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Friday, November 10
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(all panels will be held in Tawes hall, room 2115)
8:00-9:00am Registration, Coffee, Breakfast
Tawes Hall, 1st and 2nd floor lobbies
8:00-9:00am Registration, Coffee, Breakfast
Tawes Hall, 1st and 2nd floor lobbies
9:00-9:15am Introductory Remarks, Tawes Room 2115
Sabrina Alcorn Baron, Assistant Research Professor of History - University of Maryland, Chair, MEM-UM
Sabrina Alcorn Baron, Assistant Research Professor of History - University of Maryland, Chair, MEM-UM
BODY
9:15-10:30 am
Moderator: Nicole McLean, PhD Candidate in History - University of Maryland
Giorgio Tosco, European University Institute, Firenze. “Importing the Netherlands: the Dutch-speaking community of Genoa and its role in naval and commercial development (XVIIth century)”
Bernard Cooperman, Louis L. Kaplan Chair in Jewish History - University of Maryland. “Os Homens do Nação: Shared Language and Overlapping Identity”
Ian Verstegen, Director of Visual Studies - University of Pennsylvania. “Tethered Agents: Labor Exports from the Duchy of Urbino”
Moderator: Nicole McLean, PhD Candidate in History - University of Maryland
Giorgio Tosco, European University Institute, Firenze. “Importing the Netherlands: the Dutch-speaking community of Genoa and its role in naval and commercial development (XVIIth century)”
Bernard Cooperman, Louis L. Kaplan Chair in Jewish History - University of Maryland. “Os Homens do Nação: Shared Language and Overlapping Identity”
Ian Verstegen, Director of Visual Studies - University of Pennsylvania. “Tethered Agents: Labor Exports from the Duchy of Urbino”
10:30-10:45am BREAK
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
Featured Speaker
10:45 am-12:00 pm
Moderator: Holly Brewer, Burk Chair in American History - University of Maryland
Clare A. Lyons, Associate Professor of History - University of Maryland. “Bodies in Motion: Fashioning the Intimate in a Globalizing Eighteenth Century World”
10:45 am-12:00 pm
Moderator: Holly Brewer, Burk Chair in American History - University of Maryland
Clare A. Lyons, Associate Professor of History - University of Maryland. “Bodies in Motion: Fashioning the Intimate in a Globalizing Eighteenth Century World”
12:00-1:30pm LUNCH
2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
WORD
Featured Speaker
1:30-2:30pm
Moderator: Theresa Coletti, Professor of English - University of Maryland
Nigel Smith, William and Annie S. Paton Foundation Professor of Ancient and Modern Literature - Princeton University. “Polyglot Poetics: Transnational Early Modern Literature”
1:30-2:30pm
Moderator: Theresa Coletti, Professor of English - University of Maryland
Nigel Smith, William and Annie S. Paton Foundation Professor of Ancient and Modern Literature - Princeton University. “Polyglot Poetics: Transnational Early Modern Literature”
2:30-2:45pm BREAK
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
2:45-4:15pm
Moderator: Melanie Rio, PhD Student in English - University of Maryland
Karen Nelson, Associate Director, Center for Literary & Comparative Studies, Department of English - University of Maryland. “Embodying Families at War in Early Modern English Drama"
Katarzyna Lecky, Assistant Professor of English - Bucknell University; Folger Shakespeare Library Fellow. "Naturalizing Rebellion: The English Physician in Colonial America"
Rachel L. Burke, Assistant Professor of Spanish - Notre Dame of Maryland University. "Broadsides and Bodies: Columbus’s First Return to Europe"
Moderator: Melanie Rio, PhD Student in English - University of Maryland
Karen Nelson, Associate Director, Center for Literary & Comparative Studies, Department of English - University of Maryland. “Embodying Families at War in Early Modern English Drama"
Katarzyna Lecky, Assistant Professor of English - Bucknell University; Folger Shakespeare Library Fellow. "Naturalizing Rebellion: The English Physician in Colonial America"
Rachel L. Burke, Assistant Professor of Spanish - Notre Dame of Maryland University. "Broadsides and Bodies: Columbus’s First Return to Europe"
4:30pm Wine Reception
Tawes Hall 2nd. Floor Lobby
5:30pm Conference Dinner
and
6:00pm Performance by The Palestrina Choir
Tawes Hall, first floor room 1310
Tawes Hall 2nd. Floor Lobby
5:30pm Conference Dinner
and
6:00pm Performance by The Palestrina Choir
Tawes Hall, first floor room 1310
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Saturday, November 11 |
9:00-10:00am Registration, Coffee, Breakfast
Tawes Hall, 1st and 2nd floor lobbies
Tawes Hall, 1st and 2nd floor lobbies
WORD
10:00-11:30 am
Moderator: Liam Daley, PhD Student in English - University of Maryland
Drew Heverin, PhD Candidate in English Literature - University of Kentucky. “'Washed in the Thames': The Trouble with Economic Migration in Jacobean City Comedy"
Matthew Giancarlo, Associate Professor of English - University of Kentucky. “French vs. English? Political Exiles and Literary Returns across the English Channel in the Fürstenspiegel tradition, c. 1260-1470”
J. Seth Lee, Lecturer in Literature and Composition - University of Alabama-Huntsville. “Shifting Voices: Gower’s Use of the Exilic Voice in the Vox Clamantis”
Moderator: Liam Daley, PhD Student in English - University of Maryland
Drew Heverin, PhD Candidate in English Literature - University of Kentucky. “'Washed in the Thames': The Trouble with Economic Migration in Jacobean City Comedy"
Matthew Giancarlo, Associate Professor of English - University of Kentucky. “French vs. English? Political Exiles and Literary Returns across the English Channel in the Fürstenspiegel tradition, c. 1260-1470”
J. Seth Lee, Lecturer in Literature and Composition - University of Alabama-Huntsville. “Shifting Voices: Gower’s Use of the Exilic Voice in the Vox Clamantis”
11:30-11:45am BREAK
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
WORD & SPIRIT
11:45am- 1:15pm
Moderator: Sarah Lind, MA Student in English - University of Maryland
Kathryn Gucer, Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital Curation - University of Maryland. “Migrating Mazarinades : A Case Study in Digital Reunification”
Jordan S. Sly, Librarian and MA Student, Department of History - University of Maryland. “Digital Humanities and the Recusant Printing Network: An Experiment in Research Format”
Ralph Bauer, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, College of Arts and Humanities - University of Maryland. "The Key to the Secrets of the World: Christopher Columbus's Ecstatic Itinerancies"
Moderator: Sarah Lind, MA Student in English - University of Maryland
Kathryn Gucer, Postdoctoral Fellow in Digital Curation - University of Maryland. “Migrating Mazarinades : A Case Study in Digital Reunification”
Jordan S. Sly, Librarian and MA Student, Department of History - University of Maryland. “Digital Humanities and the Recusant Printing Network: An Experiment in Research Format”
Ralph Bauer, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, College of Arts and Humanities - University of Maryland. "The Key to the Secrets of the World: Christopher Columbus's Ecstatic Itinerancies"
1:15-2:15pm LUNCH
2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
SPIRIT
2:15-3:30pm
Moderator: Garth Libhart, PhD Student - University of Maryland
Bryan Gourley, PhD - Independent Scholar. “The Vocacyon of Johan Bale to the Bishoprick of Ossory: An Irish Exile and Edwardian Reformation Identity Politics"
Helena Wagefelt Ström, PhD Candidate in Museology - Umeå University, Sweden. "Cult, Culture, Customs: Narrating Religious Otherness During times of Migrations in Early Modern Europe"
Barnaby Nygren, Associate Professor of Art History - Loyola University of Maryland. "Old Forms Grow in New Lands: The Grotesque in Early Colonial Mexico"
Moderator: Garth Libhart, PhD Student - University of Maryland
Bryan Gourley, PhD - Independent Scholar. “The Vocacyon of Johan Bale to the Bishoprick of Ossory: An Irish Exile and Edwardian Reformation Identity Politics"
Helena Wagefelt Ström, PhD Candidate in Museology - Umeå University, Sweden. "Cult, Culture, Customs: Narrating Religious Otherness During times of Migrations in Early Modern Europe"
Barnaby Nygren, Associate Professor of Art History - Loyola University of Maryland. "Old Forms Grow in New Lands: The Grotesque in Early Colonial Mexico"
3:45-4:15 pm BREAK
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
Coffee in 2nd floor lobby, Tawes Hall
4:30-5:00pm Remarks from Prof. Julie Greene, Co-Director, Center for Global Migration Studies, University of Maryland
Featured Speaker
5:00-6:00pm
Moderator: Stefano Villani, Associate Professor of History - University of Maryland
Nicholas Terpstra, Professor and Chair of History - University of Toronto. “Exile, Expulsion, and Religious Refugees: Forced Migration and the Meaning of Reformation”
5:00-6:00pm
Moderator: Stefano Villani, Associate Professor of History - University of Maryland
Nicholas Terpstra, Professor and Chair of History - University of Toronto. “Exile, Expulsion, and Religious Refugees: Forced Migration and the Meaning of Reformation”
6:00-8:00pm RECEPTION AND EXHIBITION
Special Collections Lobby, Hornbake Library 1st floor
Images courtesy of the Folger Shakespeare Library
Thomas Blundeville. M. Blundevile his exercises, containing eight treatises, the titles whereof are set down in the next printed page...p.301 Source Call Number: STC 3149 Copy 1.
Thomas Blundeville. M. Blundevile his exercises, containing eight treatises, the titles whereof are set down in the next printed page...p.301 Source Call Number: STC 3149 Copy 1.