Joseph Derosier, Northwestern Univ.
Timekeeping in the Cloister: Teleologies of Sculpture and Water Clocks
Matthew J. Westerby, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Material Temporalities of Earth and Stone
Laura Veneskey, Wake Forest Univ.
he Shape of Reform
Katherine C. Little, Univ. of Colorado–Boulder
Respondents: Roland Betancourt, Institute for Advanced Study/Univ. of California–
Irvine, and Anne F. Harris, DePauw Univ.
570 BERNHARD 210
181
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Rape and Education, Medieval and Modern (A Roundtable)
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS)
Organizer: Carissa M. Harris, Temple Univ.
Presider:
Carissa M. Harris
Rape, Hyper-vigilance, and the Making of an Honorable Woman
Mary C. Flannery, Univ. de Lausanne
“Our Very Moder in Kynde, of Our First Makyng”: Bodily Sovereignty and the
Problematics of Rape
Katharine W. Jager, Univ. of Houston–Downtown
Teaching Rape in Chaucer and Gower
Jennifer Garrison, St. Mary’s Univ.
Teaching the Legend of Philomela from Ovid to Gower
Shyama Rajendran, George Washington Univ.
571 BERNHARD 211
Medieval Philosophy II: Ethics and Political hought
Sponsor:
Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy
Organizer: Jason Aleksander, National Univ.
Presider:
Jason Aleksander
he Political hought of Lisan al-Din Ibn al-Khatib
Josep Puig Montada, Univ. Complutense Madrid
he Problem of Self-Sacriice in hirteenth-Century Philosophy
Milo Crimi, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Political Philosophy in the Scholastics: Peter of John Olivi and John Duns Scotus
Ryan hornton, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris
572 BERNHARD 212
As hrough a Proverb Darkly: Sentential Modes of Interpretation in Early Literature
Sponsor:
Early Proverb Society (EPS)
Organizer: Karl Arthur Erik Persson, Signum Univ.
Presider:
Sarah M. Anderson, Princeton Univ.
Syntax, Wisdom, and Aesthetics in Old English Poetry
Evan Wilson, Univ. of California–Berkeley
Proverbial Wisdom and Ways of Knowing in Chaucer’s Squire’s Tale
Johanna Kramer, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia
More han Grammatically Feminine: Crashaw’s Epigrammata sacra
Emily A. Ransom, Univ. of Wisconsin–Green Bay
Reading between the First Two Lines: Al-Mutanabbi’s Poetics of the Proverb
Joshua Calvo, Princeton Univ.
573 BERNHARD 213
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Syon Abbey and Its Associates
Sponsor:
Syon Abbey Society; Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group
Organizer: Stephanie Morley, St. Mary’s Univ.; Brandon Alakas, Univ. of
Alberta–Augustana
Presider:
Stephanie Morley
Fifty Shades of Syon Abbey
Jennifer N. Brown, Marymount Manhattan College
Spiritual Exercises at Syon Abbey: Syon MS 18 and the Emergence of Ignatian
Spirituality
Brandon Alakas
A New Syon Manuscript? he Carthusian Door Verses of Beinecke MS 317
Laura Saetveit Miles, Univ. i Bergen
182
574 BERNHARD BROWN & GOLD ROOM
Cities of Religion, Religions of the City: Religious Diversity and Urbanization in
Medieval Europe
Sponsor:
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Bristol; Henri Pirenne
Institute for Medieval Studies
Organizer: Benjamin Pohl, Univ. of Bristol
Presider:
Robert F. Berkhofer III, Western Michigan Univ.
he Late Medieval English Cathedral in Its City: Structural Diversity and Local
Relations at Hereford, Worcester, and Gloucester
Richard Fisher, Univ. of Bristol
Urban Identity as “Translatio”: he Development of Caen in the Eleventh and
Twelfth Centuries
Laura L. Gathagan, SUNY–Cortland
A “Scabby Goat”? heology Students between the University and the City, Paris
ca. 1200
Jan Vandeburie, Leverhulme Trust/Univ. degli Studi di Roma Tre
Nizhny Arkhyz: A Little-Known Holy City of Medieval Christianity
John Latham, School of Oriental and African Studies, Univ. of London
—End of 10:30 a.m. Sessions—
Noon–1:00 p.m.
LUNCH
Valley Dining Center
—End of the 52nd International Congress on Medieval Studies—
Sunday 10:30 a.m.
183
184
Academy of Jewish-Christian Studies 31
American Benedictine Academy 226
American Cusanus Society 65, 112, p. 46
American Society of Irish Medieval Studies (ASIMS) 213, p. 73, 271, p. 108, 388
Ancient Abbeys of Brittany Project 541
Anglo-Norman Text Society 208
Anglo-Saxon Hagiography Society (ASHS) 419, 471
Applied Research Centre in the Humanities 442, 448
Aquinas and ‘the Arabs’ International Working Group 170
Arthurian Literature 57
Arthuriana 393
Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies 13, 60, 102
Association for the Advancement of Scholarship and Teaching of the Medieval in
Popular Culture 194
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions
160, 219
AVISTA: he Association Villard de Honnecourt for the Interdisciplinary Study
of Medieval Technology, Science, and Art 41, 77, 140, p. 109, p. 128, p. 158
BABEL Working Group 105, p. 45, 340, p. 108
BedeNet 63, 110
Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale Univ. 373, p. 159
Brepols 535
Brill Academic Publishers p. 111
Canadian Society of Medievalists/La Société canadienne des médiévistes 177, 243
Canterbury Tales Project 22
Cantus: A Database for Latin Ecclesiastical Chant 282
CARA (Committee on Centers and Regional Associations, Medieval Academy of
America) 182, p. 73, 404
Cardif School of History, Archaeology and Religion, Cardif Univ. 530
Celtic Studies Association of North America 42, 89
Center for Austrian Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities 397
Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies, Western Michigan Univ. 341, 352,
403, 455, p. 159, 502, 541
Center for Inter-American and Border Studies, Univ. of Texas–El Paso 416, 461
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Stanford Univ. 260, 319
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Florida 23, 70, 262, 321
Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, St. Louis Univ. 128
Center for Medieval Studies, Fordham Univ. p. 110
Center for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities 26, 186, 364
Center for Teaching Excellence, Rice Univ. 113
Center for the Study of C. S. Lewis and Friends, Taylor Univ. 52, 99
Center for homistic Studies, Univ. of St. homas, Houston 6, 53, 100
Centre d’études supérieures de civilisation médiévale (CESCM) 428, 480
Centre for Catholic Studies, Durham Univ. 215
Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Univ. of Kent p. 111
Centre for Medieval Literature, Syddansk Univ. and Univ. of York 177, 243
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Bristol 46, 574
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Toronto p. 54, 500
Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of York 148, p. 54
Centre for Publishing, Univ. College London 46
185
Index of Sponsors
Index of Sponsoring Organizations
Index of Sponsors
Centre for Scandinavian Studies, Univ. of Aberdeen 289
Centre for Scottish Studies, Univ. of Guelph 508
Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture, Univ. of York 14, 120
Centre for the Study of the Middle Ages (CeSMA), Univ. of Birmingham 256, 315
Chaucer MetaPage 144, 306
Chaucer Review 189, 237, 359
Christendom Graduate School 227, 285
Claremont Consortium for Medieval and Early Modern Studies 242, 301
Contagions: Society for Historic Infectious Disease Studies 214, p. 73, 272
Conversions: Medieval and Modern Working Group, Duke Univ. 400
La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures 169
Crusades in France and Occitania 238
CU Mediterranean Studies Group 269, 328
Dante Society of America 371, 422, 474
DARC Fibre Stitch and Bitch Team p. 72
Dark Ages Recreation Company 224
De Re Militari: he Society for Medieval Military History 351, p. 128, 441, 492
Dept. d’histoire , Univ. de Montréal 210
Dept. of Archaeology, Durham Univ. 417, 478
Dept. of Art History, Florida State Univ. 86, 133, p. 45
Dept. of English Studies, Durham Univ. 411
Dept. of English, Temple Univ. 350
Dept. of History, Durham Univ. 506, 545
Dept. of History, Western Michigan Univ. 217
Dept. of Medieval Studies, Central European Univ. 383
Dept. of Philosophy, Maynooth Univ. 50
Dept. of Religious Studies and Philosophy, he Hill School 348
Deutsches Historisches Institut Paris 259, 318
Digital Editing and the Medieval Manuscript: Rolls and Fragments (DEMMR/F) 291
Digital Medievalist p. 46
Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures 197
DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics, and
Fashion) 41, 175, 233, 292, p. 109
Divinity School, Univ. of Chicago 7
Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection 546
Early Book Society 35, 92, 139, 191, p. 111
Early Medieval Europe 181, 248, 307, p. 111
Early Middle English Society 255, 314
Early Proverb Society (EPS) 534, 572
Episcopus: Society for the Study of Bishops and Secular Clergy in the Middle Ages
212, p. 72, 252, 311
EXARC 41, 155
Exemplaria: A Journal of heory in Medieval and Renaissance Studies 29
A Feminist Renaissance in Anglo-Saxon Studies p. 158
Fifteenth-Century French Studies 235, p. 110
14th Century Society p. 109, 370, 439, 491
Framing the Late Antique and Early Medieval Economy (FLAME) 467
Franciscan Institute, St. Bonaventure Univ. 132, 167, 278, 332, p. 109
Game Cultures Society p. 72, 247, 290
Gender and Medieval Studies Group 496
Goliardic Society, Western Michigan Univ. p. 46, 392
Gower Project 406, 458
186
187
Index of Sponsors
Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley 459
Great Lakes Adiban Society 149, 203
Hagiography Society 211, p. 72, 261, 320
Harvard English Dept. Medieval Colloquium 382, 433
Haskins Society 91, 138
Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies 574
Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Medieval Northwestern Europe 408, 456
Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML) 8, p. 111
Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies (HSMS) 176, 365
Ibero-Medieval Association of North America (IMANA) p. 110, 409, 468, 503, 542
Imagines Maiestatis (IMAGMA) 9
Index of Christian Art, Princeton Univ. 280, 325, p. 108
Indiana Medieval Consortium 510
Institut de recherche et d’histoire des textes (IRHT) 191
Institut für Mittelalterforschung, Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften
512, 550
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Leeds 71, 118, p. 54
Institute for Medieval Studies, Univ. of New Mexico 17, 64, 188
Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Durham Univ. 163, p. 54
Instituto de Estudios Medievales, Univ. de León 249, 308
Instituto de Estudos Medievais, Univ. Nova de Lisboa 249, 308
Interdisciplinary Graduate Medieval Colloquium, Univ. of Virginia 5
International Alain Chartier Society p. 110
International Anchoritic Society p. 46, 151, 487
International Arthurian Society, North American Branch (IAS/NAB) p. 46, 168,
p. 72, 231, p. 109
International Association for Robin Hood Studies (IARHS) 548
International Boethius Society 495, p. 158
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) p. 111, 432, 484, p. 159
International Center of Medieval Art (ICMA) Student Committee p. 110, 366
International Christine de Pizan Society, North American Branch 369, 420, p. 159
International Courtly Literature Society (ICLS), North American Branch 106,
150, p. 54
International Hoccleve Society 401, 473
International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) 486
International Joan of Arc Society/Société Internationale de l’étude de Jeanne
d’Arc 407
International Machaut Society 354, p. 128, 405, 457
International Marguerite Porete Society 230
International Marie de France Society 372, p. 128, 395, 447
International Medieval Sermon Studies Society 32, 79, 126, p. 128
International Medieval Society, Paris 428, 480, 517
International Piers Plowman Society 327, 345, 445, 496
International Porlock Society p. 160
International Sidney Society p. 111, 391, 443, 494
International Society for the Study of Medievalism 157, 218, 270, 329
International Society of Anglo-Saxonists 78, 134
International Society of Hildegard von Bingen Studies 338
Italian Art Society p. 109, 423, 475
Italians and Italianists at Kalamazoo 147, 192, p. 159
Jean Gerson Society 1
John Gower Society 69, 116, p. 54
Index of Sponsors
Kaiserchronik Project, Dept. of German and Dutch, Univ. of Cambridge (AHRC
Grant) 277
Kalamazoo Book Arts Center (KBAC) p. 109
Kommission für Volksdichtung 346, 425
Lollard Society 82, 529, 567
Lone Medievalist p. 16, 481
Lydgate Society 39, 200, 384, p. 158
Magistra: A Journal of Women’s Spirituality in History 430, 482
Manuscript Technologies Forum Interest Group, he English Association 421
Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture 246, 305
Material Collective 90, 137, p. 72, p. 108
Mediaevalia: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Medieval Studies Worldwide 121
Medica: he Society for the Study of Healing in the Middle Ages 41, p. 16, p.
108, 501, 540
Medieval Academy Graduate Student Committee 113, p. 46
Medieval Academy of America p. 55, 276, 335
Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (MEMSI), George Washington
Univ. 232
Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS) 195, p. 72, 253, 312, p. 108, 360
Medieval and Renaissance Research Seminar, Baylor Univ. 156
Medieval and Renaissance Studies Program, Purdue Univ. 427, 479
Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Christopher Newport Univ. 63, 110
Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Columbus State Univ. 552
Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Univ. of Missouri–Columbia 81
Medieval Association for Rural Studies (MARS) 15, 72, p. 46
Medieval Association of Place and Space (MAPS) 302, p. 108
Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM) 16, p. 16, p. 46, 284, 390, 440
Medieval Brewers Guild 293, p. 158
Medieval Central Europe Research Network (MECERN) 47
Medieval Ecocriticisms 135, 327
Medieval Electronic Scholarly Alliance (MESA) 342
Medieval Foremothers Society; Medieval Foremothers Society 344, 435
Medieval Institute Publications, Western Michigan University 84, 98
Medieval Institute, Univ. of Notre Dame 56, 103
Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ. p. 112, p. 158
Medieval Prosopography 279, 326
Medieval Romance Society 196, 254, 313
Medieval Studies Association, Florida State Univ. 18, p. 45
Medieval Studies Certiicate Program, Graduate Center, CUNY 426, 469
Medieval Studies Institute, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington 452, 532, 537
Medieval Studies Program, Univ. of Texas–Austin 180
Medieval Studies Workshop, Univ. of Chicago 518
Medievalists@Penn 104
Medieval-Renaissance Faculty Workshop, Univ. of Louisville 343, 418, 470
Mens et Mensa: Society for the Study of Food in the Middle Ages 51, 334
Monsters: he Experimental Association for the Research of Cryptozoology
through Scholarly heory and Practical Application (MEARCSTAPA) 353,
415, 456, p. 158
Musicology at Kalamazoo 21, p. 46, 183, 241, 300, 516, 554
Network for the Study of Late Antique and Early Medieval Monasticism 36, 83, 130
New England Saga Society (NESS) p. 73, 555
North American Catalan Society 542
188
189
Index of Sponsors
Numismatists at Kalamazoo 205
Old English Forum, Modern Language Association 161
Oswald-von-Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft 193
Paideia Institute for Humanistic Study 413, 465
Pearl-Poet Society 234, 304, p. 128
Piers Plowman Electronic Archive 172
Pilgrim Libraries (Leverhulme International Research Network, Birkbeck, Univ.
of London) 275
Platinum Latin 507, 546
Politicas: he Society for the Study of Political hought in the Middle Ages 127
Pontiical Institute of Mediaeval Studies p. 54
postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies 389
Program in Medieval Studies, Princeton Univ. 538
Program in Medieval Studies, Rutgers Univ. 201
Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of California–Berkeley 258, 317
Program in Medieval Studies, Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign 256, 315
Pseudo Society p. 160
Rare Book Dept., he Free Library of Philadelphia 266
Research Group on Manuscript Evidence 41, p. 16, 262, 321, p. 108, p. 110, 515
Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research 43,
p. 16, 178, 240, 299
Romanian Institute of Orthodox heology and Spirituality of New York 330
Royal Studies Journal 368
Royal Studies Network 438, 490
SALVI (Septentrionale Americanum Latinitatis Vivae Institutum): North American Institute for Living Latin Studies p. 128, 413, 465
Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts Project, Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies 44
Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies 95, 142, p. 46
Scottish Text Society 331
Seigneurie: he International Society for the Study of the Nobility, Lordship, and
Knighthood 263, 322
Selden Society 220
SFB Visions of Community (VISCOM), FWF F42 363, 414, 466
Shakespeare at Kalamazoo 20, 67, 114
Societas Daemonetica 337, 353
Societas Johannis Higginsis 76, 129
Societas Magica 41, 131, p. 110, p. 111, 355, p. 128, 437, 489, 515
Societas Ovidiana 26
Société d’Études Interdisciplinaires sur les Femmes au Moyen Âge et à la
Renaissance (SEIFMAR) 375
Société Guilhem IX p. 16, 88, 125, p. 46
Société Internationale des Amis de Merlin 564
Société Rencesvals, American-Canadian Branch 40, p. 16, 87
Society for Beneventan Studies 61, 108, p. 158
Society for Early English and Norse Electronic Texts (SEENET) 172
Society for Emblem Studies 281
Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy 533, 571
Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS) p. 72, 410, 462, p. 158, 499, 570
Society for Medieval Germanic Studies (SMGS) 153, 424, 476
Society for Medieval Languages and Linguistics 336, p. 158
Society for Medieval Logic and Metaphysics 187
Index of Sponsors
Society for Reformation Research 199, 257, 316
Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies 222
Society for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages p. 108, 436, 527
Society for the Study of Homosexuality in the Middle Ages (SSHMA) p. 73, 268,
283, 488
Society for the Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (SSBMA) p. 16, 380, 431, 449
Society of the White Hart 11, 58, 119, 146
Sources of Anglo-Saxon Literary Culture p. 2, 513
Southestern Medieval Association (SEMA) 145
Spenser at Kalamazoo 216, 225, 333
Summer Program “he Birth of Medieval Europe,” Central European Univ.
(CEU) 166, 273
Syon Abbey Society 573
Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies (TACMRS) 309
Tales after Tolkien Society 190
TEAMS (Teaching Association for Medieval Studies) p. 1, 4, 123, p. 45, p. 46, 223
Texas Medieval Association (TEMA) 361, 412, 464, 528, 566
homas Aquinas Society 347, 398, 450
Tolkien at Kalamazoo p. 128, 402, 454
UNICORN Virtual Museum of Medieval Studies and Medievalism 55, p. 109, p. 128
Univ. Autónoma de Madrid 381
Univ. of Aberdeen p. 108
Univ. of Pennsylvania Press p. 111
Univ. of Toronto Press p. 54
Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison 259, 318
Vagantes Graduate Student Conference p. 109
Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group 483, 497, 573
Women in the Franciscan Intellectual Tradition (WIFIT) 85, 132, p. 72
190
Index of Participants
Anderson, Kimberly Tate 18, 410
Anderson, Leslie 537
Anderson, Rachel S. 434
Anderson, Sarah M. 168, 536, 572
Anderson, Wendy Love 1, 112
Andyshak, Sarah 380
Angelova, Diliana 154
Anghel, Daniela 330
Arbesú, David 468
Archibald, Elizabeth (Durham Univ.) 57,
236, 295, 535
Archibald, Elizabeth (Univ. of Pittsburgh)
206
Ard, DeVan 5
Arias, Joseph 100
Arias, Pablo Poveda 248
Armenti, Daniel 451
Armstrong, Dorsey 393, 407
Armstrong-Partida, Michelle 344
Arnold, Jonathan J. 273, 386, 396, 472
Arnott, Megan 357
Aronstein, Susan 157, 218
Arvanigian, Mark 11, 58, 119, 146
Asatryan, Mushegh 437
Ashley, Kathleen 165, 383
Astell, Ann W. 403
Atkinson, Stephen 168
Attar, Karina F. 318
Atwood, Christopher P. 272, 491
Auslander, Diane P. 101
Auz, Jessica L. 427, 479
Ayris, Alex 257
Azuela Bernal, María Cristina 493
Badamo, Heather 246, 305
Baddar, Maha 107, 251, 310
Badir, Patricia L. 232
Baechle, Sarah 56, 103, 160, 350
Bahr, Arthur 536
Bailey, Jess Genevieve 527
Bailey, Justin Slocum 413, 465
Baker, Austin C. 51
Baker, Christine D. 98
Baker, Katherine 339
Baker, Kathleen M. 302
Baldassano, Alexander 469
Bale, Anthony 120, 275
Balensuela, C. Matthew 183
Ball, Jennifer 246
Bamford, Heather 19
191
Index of Participants
Aaron, Dustin 366
Abbott, Jeanie 134
Abed, Sally 64, 107, 251, 310
Abel, Mickey 77, 140
Abraham, Erin 271
Achi, Andrea Myers 269
Acker, Paul 161
Ackerman, Felicia Nimue 2, 59, 168
Ackley, Joseph Salvatore 45
Adair, Anya 418
Adams, Ana 102
Adams, Claire 408
Adamson, Christopher 367
Adkins, G. Matthew 80
Adler, Gillian 495
Adoyo, Catherine 371, 422
Africa, Chris 498
Africa, Dorothy 101
Agostini, Caterina 10
Ahlgren, Justin 301
Ahmed, Raihan 5
Ailles, Jennifer A. 504,
Akbari, Suzanne Conklin 105, 369, 561
Alakas, Brandon 573
Albert, Mandy L. 253
Albertini, Tamara 65
Albin, Andrew 531,
Albritton, Benjamin 354, 421, 486
Alden, Jane 300
Aleksander, Jason 533, 571
Alexander, Gavin 494
Allbritton, Jillian Marie 151
Allen, Elizabeth 196
Allen, Valerie 557
Allés, Susanna 19
Allor, Danielle 436
Almasy, Rudolph P. 199, 316
Alte de Veiga, Diogo 308
Altstatt, Alison 291
Ambler, Benjamin Joy 223
Ambrose, Shannon O. 164
Ames, Alexander 562
Amsel, Stephanie 3
Amsler, Mark 219
Amspacher, Jordan 238
Ananth, Priya 416
Ancos, Pablo 461
Anderlini, Tina 428
Anderson, Diane Warne 413, 465
Index of Participants
Banister, Mustafa 377
Baragona, Alan 145
Barlow, Gania 358, 498
Barnes, Aneilya 212
Barnhouse, Rebecca 49
Barootes, B. S. W. 30, 304
Barr, Beth Allison 126
Barr, Jessica 274, 497
Barraclough, Eleanor Rosamund 535
Barrett, Catherine 77
Barrett, Graham 507
Barrett, Robert W. Jr. 29
Barrientos Guajardo, Javiera 281
Barron, Caroline 279, 326
Barry, Kristin 24
Barry, Robert 398
Barry, Terry 511
Barton, Allan 239
Bartos, Sebastian P. 250
Bartosh, Brooke 263
Barwis, Andrew 204
Bastawy, Haythem 367
Baswell, Christopher 236, 295, 527
Batkie, Stephanie L. 445, 458
Batof, Melanie 21
Battis, Jes 297
Battles, Paul 96
Bauer, Alexandra 470
Bawden, Tina 240
Beal, Jane 143, 234, 380
Bealke, Devon R. 364
Beaulieu, Katharine 482
Beck, Emily S. 542
Becker, Alexis Kellner 327
Becker, Audrey 440, 522
Becker, Berkeley 369
Beckers, Julie 375
Beckett, Jamie 411
Beebe, Kathryne 302
Beechy, Tifany 514
Beeny, Toby R. 80
Beer, Jeanette 228, 286
Behrend, Megan 373
Bell, Ilona 391
Bell, Jack H. 258
Bell, Kimberly 156
Bellitto, Christopher M. 112, 230
Beltrami, Costanza 366
Benati, Chiara 193
Bennett, Alastair 445, 526
Bennett, Angela R. 302
Bentick, Eoin 228
Benz, Lisa 148, 490
Berg, Dianne 67
Bergen, Richard 498
Berkhofer, Robert F. III 91, 138, 574
Berman, Constance H. 41
Bernhardt-House, Phillip 131
Bernstein, Esther 426
Berthelot, Anne 564
Bertolet, Anna Riehl 114
Bertolet, Craig E. 406
Best, Debra E. , 49
Betancourt, Roland 152, 569
Bevevino, Lisa 323
Bevington, David 86
Beynen, Bert 17, 266
Bezio, Kristin 199, 257
Biel, William 555
Bielinski, Maureen 53
Biggs, Douglas L. 11
Biggs, Frederick M. 237
Billot, Bertrand 505
Bjerke, Jillian M. 250
Blackwell, Alice 178
Blake, homas 498
Blanton, Virginia 63, 341
Blaschak, Jan 115
Bledsoe, Jenny C. 122, 382
Bleeke, Marian 90, 105
Blennemann, Gordon 36
Blick, Gail 380
Blick, Sarah 239, 296
Bloomer, W. Martin 206, 379
Blue, Walter A. 395
Blumenfeld-Kosinski, Renate 56
Blunk, Laura 548
Bø, Ragnhild M. 319
Bobier, Christopher 53
Bobrycki, Shane 138
Bofa, Andrea 537
Boharski, Morgan 303
Bolintineanu, Alexandra 197, 486
Boll, Stephan 509
Bollweg, John August 13, 51, 334, 542
Bond, Melanie Schuessler 175
Bonde, Sheila 24
Bonté, Rosalind 535
Bontea, Cornel 210
Booker, Courtney M. 466
Boomer, Megan 180
Boon, Jessica A. 102, 483
Boone, Graeme 241
Bordalejo, Barbara 22
192
Bruce, Scott G. 36, 98
Brumit, Matthew 156, 234
Bryan, Eric 562
Bryant, Brantley L. 389
Buchanan, Brian 506
Buchanan, Peter 433
Bude, Tekla 445, 531
Budny, Mildred 131, 262, 321
Bufet, Rodrigue 210
Buhrer, Eliza 556
Bulman, Jan K. 311
Bupp, Alaina 39, 200, 384
Burde, Mark 520
Burek, Jacqueline M. 519
Burger, Michael 212, 252, 311
Burgoyne, Jonathan 169
Burke, Linda 420
Burningham, Bruce R. 16
Burr, Kristin L. 162
Burridge, Claire 540
Burris, Catherine 364
Burrows, Toby 44
Bursche, Aleksander 9
Buschbeck, Björn Klaus 197
Butler, Emily 552
Butterield, Ardis 103
Buturain Schneider, Leah 483
Butz, Magdalena 374
Bychowski, M. W. 531
Byrne, Philippa 138
Byttebier, Pieter 174
Cadden, Joan 283
Caillaud, Anne 447
Calabrese, Michael 172, 327
Calin, William C. 270
Calkin, Siobhain Bly 378, 401, 485
Callahan, Christopher 150
Callan, Maeve 101
Calvo, Joshua 572
Camacho-Van Dyke, Stephanie 482
Camp, Cynthia Turner 532
Campa, Pedro F. 281
Campbell, Harley Joyce 297
Campbell, William H. 212
Cañigueral Batllosera, Pau 328
Canon, Elizabeth 314
Cantor-Echols, David 102
Canty, Aaron 449
Cappelletti, Irene 121
Carella, Kristen 164, 470
Carlin, Martha 326
Carlson, Erik A. 38
193
Index of Participants
Borders, James 301
Born, Erik 476
Borýsek, Martin 177
Bosselmann-Ruickbie, Antje 246
Boulton, D’Arcy Jonathan D. 263, 322,
399
Boulton, Maureen B. M. 208, 399
Boulton, Meg 240
Boumans, Etienne 111
Bourassa, Kristin 177, 243
Bovaird-Abbo, Kristin 231
Bowden, Betsy 39
Bower, Robin M. 60
Bowman, Jefrey A. 344
Boxer, Carly B. 518, 569
Boyadjian, Tamar M. 93
Boyer, Arlynda 253
Boyer, Tina 153, 387, 424, 456
Boyle, John F. 347, 398, 450
Boyle, Louis J. 2, 168
Brackmann, Rebecca 470
Bradbury, Nancy Mason 534
Bradley, Danielle 118, 401, 473
Brady, Lindy 63, 288, 453, 563
Branco, Maria João 249
Brand, Benjamin 554
Brantley, Jessica 382
Brasington, Bruce 361
Bray, Dorothy Ann 101
Bredehoft, homas A. 105, 421
Breeden, Francesca 265
Breen, Katharine 538
Bremmer, Rolf H. Jr. 418
Brenner, Caitlin Rose 369
Brewer, Charles E. 300
Briant, Katherine 274
Britt, Joshua 72
Broaddus, Elise 560
Brocato, Linde M. 60, 102, 542
Broilo, Federica 484
Bronstein, Molly 493
Brooks, Michelle 242
Brooks Hedstrom, Darlene L. 83
Brott, LauraLee 267
Brown, Collin 476
Brown, Harvey 229, 287
Brown, Jennifer N. 74, 573
Brown, Matthew 327
Browne, Kaitlin L. 464
Brownlee, Kevin 62
Broyles, Paul A. 254, 290
Brubaker, Jef 376
Index of Participants
Carlson, Traver Scott 115
Carlton, David 64
Carnell, Jennifer Schmitt 186
Carpenter, Leslie 314, 500
Carter, Deirdre 86, 133
Carver, Catherine R. 475
Casarella, Peter J. 242
Casazza, Roberto 422
Cases, Laurent J. 273
Cassell, Sarah 239
Castellanos, Rebeca 40
Castilho Ribeiro Santos, Paulo Eduardo
18
Castillo Botello, Yoel 461
Cataldo, Emogene S. 543
Caudill, Tamara Bentley 54, 113, 150,
372, 395, 447
Cavagna, Mattia 109
Cermanová, Pavlína 529
Chachanidze, Irine 266
Chadwick, Collin 44
Chaganti, Seeta 317
Chambers, Mark C. 411
Chandler, Cullen 363, 414, 466
Chang, Wuming 474
Chapman, Katie 300
Charzyńska-Wójcik, Magdalena 73
Chaudhuri, Aparna 474
Chen, Hasting G. 309
Cheney, Evan 343
Chesters, Samantha 412
Cheung Salisbury, Matthew 286
Chevedden, Paul E. 566
Chewning, Susannah 151, 488
Chiampi, James T. 474
Chiarantini, Leonardo 422
Christensen, Hannah M. 152, 462
Christiansen, Bethany 477
Christian-Weir, Cameron 204
Christie, Edward J. 389
Cirilla, Anthony G. 495
Clark, Amy W. 78
Clark, David Eugene 96, 536
Clark, Laura 520
Clark, Robert 360
Classen, Albrecht 193, 374, 477
Claussen, Martin A. 181, 414
Claussen, Samuel A. 17
Clay, John-Henry 535
Claytor, Brittany 487
Clegg Hyer, Maren 245
Clemens, Raymond 373
Clements, Jill Hamilton 43, 78
Clements, Pamela J. 55, 270
Clemmons, homas 394, 446
Clifton, Nicole 208, 231, 399
Clifton, Zac 115
Cline, Ruth 77
Clough, Nathan L. 129
Coch, Christine 216
Cochelin, Isabelle 512
Cochis, Simonetta 54, 395
Cohen, Jefrey Jerome 29, 232
Cohen, Samuel 166, 273, 396
Colby-Hall, Alice M. 399
Cole, Andrew 172
Cole, Chera A. 128
Coletti, heresa 133
Coley, David K. 237
Coll-Smith, Melissa 261
Coman, Jonah 462
Comuzzi, Elizabeth 370
Congdon, Eleanor A. 205, 339
Connelly, Coleman 546
Connolly, Serena 379
Connors, Aubrey 115
Conrad, Michael Allman 259
Conter, David 287
Cook, Adele 46
Cook, Alexandra 157
Cook, Brian 28, 139
Cook, Karen M. 182, 354
Cook, Lindsay S. 209, 296
Cook, Megan 48, 111, 232
Cook, Ron 447
Cooper, Dylan 107
Cooper, Lisa H. 384
Cooper, Rachel 190
Cooper-Rompato, Christine 126, 557
Corke-Webster, James 506, 545
Cormier, David 202
Cornelius, Ian 81, 172
Cornish, Alison 371, 422, 474
Cornish, Archie 216
Cornish, Paul J. 229
Corrigan, Nicole 154
Corrigan, Nora L. 20, 67, 114, 290
Cory, herese Scarpelli 285
Couch, Julie Nelson 156
Courts, Jennifer 127
Couturiaux, Jacob 189
Cowdery, Taylor 473, 531
Crabtree, Pam J. 539
Craig, Kalani 113, 248, 311
194
Denzin, Johanna 323, 434
Depairon, Philippe 68
Derosier, Joseph 569
Deschamps, Bernard 281
Desing, Matthew V. 416, 461
D’Ettore, Domenic 6, 100
Devaney, Hollie 311
Devlin, Rebecca 25
Devlin, Shayna 508
DeVries, Kelly 123, 407, 492
DeWitt, Allison 147
Dhar, Amrita 525
Di Iorio, Aniello 318
Di Marco, Patric Di Dio 538
Di Salvo, Gina M. 463
Dias, Ana Oliveira 163
DiCenso, Daniel J. 21, 183, 241, 300,
516, 554
Diebold, William 565
Diehl, Jay 163, 215
Diem, Albrecht 36, 83, 130, 512, 550
Dietz, Elias OCSO 352, 403
DiMartino, Caitlin 353
Dines, Ilya 73
Discenza, Nicole Guenther 244
Djordjević, Ivana 196
Djuth, Marianne 124
Djuve, Heidi Synnove 289
Dobie, Robert 454
Döbler, Marvin 352, 455
Doyle, Maeve 325
Draelants, Isabelle 191
Dragu, Jack 459 569
Drake, Graham N. 268, 283, 488
Dressler, Rachel 221, 267
Drimmer, Sonja 553
Driver, Martha W. 35, 92, 139 ,191
Duch, Anna 119
Dulson, Fred 258, 317, 385
Dumitrescu, Irina A. 105, 471
Dummer, Jessie 95, 142
Dunai, Amber 27, 565
Dunne, Michael W. 50
Dunn-Hensley, Susan 525
Dupont, Anthony 124
Dupont, Gaetan 267
Dutton, Elisabeth 286
Dutton, Marsha L. 352
Dyas, Dee 14, 120, 275
Dyer, Joseph 554
Dyson, Gerald 78
Dzon, Mary 359
195
Index of Participants
Craig, Leigh Ann 477
Cramer, Michael A. 76, 129
Crespo, Fabian 214
Crimi, Milo 533, 571
Critten, Rory G. 208
Crosland, Maggie S. 522
Cross, Cameron 149, 203
Crosson, Chad 237
Crow, Jason 502
Crowley, Timothy D. 443
Cruess, Gregory M. 446
Cunningham, Sean B. 398
Curta, Florin 23, 70, 262, 321, 539
Cusato, Michael F. OFM 167
Cushman, Helen 382
Daas, Martha M. 334
Dahlinger, James H. SJ 12 490
Daigle-Williamson, Marsha 52
Daileader, Philip 169
Dailey, Patricia 433
Dalbey, Nicholas 322
Dale, Sharon 351
Dalewski, Zbigniew 262
Daly, Peter M. 281
Damian, heodor 330
Danford, Rachel 505
Darby, Peter 307
Dase, Kyle 22
Davidson, Clare 160
Davies, Daniel 519, 553
Davies, Helen 28
Davis, Craig 513
Davis, Glenn 218
Davis, Joshua 424
Davis, Matthew Evan 200, 253
Davis, Michael T. 207
Davis, Rebecca 29
Davis-Secord, Sarah 17, 182, 404, 448
de Brestian, Scott 25
De Luca, Elsa 183
De Temmerman, Koen 211
Debiais, Vincent 428, 480
Decker, Michael 23
Decker, Sarah Ift 370
Defries, David 261
Dekker, Kees 419
Delcourt, Stei p. 110
Deliyannis, Deborah M. 181, 248, 307
Delogu, Daisy 184, 235, 385
Delony, Mikee 548
Dempsey, John A. 76, 212
Denny-Brown, Andrea 384
Index of Participants
Eads, Valerie 351, 441, 492
Earp, Lawrence M. 457
Easton, Dean 402
Easton, Martha 280
Eby, Regan 118
Echard, Siân 35
Eckhardt, Caroline D. 460
Eckholst, Christine 294
Eddy, Nicole 379
Eden, Brad 402, 454
Edwards, Mary Douglas p. 160
Efros, Bonnie 386, 396
Eggers, Will 349
Eisenberg, Merle 550
Eitenmiller, Melissa 347
Ekman, Erik 503
Elam, Michael David 454
Elias, Cathy Ann 21, 183, 241, 300,
516, 554
Ellard, Donna Beth 34
Elliott, Andrew B. R. 329
Elliott, Dyan 320
Elliott, Geofrey B. 190, 367, 481
Elmes, Melissa Ridley 66, 353, 532
Elortza, Beñat 289
Elphick, Kevin 132
Enders, Jody 360
Endres, William F. 188
Engelhart, Hillary 87
Ensley, James Eric 373
Ensley, Mimi 331
Eriksen, Sarah Bienko 141
Erkizan, Selena 557
Erwin, Bonnie J. 48
Escher, Margaret 284
Escot, Pozzi 338
Esser, Carolin 514
Esswein, Benjamin 199, 257
Estes, Darrell 54
Estes, Heide 64, 135, 161
Evans, Christine 113
Evans, Claude L. 541
Evans, K. Paul 541
Evans, Kelly 48
Evans, Lisa 129
Evans, Michael 329
Evans, Ruth 160
Evitt, Regula M. 144
Eyler, Joshua 113, 340, 436, 527
Fabbro, Eduardo 248
Fabian, Seth 10
Fagin Davis, Lisa 44, 291
Falk, Oren 221, 267, 364
Fanger, Claire p. 110, 355, 489
Farhat, Lillian 377
Farmer, Sharon 276
Farrar, Maia 464
Farrell, Elaine Pereira 130
Farrell, homas J. 145
Farris, Robert Shane 464
Fassler, Margot E. 21, 174, 516
Faulhaber, Charles B. 19
Fay, Jacqueline A. 161
Fayard, Nathan E. H. 52, p. 160
Fazioli, K. Patrick 23
Fee, Franchesca 24
Feeley, Frank J. 539
Fein, Susanna 189, 237, 295, 359
Feingold, Francis E. 6
Feiss, Hugh Bernard OSB 226
Feld, Alina N. 330
Feltman, Jennifer M. 209
Fenster, helma 56
Ferguson, Christopher 14
Fernández, Damián 25
Ferraces-Rodríguez, Arsenio 540
Ferreira, Manuel Pedro 308
Ferreiro, Alberto 32, 51
Ferro, Luis 140
Ferzoco, George 126
Fidler, Luke 185, 569
Figurski, Paweł 174
Filbeck, Melissa 264, 412, 464
Fildes, Sandra 559
Filios, Denise K. 102
Fillman Richards, Emerson Storm 510
Finch, Julia 90
Finke, Laurie A. 218
Finn, Kavita Mudan 368, p. 160
Fischer, Beth 113, 547
Fisher, Richard 574
Fitzgerald, Christina M. 253, 389
Fitzgerald, Jill M. 356, 513
Fitzgibbons, Moira 4
Fitzpatrick, KellyAnn 3
Flannery, Mary C. 570
Flavin, Christopher 33, 247
Fleming, Damian 105, 161, 373, 453
Fleming, Donald 337
Fletcher, Christopher D. 215, 510
Florschuetz, Angela 159
Flowers, Heather M. 408, 551
Fluke, Meredith 292
Foat, Brandon 129
196
Garrison, Jennifer 570
Garrote Pascual, Álvaro 461
Garver, Valerie L. 414
Gastle, Brian 69, 116
Gaston, Kara 519
Gates, Jay 470
Gathagan, Laura L. 138, 574
Gatti, Evan A. 252
Gayk, Shannon 29, 232, 452
Geaman, Kristen 260
Geck, John A. 111, 312
Geer, Gretchen 427
Geer, Rachel 294
Gelfand, Laura D. 165
Gerber, Amanda 221
Gerevini, Stefania 432, 484
Gerson, Paula L. 86
Gertsman, Elina 133, 259
Geymonat, Ludovico V. 139
Gibson, Craig A. 449
Gibson, Kelly 466
Gilbert, Adam Knight 65, 183
Gilbert, Dorothy 372, 395
Gilbert, Mary 68
Gilchrist, Bruce 264, 323, 514
Gildow, Jason 67
Giles, Lucas 423
Giles-Watson, Maura 173
Gilge, Megan 419
Gillespie, Alexandra 22
Gillette, Amy 239, 423
Gillette, Sarah 517
Ginsberg, Warren 121
Gobel, Eric 158, 392
Godden, Richard H. 135, 340, 345
Godet-Calogeras, Jean-François 132
Godfrey, Laura 345
Godlove, Shannon 552
Goehring, Margaret 405
Goggin, Cheryl 185
Goldberg, Jessica 335
Goldberg, Martin 508
Golden, Judith 280, 325
Golden, Rachel May 184
Goldie, Matthew Boyd 302
Goldstein, Kathryn P. 234
Goldy, Charlotte Newman 326
Gollwitzer-Oh, Kathrin 518
Gondreau, Paul 450
Gonzales, Mary Anne 332
González de la Cal, Jose Ramón 381
González Gutiérrez, Carmen 381
197
Index of Participants
Foerster, homas 277
Follett, Westley 130
Forbes, Helen Foxhall 417, 506, 545
Ford, Judy Ann 73, 324
Ford Burley, Nicole 337, 415
Ford Burley, Richard 75, 337, 415
Forde, Simon 84, 98, 442, 448
Forke, Robert 543
Forsman, Deanna 408, 456
Foster, Elisa A. 432
Fox, Hilary E. 64, 245, 418
Fox, Rebecca D. p. 110
Fraioli, Deborah 560
Frame, Heidi 359
Francalanci, Leonardo 328
Francis, Edgar IV 515
Francomano, Emily C. 528, 542
Franke, homas 34
Frankki, James 424
Franklin-Brown, Mary 26, 88, 125
Franklin-Lyons, Adam 15, 72
Frazer-Simser, Benjamin 127
Frazier, Alison K. 169, 498
Fredericks, Elizabeth 520
Fredman, Sara 274
Fresco, Karen 73
Friedman, John Block 233
Friedman, Richard B. 229
Friedrich, Jennie 194, 426
Frisch, Paul 58
Frizzell, Lawrence 31
Frolov, Alexey 267
Frost, Michael 252, 289
Fruoco, Jonathan 251
Fry, John 162
Fuentes, Marcelo E. 468, 503
Fuller, Jef 33
Gafney, Phyllis 254
Gafuri, Laura 32
Gago-Jover, Francisco 19, 176
Gaite, Pierre 530
Gallagher, Suzann K. 404
Galle, Christoph 374
Gallet, Yves 541
Gałuszka, Tomasz 529
Gamboa, Lydia Deni 533
Gandila, Andrei 467
Gangemi, Francesco 475
Garceau, Ben 228
García Losquiño, Irene 289
Gardiner, Noah D. 437, 515
Garrison, Eliza 45
Index of Participants
Goodfellow, Adam 417
Goodling, Anna E. p. 110
Goodman, Jack 217
Goodmann, homas 4, 172
Goodrich, Micah 135, 268
Goodwin, Amy 3
Gordon, Parker 67
Gossiaux, Mark D. 170
Gottloeber, Susan 50
Gower, Margaret M. 420
Goyette, Stefanie 415
Grabau, Joseph 124
Grabowski, Rachel Elizabeth 136
Graham, April 471
Graham, Elyse 159
Graiver, Inbar 512
Grau, Anna Kathryn 21, 183, 241, 300,
516, 554
Green, Monica H. 491
Green, Richard Firth 346, 425
Greene, homas A. 363
Gregory, Meg 18, 113
Gregory, Rabia 341
Grey, Evan W. 475
Grieco, Holly J. 278
Griin, Miranda 109
Griin, Sarah 509
Griith, Karlyn 86, 133
Griiths, Fiona J. 260, 319, 375, 435
Griggs, Kaitlin 551
Grimm, Kevin T. 2
Grinberg, Ana 87, 353, 456
Grinnell, Natalie 116
Grisé, Catherine Annette 74, 497
Gross-Diaz, heresa 207
Grout, Robert 196, 254, 313
Grow Allen, Kathryn 70
Grub, Valentina S. 194
Gruenler, Curtis 345
Grussenmeyer, Jon-Mark 119
Gubbels, Katherine 334
Guchua, Tamar 266
Guest, Gerry 152, 547
Gura, David T. 26, 507
Gustafson, Erik 85, 475
Gutgarts, Anna 378
Gutiérez, César 365
Gutierrez-Dennehy, Christina 67
Guyen-Croquez, Valérie 87
Guynn, Noah D. 360
Guyol, Christopher 123, 545
Guzman, Cristal 179
Gwara, Joseph J. 35
Haessler, Taiko M. 269
Hagedorn, Suzanne 275
Halevi, Leor p. 55, 276, 335
Hall, Alexander W. 187
Hall, Kelly E. 158, 429
Hall, Megan J. 510
Hall, Ryan 80
Halsall, Guy 545
Hamilton, Jefrey S. 119, 146
Hamlin, Amy K. 137
Hamman, Grace 400
Hampson, Louise 14, 239, 296
Hampton, Valerie Dawn 521
Hanawalt, Barbara A. 344
Händl, Claudia 193
Hanks, D. homas Jr. 145, 536
Hanks, Rachel 357
Hannan, Sean 1
Hanuschkin, Katharina 153
Hardie, Rebecca 357
Hardwick, Paul 259
Harkins, Franklin T. 431
Harper, Alexander 77
Harper, Alison p. 110, 526
Harper, Elizabeth 126, 198
Harrill, Claire 315
Harrington, Marjorie 255, p. 110, 453
Harris, Anne F. 569
Harris, Carissa M. 350, 532, 570
Harris, Nichola 250, 477
Harris, Nicholas G. 437, 515
Harris, Patrick 217
Harris, Stephen J. 110
Harrison, Anna 497
Harrison, Perry Neil 96
Harrison, Sunny 118
Hart, Timothy C. 386
Hartman, Megan E. 222, 481
Hartnett, Daniel 60
Hartt, Jared C. 354, 405, 457
Harty, Kevin J. 218, 393
Hash, Sadie 548
Haskell, Merrie 97
Hastings, Justin 26, 206
Haught, Leah 481, 536
Hawley, Carlos 16, 528
Hawley, Kenneth C. 96
Haworth, Katie 478
Haydon, Nathan John 226
Hayes, Mary 195
Hays, B. Gregory 507, 546
198
Holtz Wodzak, Victoria 4, 348
Holzer, Irene 21
Holzmeier, Nadine 509
Homans-Turnbull, Marian 255
Hoofnagle, Wendy Marie 38
Hoogvliet, Margriet 524
Hooper, Laurence E. 371, 422
Hopkins, Stephen 134
Hopkirk, Susan 303, 447
Hopwood, Mahlika 274
Horrocks, Rachel 20
Hostetler, Margaret 336
Houck, Daniel W. 1
Houghton, John Wm. 348
Houlik-Ritchey, Emily 29
Housley, Marjorie 297, 350, 555
Hovland, Deborah 51
Howard, James 290
Howden, Sam 252
Howe, John 307
Howes, Hetta 104
Hren, Joshua 348
Hrynick, Tobias 302
Huang, Alexa 105
Huber, Emily R. p. 160
Hubert, Ann 463
Hughes, Shaun F. D. 141, 222
Hult, David F. 317
Hultgren, Robert 416
Human, Julie 372
Huneycutt, Lois L. 211
Hupin, Éric 210
Hurley, Gina Marie 104, 373, 444
Hurley, Mary Kate 78, 134, 232
Huskin, Kyle p. 110
Hussey, Matthew T. 161, 421, 471
Hutcheson, Gregory S. 13, 503
Hutchison, Caitlin 113
Hutterer, Maile S. 185
Hyams, Paul R. 326
Hymes, Robert P. W. 491
Hynes, Karen 358
Iglesias, Yolanda 559
Ilko, Krisztina 362
Immich, Jennifer L. 511, 549
Ingham, Michael Anthony 463
Insley, Charles 91
Irannejad, Shahrzad 540
Ireland, Casey 382
Irvin, Matthew W. 385, 496
Irving, Andrew J. M. 61, 108, 379
Isaac, Steven 428, 480
199
Index of Participants
Heath, Anne 480
Hebbard, Elizabeth K. 125, 291
Heckman, Christina M. 568
Heetderks, Angela 525
Heidgerken, Benjamin E. 83
Heinrichs, Erik 257, 316
Heintzelman, Matthew Z. 8
Held, Joshua 525
Heller, Kaitlin 340
Heller, Sarah-Grace 175
Helsen, Kate 282
Hénaf, Arthur 509
Henderson, Jessica 373
Hendrianto, Stefanus SJ 220
Hendrikson, Amy 338
Henkel, Nikolaus 206
Henley, Georgia 421, 451
Hennequin, M. Wendy 223, 558
Hennessy, David Michael 456
Henry, Sean 216, 225
Herbert, Lynley Anne 430
Hermann, Robin 372
Hernando, Julio 40
Herold, Conrad 338
Herráez Ortega, María Victoria 308
Herrold, Megan 333
Herron, homas 216
Herzman, Ronald 133
Heyne, Jon Paul 85
Hicks-Bartlett, Alani 104, 201
Higgins, Andrew 402
Higgins, John 408
Hildebrandt, Christina 20
Hile, Rachel E. 216, 333
Hill, homas D. 425
Hilliard, Paul 63, 110, 449
Hinds, Kathryn 143
Hines, Jessica 400
Hines, Kathleen 443
Hinojosa, Bernardo S. 27
Hintz, Ernst Ralf 153
Hiser, Rachel 140
Hochner, Nicole 177
Hoel, Nikolas O. 181
Hofmann, Alexandra 149
Hofmann, Julie A. 466
Hofrichter, Sarah 289
Holladay, Joan A. 133, 180
Holmes, John R. 348
Holmes, Olivia 121
Holt, Andrew 23, 321
Holtan, Aidan M. 427, 479
Index of Participants
Ito, Marie D’Aguanno 77, 370
Izbicki, homas M. 112
Izzo, Jesse W. 377
Jack, Kimberly p. 110
Jackel, Christina 557
Jackson, Eleanor 460
Jackson, Justin A. 227
Jackson, Sarah-Nelle 265
Jacobs, Lesley 42
Jacobsen, Jeanette 336
Jaeger, Vanessa 128
Jager, Katharine W. 570
Jagot, Shazia 561
Jakobsson, Ármann 94, 141
Jamison, Carol 440
Jamroziak, Emilia 118
János, István 70
Jansen, Caroline 482
Jansen, Virginia 140
Jarchow, Kathleen 564
Jaritz, Gerhard 47, 383
Jarrett, Jonathan 71
Jaynes, Katelyn 496
Jeferis, Sibylle 193
Jenkins, John 120
Jensen, Christopher 18, 104
Jensen, Steven J. 6, 53, 100
Jestice, Phyllis G. 217
Jewell, Kaelin 423
Johnson, David F. 57, 453
Johnson, Holly 32, 79, 126
Johnson, Jared 452
Johnson, Junius C. 227
Johnson, Sherri Franks 344
Johnston, Alexandra 411
Johnston, Elva 388
Johnston, Eric M. 347
Johnston, Hope 247
Johnston, Mark D. 169, 542
Johnston, Michael 139
Johnston, Paul A. Jr. 336
Jónatansdóttir, Kolinna 94, 141
Jones, Allen E. 396
Jones, Ashley 547
Jones, Christopher A. 307
Jones, Claire Taylor 424
Jones, Gilbert 362
Jones, Linda G. 32
Jordan, Erin L. 344, 435
Jordan, Timothy R. 39, 200, 384
Jost, Jean E. 313
Joyner, Danielle B. 223
Jurasinski, Stefan 418
Jürgensen, Martin Wangsgaard 383
Kaempfer, Lucie 219
Kagay, Donald J. 528, 566
Kalas, Gregor 423
Kamali, Elizabeth Papp 439
Kandzha, Iliana 248
Kapelle, Rachel 479
Kaplan, Gregory 542
Kaplan, S. C. 92
Karbic, Damir 47
Karkov, Catherine E. 43, 178, 240, 299
Karpinski, Agnes 556
Katz Seal, Samantha 350, 410
Kaufman, Amy S. 59, 157, 270, 329
Kaylor, Noel Harold Jr. 495
Kearney, Eileen F. 32, 431
Keck, Russell L. 231
Keene, Bryan 423
Keene, Catherine 430
Kelber, Nathan 318
Kelen, Sarah A. 270
Keller, Paul Jerome OP 347
Kelly, Henry Ansgar 474
Kelly, homas Forrest 61
Kelner, Anna 382, 531
Kemmis, Deva F. 128
Kemna, Anessa 340
Kennard, Mitchell 37
Kennedy, Kathleen 11, 82
Kennedy, Kelly 488
Kennett, David H. 296
Kenney, heresa 117
Kertz, Lydia Yaitsky 93
Khan, Abdurrafey 68
Khaydarov, Timur 272, 491
Kightley, Michael R. 562
Kim, Dorothy 255, 314, 350, 421, 499
Kim, Il 209
Kinney, Shirley 89
Kipling, Gordon 312
Kirgiss, Crystal 99
Kirk, Louisa 460
Kisor, Yvette 454
Klaassen, Frank 41, p. 110, 489
Klaniczay, Gabor 332
Klein, Stacy S. 179, 534
Klein, homas P. 387
Kleinman, Scott 314, 412
Klement, Leah 519
Klepper, Deeana Copeland 31
Kline, Daniel T. 3, 196, 290
200
Lang, Elon 291, 401, 473
Langdon, Alison 66, 202, 390
Lange, Marjory 352
Langmead, Alison 137
Lapina, Elizabeth 259, 318
Larkin, Peter 123
Larsen, Kristine p. 111, 402, 454
Larson, Paul E. 16, 412, 528
Lasman, Samuel 203, 518
Latham, John 574
Latta, Corey 99
Latteri, Natalie E. 334, 380
Laverock, Ashley 353
Lavin, Gerard 150
Lavinsky, David 82
Law, Stephen C. 111, 293
Layman, Sarah 4
Leach, Katherine 477
Leader, Karen J. 137
Leake, M. Breann 136, 161, 453
Leal, Beatrice 543
Leaman, Kristin Browning 510
Leaños, Jaime 16
LeBlanc, Lisa 186
LeBlanc, Yvonne 54, 395
Lecaque, homas 238 428
Lee, Alexandra 192
Leech, Mary 171
Leek, homas R. 64 277
Leet, Elizabeth S. 462
Lehman, Patricia V. p. 110
Leighton, Gregory 321
Leland, John Lowell 279, p. 110
Lellock, Jasmine 195
Lemeni, Daniel 83
Leneghan, Francis 244
Leo, Domenic 457
Lester, Anne E. 45, 223, 485
Lester, Molly 25
L’Estrange, Elizabeth 315
Leung, Maybelle 430
Leverett, Emily Lavin 49
Levin, Carole 20
Levinson-Emley, Rachel 162
Levitsky, Anne 184
Levy, Ian Christopher 167
Lewis, Bernard 306, p. 110
Lewis, Carenza 214, 272
Lewis, Franklin 149, 203
Lewis, Katherine J. 148
Lewis, Molly 389
Libbon, Marisa 373
201
Index of Participants
Klingebiel, Kathryn 88
Knight, Dayanna 404
Knobel, Angela 187
Knoll, Paul W. 262
Knowles, James 172
Knox, Lezlie 278, 332
Koenig, Bernie 287
Kohli, Candace L. 397
Kolenda, Margo 33
Komnick, Holger 9
Kong, Katherine 184
Konieczny, Peter 351, 442
Konshuh, Courtnay 244
Kopp, Vanina 259, 318
Koproski, Seth Hunter 298
Kordecki, Lesley 66
Kouroutakis, Antonios 220
Kralik, Christine 505
Kramer, Johanna 134, 419, 471, 572
Kramer, Rutger 36, 363, 414, 466, 512
Kras, Paweł 529
Kritsch, Kevin R. 419
Kroemer, James 316
Krueger, James Paul 446
Kruger, Steven 426, 469
Krummel, Miriamne Ara 135
Kubiski, Joyce 233
Kuczynski, Michael P. 82
Kuegeler-Race, Simone 274
Kuin, Roger 391
Kumar, Akash 10, 147, 318
Kumhera, Glenn 192
Kümmeler, Fabian Benedikt 72
Kurzová, Irena 288
Kuskowski, Ada Maria 439
Kveberg, Jean 292
Kyle, Sarah R. 544
La Corte, Daniel Marcel 502
La Porta, Sergio 266
Labatt, Annie Montgomery 246, 305
LaBrecque, Claire 296
Lacoste, Debra 282
Ladd, Roger 116
Laferty, Maura 73
Lahey, Stephen E. 50, 112
Laidlaw, Martin 374
Laing, Gregory L. 434
Lake, Tristan 478
Lake-Giguère, Danny 439
Lakey, Christopher R. 432
Lamb, Mary Ellen 391
Landon, Christopher 166
Index of Participants
Licheli, Vakhtang 266
Lidova, Maria 154
Lim, Joshua 403
Lincoln, Kyle C. 378
Lindeman, Katherine 169
Linder-Spohn, Verena 277
Lipton, Sara 31, 276, 335
Little, Katherine C. 232, 569
Liuzza, Roy M. 500
Livingston, Michael 123
Livingstone, Amy 279, 326, 435
Lledó-Guillem, Vicente 13, 365
Llewellyn, Nancy 465
Lloret, Albert 19, 197
Lochrie, Karma 283, 532, 537
Lockey, Paul E. 502
Loewenstein, Joseph 333
Lombard, Jacqueline M. 185
Lomuto, Sierra 34, 93
Long, Brian 558
Long, Mary Beth 444
Longo, Ruggero 423
Longtin, Mario B. 360
Lopez, Kirsten 479
Lopez-Jantzen, Nicole 182, 248
Lorden, Jennifer 324, 433
Love, Paul 44
Lovett, John 492
Lowman, Emily p. 110
Lucey, Stephen J. 368
Lumbley, Coral 288
Lutton, Rob 30
Luyster, Amanda 154, 305
Lynch, Erin S. 440
Lynch, Matthew B. 182
Lynch, Reginald M. OP 394
Lynch, Sarah B. 568
Lyons, Jennifer 90, 505, 544
Lyons, Rebecca 46
Lyons-Penner, Mae 286
Lyttleton, James 213, 271, 388
MacCarron, Máirín 63, 110
Machan, Tim 331
Machulak, Erica 5
Macierowski, Edward M. 347
MacMaster, homas J. 211
Magni, Isabella 147
Mahoney, Peter 40, 559
Mahrt, William Peter 554
Maines, Clark 24
Makuja, Darius O. 12
Mallette, Karla 561
Mallin, Eric S. 114
Malo, Robyn 567
Malone, S. Michael 257, 316
Maloney, Kara Larson 175, 234, 304, p. 110
Manion, Lee 81
Marchi, Lucia 235
Marcocci, Giuseppe 335
Marcos Cobaleda, María 480
Marcos-Marín, Francisco A. 365
Marcoux, Robert 544
Marculescu, Andreea 517
Marino, Nancy F. 19
Markewitz, Darrell 41, 224
Markman, Kristina 448
Marron, Asher 85
Marrone, Steven P. 320
Marsal, Florence 564
Martin, Jonathan Seelye 424
Martin, Michael 182
Martin, Molly 59
Martínez, Pedro 308
Marvin, Julia 208
Marzec, Marcia Smith 68, 115
Maslov, Danila 533
Matava, Robert Joseph 227, 285
Matenaer, James M. 380, 431, 449
Matlock, Wendy A. 66
Matthews, Ricardo 406
Mattison, William C. III 187
Matto, Michael 459
Maurer, homas 79
Mayburd, Miriam 94, 141
Mayer, Lauryn S. 290
Mayus, Melissa 298, 357
Mazour-Matusevich, Yelena 199
McAlister, Vicky 15, 213, 511, 549
McAvoy, Liz Herbert 151, 496, 499
McCall, Taylor 280
McCandless, Jamie 397
McCann, Allison 547
McCarter, Christy 117
McCarthy, Lucas J. 284
McCarthy, T. J. H. 183
McCartney, Elizabeth 127
McCleery, Iona 71
McCloskey, Laura 276
McComb, Maximilian 414
McConnell, Matthew 338
McCormick, Betsy 247, 290
McCormick, Stephen P. 40, 147
McCracken, Peggy 62, 109
McCrank, Lawrence J. 566
202
Millan, Andres 265
Miller, Anne-Hélène 405, 457
Miller, Barbara 564
Miller, David Lee 216, 333
Miller, Jasmin 258, 482
Miller, Lynneth J. 122
Miller, Maureen C. 258, 317
Million, Tucker 263
Mills, Kristen 425
Milmine, Alexis M. 337
Min, Mariah Junglan 104
Mioni, Lino 147
Miranda, Jim 415
Mitchell, John 504
Mitchell, Linda E. 58, 279, 438
Mitchell-Smith, Ilan 162, 456
Mittman, Asa Simon 78, 295, 353, 415,
456
Mize, Britt 145
Moberly, Brent Addison 309
Modarelli, Michael 367
Moedersheim, Sabine 281
Mogk, Kathryn 117
Molstad, Caleb 392
Momma, Haruko 563
Mondschein, Kenneth 76, 129
Monta, Susannah B. 216, 333
Montero, Ana Isabel 60
Montero, Ana M. 243
Montgomery, Andrea 4
Montgomery, Scott B. 45
Montgomery, Tom 4
Montroso, Alan S. 135
Moodey, Elizabeth J. 165
Mooney, Catherine 278, 332
Moore, Eileen Marie 402
Moore, Michael Edward 394
Moore, Stephen G. 30
Moore-Jumonville, Robert 52, 99
Morand Métivier, Charles-Louis 294,
420, 493
Mordechai, Lee 467
Morgan, Joseph 483
Morín de Pablos, Jorge 381
Morley, Stephanie 573
Morreale, Laura 448
Morrel, Joseph 226
Morrell, John 349
Morris, Aubrey 520
Morrison, Clint 156, 247
Morse, Douglas 173
Morse-Gagné, Elise E. 144, 306
203
Index of Participants
McCullough, Ann 372, 447
McDermott, Nicholas 530
McDonald, Nicola 254
McDonald, Roderick 201
McDowell, Jesse 244
McElrath Panasenco, Brianna 299
McEwan, John 279
McFadden, Brian 80
McGee, Ted 411
McGillivray, Andrew 141
McGinn, Bernard 7, 133, 167
McGlohon, Laney 486
McGowan, Matthew M. 413
McGrane, Colleen Maura OSB 226, 341
McGregor, Francine 116
McGuire, Brian Patrick 344
McHardy, Alison 11
McKee, Arielle 510
McLaughlin, A. E. T. 396
McLean, Nicole 350
McLemore, Emily 444
McLoughlin, Caitlyn 410
McMichael, Alice Lynn 90
McMichael, Steven J. OFM Conv. 74, 167
McMullen, Joey 28, 453
McNabb, Cameron Hunt 195
McNellis, Rachel 65
McPherson, Clair 330
McRae, Joan E. 235
McShane, Kara L. 69, 458
Mees, Kate 417
Megna, Paul 160, 350
Meigs, Samantha A. 51
Melick, Elizabeth 390
Melvin-Koushki, Matthew 437
Menaldi, Veronica 355, 503
Mendola, Tara 350
Mengozzi, Stefano 554
Mercuzot, Delphine 524
Merritt, Adrienne Noelle 476
Mertes, Kate 404
Metzger, Stephen 285
Meyer, Evelyn 128
Meyer-Lee, Robert J. 189
Michael, Allison Zbicz 394, 446
Middleton, Blake 289
Miguel dos Santos, Luis 503
Miguel Prendes, Sol 409
Miguélez Cavero, Alicia 249, 308
Miles, Laura Saetveit 483, 573
Miljan, Suzana 47
Miljkovic, Ema 98
Index of Participants
Moskal, Kelsey 57
Moss, Rachel E. 148, 313
Múcska, Vincent 262
Mudd, Katharine 231
Muehlbauer, Mikael 24
Muessig, Carolyn 79, 332
Mui, Sian 78
Mula, Stefano 341
Müller, Axel E. W. 71, 118
Murphy, Francesca 258
Murphy, Patrick J. 194
Murphy, Ronald G. SJ 12
Murrell, William S. 377
Myers, Ariana 71
Myers, Maggie 392
Myklebust, Nicholas 39, 401
Myzgin, Kiril 9
Nachtwey, Gerald 157
Nadhiri, Aman 5
Naismith, Rory 178
Najork, Daniel C. 261, 565
Nakley, Susan 34
Napolitano, David P. H. 243
Napolitano, Frank 113
Narayanan, Tirumular 527
Nardini, Luisa 61
Nate, Andrea 416
Naughton, Ryan 393
Navalesi, Kent E. 12
Navarro, David 559
Nayyar, Alyssa 404
Neal, Derek 499
Neel, Travis 265, 473
Nelson, Amy C. 39
Nelson, Ingrid 81
Nelson, Max 293
Nelson, Timothy J. p. 160
Nephew, Julia A. 369
Nestel, Meghan 517
Netherton, Robin 175, 233, 292
Newby, Rebecca 180
Newhauser, Richard 389
Newman, Barbara 320, 497
Newman, Jack 72
Newman, Jonathan M. 560
Newman, Sharan 49
Newton, Lloyd 187
Nicholas, Richard A. 37, 68, 115
Nicholson, Helen J. 441, 530
Nickel, Breanna J. 403
Nickson, Tom 432, 484
Nielsen, Elizabeth J. 67, 159, p. 160
Njus, Jesse 195
Nobili, Mauro 256
Noble, James 483
Nokes, Richard Scott 514
Nolan, Anne 84, 442
Nolan, Maura 160
Nolan, Simon F. 50
Noll, Frank Jasper 186
Noonan, Sarah 139
Noone, Kristin 159
Norako, Leila K. 93 536
Norcross, Kate 38
Nordtorp-Madson, M. A. 233
Normore, Christina 5, 553
Norris, Robin 105, 161, 179, 340, 356,
419, 471
Norton, Michael L. 21
Nourrigeon, Pamela 480
Novak, Mario 70
Novikof, Alex J. 207
Nowlin, Steele 69, 189
Nyfenegger, Nicole 75
Ó Broin, Brian 388, 521
Oberlin, Adam 64, 107, 153, 387, 476
O’Brien O’Keefe, Katherine 324
O’Camb, Brian 245, 534
Odasso, A. J. 143
O’Dell, Kaylin 38
O’Donnell, Matthew 390
Oehme, Annegret 549
Olayoku, Philip Ademola 76
Oldman, Ruth M. E. 201
Oliver, Judith H. 280, 291
Olver, Jordan 53, 100
O’Malley, Austin 203
O’Malley, Denise 429
O’Mara, Philip F. 371
Omran, Doaa 64, 107, 310
O’Neill, Rosemary 111, 463
Ong, Sophie 522
Oram, William A. 333
Organ, Claire 289
Orgelinger, Gail 407
Orlemanski, Julie 81, 137, 389
Orozco-Vela, Isabel 102
Orsag, Matthew 559
Orsbon, David Allison 7
Oschman, Nicholas A. 170
Otaño Gracia, Nahir I. 288, 451
O’Toole, Graham 357
Otten, Willemien 7, 242
Otter, Monika 171
204
Persson, Karl Arthur Erik 534, 572
Peters, Catherine 100
Peterson, Neil 155, 224
Peterson, Noah 58
Petitjean, Beth 501
Petrosillo, Sara 66
Petrosyan, Ester 266
Pettit, Kent 94
Petts, David 478
Pfau, Aleksandra 436, 556
Pfefer, Wendy 125
Pfrenger, Andrew M. 481, 555
Phillips, Nöelle 111
Phillips, Philip Edward 495
Phillis, Bradley 238
Piavaux, Mathieu 209
Pichel Gotérrez, Ricardo 176, 468
Pick, Lucy K. 319
Pierce, Ingrid 156
Pierce, Marc 476
Piercy, Jeremy 91
Pigeon, Geneviève 299
Pinet, Simone 528
Pinto, Karen 302
Pious, Samantha 104, 451
Planchart, Alejandro 61
Platte, Katie p. 109
Pohl, Benjamin 46, 261, 574
Poinar, Hendrik 272
Pokorski, Robin K. 497
Polcrack, Julie 158
Pollington, Stephen 293
Polloni, Nicola 468
Ponesse, Matthew 502
Poor, Sara S. 320, 538
Pope, Leah 436
Pope, Rebecca 536
Porreca, David p. 110, 489
Porter, Dorothy Carr 95, 142, 188, 342
Porwoll, Robert J. 7, 568
Posth, Carlotta Lea 429
Postlewate, Laurie 399
Pow, Stephen 383
Powell, Austin 560
Powers, Ashley 186
Powrie, Sarah 62, 526
Preston-Matto, Lahney 213, 549
Pretzer, Christoph 277
Price, Patricia 106
Pritula, Anton 8, 269
Pryds, Darleen 85, 132
Pugh, Tison 156, 218
205
Index of Participants
Ouellette, Ed 395
Overbey, Karen Eileen 45, 75
Owen-Crocker, Gale R. 175, 233, 292
Owens, Judith 225
Owens, Shane M. 446
Owings, Daniel 1
Pace, Matteo 10
Paden, William D. 88
Padusniak, Chase 534, 538
Pagan, Heather 208
Pagels, Carrie 190
Palmer, Caroline 84
Paolella, Christopher 211
Park, Dabney 371
Park, Justin G. 324
Parkin, Gabrielle 116
Parks, Robert N. 124
Parsons-Powell, Michelle E. 304
Partridge, Joy 90, 137, 366
Partridge, Stephen 35
Passuello, Angelo 475
Pastan, Elizabeth Carson 31
Pastrana-Pérez, Pablo 176, 365
Patch, Jillian 392
Patrick, Robey Clark 503
Pattenaude, Annika 382
Patterson, Jeanette 197, 228
Pattwell, Niamh 139
Patzuk-Russell, Ryder 568
Paul, Nicholas L. 485
Paulson, Julie 436
Pauw, Andrea 416
Pavlac, Brian A. 311
Pavlinich, Elan Justice 250, 297
Pearman, Tory V. 393, 436
Pearsall, Derek A. 35
Pearsall, Mark 413
Pearson, Hilary 487
Pearson, Jeremy D. 361
Peattie, Matthew 61, 108
Peck, Mackenzie 156
Peck, Russell A. 123
Pedersen, Else Marie Wiberg 455
Peixoto, Michael 238
Pelle, Stephen 500
Pellissa Prades, Gemma 409
Pentz, Stephanie 93
Pérez Vidal, Mercedes 375
Perry, Nandra 391, 443, 494
Perry, R. D. (Univ. of California–Berkeley)
258, 317, 385, 519
Perry, Ryan (Univ. of Kent) 567
Index of Participants
Puig Montada, Josep 571
Pulham, Carol 3
Purdon, Liam 173
Purdy Moudarres, Christiana 422
Purkis, William J. 45, 378, 485
Pyun, Kyunghee 152
Quaghebeur, Joëlle 541
Quigley, Aisling 137
Quinn, William A. 401
Rabin, Andrew 324, 343, 418, 470
Raby, Michael J. 526
Racicot, William 190
Radomme, hibaut 109
Radosti, Adrianna 479
Rafensperger, Christian 47, 98, 260
Raine, Melissa 219
Raisharma, Sukanya 181
Rajabzadeh, Shokoofeh 34, 93, 561
Rajendran, Shyama 113, 406, 570
Rambaran-Olm, Mary 340
Ramey, Peter 298
Ramos, Eduardo 179
Ramseyer, Valerie 273
Ransom, Emily A. 572
Ransom, Lynn 44, 448
Raybin, David 189, 237, 359
Raymond, Dalicia K. 504
Rayner, Samantha 46
Rec, Agnieszka 355
Reed, Emily 562
Reed, Teresa 290
Reeves, A. Compton 326
Reeves, Andrew 79
Reid, Danielle 472
Reider, Alexandra 105, 373, 453
Reilly, Diane 215
Reilly, Lisa 239
Rembold, Ingrid 130
Remein, Daniel 34, 141
Renna, homas J. 127
Rentz, Ellen 172, 301
Reynolds, Daniel 256, 506
Reynolds, Evelyn 452
Reynolds, Meredith 59
Rhodes, William 327
Rice, Laura Elizabeth 337
Richards, Christopher T. 366
Richardson, Norma H. 251, 310
Richmond, Andrew 346
Ricke, Joe 52, 99
Ridgway, Katherine 18
Riedel, Christopher 91
Riley, Bridget 431, 449
Ripplinger, Michelle 317, 496
Risden, Edward L. 97, 563
Ritchey, Sara 122, 261, 320
Rittmueller, Jean 164
Rivera, Isidro J. 542
Rivers, Kimberly 79
Riyef, Jacob 226
Robb, Candace 49
Roberts, Jason (Univ. of Texas-Austin) p.
110, 355
Roberts, Jay (Accelerated Schools of Overland Park) 351, 492
Roberts, Matthew A. 52
Roberts, Michael 546
Roberts, V. M. 155
Robertson, Abigail G. 188, 299
Robertson, Alexis 42
Robertson, Elizabeth 160, 172, 496
Robertson, Kellie 29
Robeson, Lisa 2
Robins, Jenny 523
Robinson, Carol L. 55, 157, 290
Robinson, Peter 22
Robison, Kira L. 501
Roblee, Mark 489
Rochester, Tom 256
Roders, Dana 345
Rodríguez, Jared 34
Rodríguez Viejo, Jesús 325
Rogers, Cliford J. 76, 351
Rogers, William 189, 458
Rohde, Anja 205
Rohr, Zita Eva 438, 490
Roiland, Muriel 191
Rojas, Felipe 488
Rojo Carrillo, Raquel 174
Roman, Christopher M. 151, 200, 265
Ronen, Marit 245
Root, Jerry 428
Roper, Gregory 113, 237
Rosch-Eifert, Eliot 297
Rosenfeld, Jessica 219
Rosenthal, Joel T. 11, 326
Rose-Steel, Tamsyn 457
Rosillo-Luque, Araceli 375
Rouse, Robert 30, 57, 157
Rovang, Paul R. 358
Rowland, homas 548
Rowley, Colin 312
Rowley, Sharon M. 63, 110
Royan, Nicola 331
206
Schmieder, Felicitas 221
Schmitz-Esser, Romedio 374
Schneider, Julia A. 206, 379
Schoolman, Edward M. 166, 273, 472
Schorn, Brittany 387
Schreyer, Kurt 463
Schryver, James G. 213, 321, 388
Schulenburg, Jane Tibbetts 435
Schulman, Jana K. p. 55, p. 112
Schutte, Valerie 92, 368
Schutz, Andrea 69
Schwartz, Nicholas 64
Schwarz, Martin 207, 432
Scott, Carolyn F. 309, p. 110
Scott, Karen 74
Scott, Lisa 397
Scott, Rachel E. 271
Scozia, Matteo 287
Scragg, Donald G. 43
Seale, Yvonne 435
Seaman, Myra 389
Sears, Andrew 522
Seeberg, Stefanie 319
Segol, Marla 131, p. 110
Selvage, Courtney 521
Semple, Benjamin M. 369, 420
Semple, Sarah J. 43, 417, 478, 506
Senocak, Neslihan 320
Sepp, Tiina 120
Sergent, F. Tyler 198
Sergi, Matthew 312
Sévère, Richard 59
Sexon, Sophie 278
Sexton, John P. 349, 481, 527
Shalom, Gili 518
Shank, Derek 234, p. 110
Shanzer, Danuta 507, 546
Shaw, Richard 63
Sheble, Margaret 479
Sheldon, A. Aversa 552
Shepard, Laurie 121
Shepard, Mary B. 239
Sheridan, Christian 440
Sherman, Heidi 175
Shichtman, Martin B. 218
Shimabukuro, Karra 75
Shimomura, Sachi 110
Shortell, Ellen M. 165
Shuey, Nathan 48
Shuster, Noah 469
Shutters, Lynn 359
Siebach-Larsen, Anna 56, 103
207
Index of Participants
Rubin, Michael J. 450
Rubio Moirón, Rocío 461
Rude, Sarah B. 2, 156
Rudolph, Joseph 33
Ruether-Wu, Danielle 433, 551
Ruether-Wu, Marybeth 346
Ruiter, Keith 289
Runstedler, Curtis 163
Ruppar, Rebecca Hertling 362
Ruppe, Helga 501
Ruppel, Daniel 158
Russakof, Anna D. 276
Russell, Arthur J. 565
Russo Rodríguez, Maureen 542
Russom, Geofrey Richard 336
Ryan, Michael A. 17, 182, 404
Rydel, Courtney E. 122
Rydstrøm-Poulsen, Aage 455
Sabbaghi, Maryam 149
Saif, Liana 131, 437, 515
Salata, Debra A. 370
Salisbury, Eve 196, 313, 406, 458
Saltzman, Benjamin A. 317
Salzberg, Kenneth 106
Salzillo, Raphael Mary OP 285
Salzmann, Andrew Benjamin 37
Samples, Susann herese 168
Samuelson, Charlie 405
San Martín, Israel 249
Sánchez Ramos, Isabel 381
Sánchez-Reyes, María 125
Sancinito, Jane 467
Sand, Alexa 90, 137, 152
Sandberg, Julianne 525
Sandoval, Elizabeth M. 544
Sarantis, Alexander 472
Saretto, Gianmarco E. 27
Sargent, Michael 567
Sasson, Ilana 251, 534
Saucier, Catherine 516
Sauer, Michelle M. 151, 268, 487
Savage, Jessica 280, 325
Savo, Anita 13
Sawyer, homas 27
Schachenmayr, Alcuin 341
Schadler, Peter 376
Scheck, Helene 110
Schendel, Isaac S. 186
Schiavetta, Lorenzo 339
Schif, Randy 121
Schmid, Boris Valentijn 272
Schmidt, William 12
Index of Participants
Siek, homas 70
Sigal, Gale 184
Sikarskie, Amanda 97
Silberman, Lauren 225
Silleras-Fernández, Núria 269, 328, 438
Simon, Larry J. 217
Sims, Holly 409
Sims, Taylor A. 202
Singer, Julie 354
Singerman, Jerome E. 236
Sinnett-Smith, Jane 485
Sinnreich-Levi, Deborah M. 524
Sirabian, Robert 440
Sirilla, Michael G. 450
Sisk, Jennifer 445
Slaven, Amber N. 216
Slavin, Bridgette 213, 250, 521
Slavin, Philip 15, 214, 272
Sleinger, John 263
Smigen-Rothkopf, David 358
Smit, Laura 99
Smith, Danny 543
Smith, Eileen 8
Smith, James L. 28
Smith, Joshua Byron 57
Smith, Katherine Allen 238
Smith, Kathryn 86
Smith, Leigh 2
Smith, Margaret 511
Smith, Marie-Anne 194
Smith, Matthew (Univ. of Alabama) 106
Smith, Matthew (Univ. of Florida) 23
Smith, Trevor Russell 118
Smith, Wendell P. 16
Smoller, Laura Ackerman 169
Smyth, Marina 164
Sneddon, Clive R. 228
Snow, Joseph T. 18
Snowden, Emma 364
Snyder, Christopher A. 393
Snyder, Janet 140
So, Francis K. H. 309
Sobehrad, Lane J. 361, 407
Solopova, Elizabeth 82
Solway, Susan 24
Somenzi, Laura Maria 122
Somerset, Fiona 265, 531, 567
Songstad, Nicole 38
Sonnesyn, Sigbjorn 215
Soper, Harriet 535
Sorenson, David 205, 339
Soria, Judith 505, 544
Soto, Karen 392
Spears, Matthew E. 551
Speed, Jennifer 439
Speilman, Charlotte 323
Spence, Sarah 236
Spencer, Mark K. 398
Spencer-Hall, Alicia 462
Spiering, Jamie Anne 53
Sposato, Peter W. 279, 322
Sprouse, Sarah Jane 156, 361
Stahl, Alan 9, 205, 467
Staley, Lynn 452
Stamati, Iurie 23
Stanavage, Liberty S. 20, 66
Stankovitsová, Zuzana 94
Stanley, Matthew A. 68
Stantchev, Stefan 335
Stanton, Anne Rudlof 180
Stanton, Robert 107, 264, 551
Staples, James C. 536
Star, Sarah 283, 565
Starkey, Kathryn 260, 319
Staufer, Robert 230
Stavroulias, Stavros 247
Stenbrenden, Gjertrud F. 336
Stephenson, Joe 52
Stephenson, Rebecca 179, 324, 356
Stern, Isabel 201, 452
Sterringer, Shanon 338
Steuer, Susan M. B. 341
Stevens, Ian 84
Stevens, Travis 278
Stevenson, Max 136
Stewart, Michael E. 472
Stewart, Vaughn 306
Stewart, Zachary 209, 239
Stiles, Jennifer 192
Still, Carl N. 450
Stinson, Timothy 172, 342
Stirm, Jan 20
Stirnemann, Patricia 191
Stock, Lorraine Kochanske 218, 548
Stockson, Gilbert 37
Stokes, Daniel 199
Stokes, James 312
Stone, Kara M. 426
Stone, Robert S. 16
Stone, Zachary E. 5, 553
Stones, M. Alison 325
Stoppino, Eleonora 256, 315
Storm, William M. 304
Stoyanof, Jefery G. 116, 458
208
hompson, Dylan 93
hompson, Nancy 432, 484
hompson, Sarah 41, 77, 140
homson, S. C. 471
hornton, Ryan 571
horpe, Deborah 556
hum, Maureen 199, 257, 316
hunø, Erik 301
Tica, Cristina 70
Tichenor, Morris 26, 343
Tifany, Grace 97
Tighe, John 511
Tilghman, Benjamin C. 137, 280
Tilghman, Carla 41
Tillery, Laura R. 522
Tillisch, Rose Marie 455
Tirado Salazar, Rodrigo O. 381
Tirosh, Yoav 94
Tizzoni, Mark Lewis 568
Toledo Candelaria, Marian 508
Tomasch, Sylvia 469
Tomkinson, Diane V. OSF 85, 132
Torregrossa, Michael A. 194
Torres, Lis 176
Toswell, M. Jane 98, 453, 563
Toth, Zita 533
Tracy, Kisha G. 481, 527
Tracy, Larissa 145, 456
Traxler, Janina P. 168
Treanor, Lucia FSE 495
Treharne, Elaine M. 86, 188, 421
Tremblay, Vincent 210
Treschow, Michael 513
Trigg, Stephanie 160, 219, 401
Trilling, Renée R. 179, 356
Trokhimenko, Olga V. 424
Troup, Andrew C. 336
Troy, Jessica 304
Troyan, Scott 234
Trynoski, Danielle 4
Tuggle, Brad 333, 391
Tuley, K. A. 364
Tung, Toy-Fung 229, 284
Turner, James 163
Turner, Joseph 343
Turner, Wendy J. 272, 439, 556
Twomey, Carolyn 240
Twomey, Michael W. 92, 117, 231
Ukropen, Alex 298
Ureni, Paola 10
Utz, Richard 98, 563
Vaccaro, Christopher T. 283, 348
209
Index of Participants
Strådal, Sara Öberg 460
Strakhov, Elizaveta 384, 410, 553
Straple, Rebecca E. 122, 171
Straubhaar, Sandra B. 425
Stringer, Gregory P. 413, 465
Strohschneider, Anna-Katharina 170
Strub, Spencer 265, 385, 531
Strycharski, Andrew 443
Stump, Donald 494
Sturgeon, Justin 177, 243
Sullivan, Joseph M. 393
Suppe, Frederick 42, 89
Sutera, Judith OSB 341, 430, 482
Sutor, Sarah 417
Swain, Brian 386
Swain, Larry J. 76, 96, 145
Swallow, Rachel E. 91
Swanson, Matthew 61, 108
Sweeney, Mickey 304
Sweeten, David 48
Sweetenham, Carol 286
Swift, Christopher 469
Swift, Helen J. 235, 385
Symes, Carol 315
Szarmach, Paul E. 279
Szende, Katalin 47, 98
Szittya, Penn 86
Tabor, Nathan L. M. 149, 203
Tan, Jenny 303
Tanaseanu-Döbler, Ilinca 352
Tanton, Kristine 480
Tarver, Charles 338
Taylor, Craig 148, 243
Taylor, Karen 198
Taylor, Mark 88
Teijeira Pablos, María Dolores 249, 308
Templeton, Lee 434
Tepper, Bradley D. 134
Terkla, Dan 221, 267
Terry, David D. 217
Terry, Elizabeth Ashcroft 530
Terry, Wendy 230
Tether, Leah 46
Teviotdale, Elizabeth C. 178, p. 109
hebaut, Nancy 518
hengs, Kjetil V. 202
homas, Carla María 255, 314, 500
homas, Curtis 493
homas, Hugh M. 499
homas, Paul R. p. 110
homas, Sarah 252
hompson, Cassidy 353
Index of Participants
Vachon-Roy, Maude 493
Valante, Mary A. 213, 549
Valdés Fernández, Fernando 381
Valentine, Suzanne 555
Valles, Margot B. 334
van der Meer, Matthieu 36, 83, 130
van Deusen, Nancy 65, 242, 301, 361
Van Dussen, Michael 82, 529, 567
Van Dyke, Carolynn 66
van Liere, Franz 380
van Renswoude, Irene 363
van Rhijn, Carine 414
Vandeburie, Jan 574
Vander Elst, Stefan 210
Vanderpoel, Matthew 1, 294
VanDonkelaar, Curtis 97
VanDonkelaar, Ilse Schweitzer 434
Vann, heresa M. 441
Vaquero, Mercedes 40, 87
Vaughan, heresa A. 293
Vaught, Jennifer 225, 333
Vázquez Corbal, Margarita 249
Vázquez Cruz, Adam Alberto 22, 409
Velasco, Jesús R. 19
Velázquez-Mendoza, Omar 365
Veneskey, Laura 569
Verardi, Andrea Antonio 130
Verduin, Kathleen 371, 474
Verini, Alexandra 198
Verkholantsev, Julia 529
Viallon, Marina 492
Villalon, L. J. Andrew 441, 492
Vines, Amy N. 145, 400
Violette, Stephanie Victoria 415
Visconti, Amanda 510
Vise, Melissa E. 426
Vishnuvajjala, Usha 162, 532, 537
Vitale, Lisa 74
Vitz, Evelyn Birge 150, 372
Voight, Valerie 39
Voigts, Linda Ehrsam 41, 540
Volek, Jan 397
Volokh, Alexander 220
von Lüpke, Beatrice 523
von Müller, Johannes 547
von Weissenberg, Marita 499
Voss, Elizabeth 197
Vrieland, Seán D. 387
Vukovich, Alexandra 177
Wacha, Heather 435
Wadden, Patrick 388
Wade, Erik 201, 356
Wagner, Erin K. 50
Wakeman, Rob 232
Walden, Justine 44
Waldstein, Susan 398
Walef, Marci Lyn 155
Walef, Stevan E. 155
Walker, Rose 566
Wallace-Hare, David 89
Waller, Gary 443
Walling, Amanda 473
Walsh, Martin 173
Walsh, Verity 459
Walters, John 225
Walters, Lori 197
Walther, Sabine Heidi 222
Walton, Kathryn 564
Wang, Stella 537
Wangerin, Laura 220
Wanninger, Jane 349
Ward, Aengus 19
Ward, Graeme 550
Ward, Jessica D. 400
Ward, Patricia H. 49
Ward, Renée 264
Warren, Nancy Bradley 270
Waters, Claire M. 103, 531
Watson, Rachel 122
Watson, Sarah Wilma 410, 496
Watson, Stephen 362
Watt, David 401, 473
Wawrzyniak, Elizabeth 329, 527
Waymack, Anna Fore 509
Wearing, Shannon L. 325
Weatherwax, Nancy 124
Weaver, Erica 161, 324, 382, 433, 453, 526
Webb, Karen 242
Webb, Lora 90, 543
Webb, Michael F. 92
Weber, Benjamin 513, 551
Weijer, Neil 35
Wellendorf, Jonas 476
Wells, Courtney Joseph 13
Welton, Andrew 63
Welzenbach, Rebecca A. 84
Wendling, Miriam 516
Werthmann, Indra 478
Werwie, Katherine 366
Westcoat, Eirik 143, 222
Westerby, Matthew J. 569
Westfall, Suzanne 411
Weston, Lisa M. C. 268, 356
Wetmore, Amanda 27
210
Wong, Dorothy 5
Wood, Donald W. 377
Wood, Jamie 25, 98
Wood, Lucas 62, 109, 385
Wood, Sarah 327
Woodacre, Elena 438, 490
Woodward, Beth 518
Woosley-Goodman, Megan 520
Worley, Meg 314
Wrapson, Lucy 296
Wright, Monica L. 233, 372
Wright, Myra E. 29
Wright, Vanessa 71
Wu, Yu-Ching 313
Wuest, Charles 359
Yager, Susan 144, 306
Yardley, Brett 170
Yeager, Hillary 157
Yeager, R. F. 69
Yingst, Daniel 7
Yirga, Felege-Selam 376
Yolles, Julian 546
Yoon, David 539
York, William H. 501, 540
Yoshikawa, Fumiko 487
Young, Geneviève 33
Young, Helen 190
Zachary Panxhi, Lindsey 427
Zadeh, Travis 515
Zajac, Talia 260
Zambreno, Mary Frances 558
Zaneri, Taylor 539
Zarins, Kim 406, 458
Zavagno, Luca 467
Zayaruznaya, Anna 354
Zecevic, Nada 47
Zedolik, John 444
Zeitler, Jessica 310
Zeldes, Nadia 328
Zemler-Cizewski, Wanda 7
Ziegler, Michelle 15, 214, 272
Zimbalist, Barbara 122, 497
Zisa, Jessica 104
Zoll, Laura 150
Zupka, Dušan 262
Zysk, Jay 253
211
Index of Participants
Whatley, Laura J. 504,
Whearty, Bridget 200, 384
Wheeler, Bonnie 145, 223, 236
Wheeler, Nicholas 166
Whetter, Kevin S. 57, 168, 231
Whitacre, Andrea 427, 510
Whitaker, Cord 34
Whitaker, Natalie M. 350
White, Kevin 6
White, Tifany 252
Whitnah, Lauren L. 14
Whoda, Martin 262
Wicker, Nancy L. 9
Wickham, Chris p. 112
Wiecek, Tomasz 9
Wieser, Veronika 512, 550
Wiesinger, Michaela 523, 557
Wigg-Wolf, David 9
Wilcox, Miranda 136
Wilhite, Valerie M. 88, 106, 517
Wilkerson, Dylan M. 500
Williams, Elise 558
Williams, Elizabeth Dospel 305
Williams, Evan R. 431
Williams, Kelly 171
Williams, Maggie M. 75, 137, 178
Williams, Tara 444
Williamsen, Elizabeth A. 390
Williamsen, Kyler 192
Williamson, Beth 45
Williard, Hope D. 376, 507
Willingham, Elizabeth 235
Wilson, Anna 159, 200
Wilson, Evan 459, 572
Wilson-Okamura, David Scott 225
Wilton, David 136
Wingield, Emily 315
Winslow, Sean M. 41, 256
Wittstock, Antje 523
Wodzak, Michael 4
Wogan-Browne, Jocelyn 103, 236, 295,
399
Wolever, Eric 277
Wolf, Fabian 154
Wollenberg, Klaus 455
Wollock, Jefrey 284
Wollock, Jennifer 346
Index of Honorees
Lapidge, Michael 324
Palmer, Caroline 236, 295
Renna, homas J. 167
Rosenthal, Joel T. 279, 326
Index of Honorees
Berman, Constance H. 344, 435
Boulton, Maureen B. M. 56, 103
Emerick, Judson 301
Emmerson, Richard K. 86, 133
Hagens, Adelaide Bennett 280, 325
212
M-1
M-2
M-3
M-4
M-5
M-6
FETZER CENTER
FETZER CENTER
M-7
M-8
SANGREN HALL
M-9