Showing posts with label GW MEMSI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GW MEMSI. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Paxson Winners & BABEL Events at #Kzoo2017!

by BABEL WORKING GROUP


[#MedievalDonut copiousness at #Kzoo2016; photo by Jeffrey]


First, BABEL is delighted to announce the three winners of the 2017 James J. Paxson Memorial Travel Grant for Scholars of Limited Funds, which supports scholars' participation in the annual International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo. They are (in alphabetical order)
  • Jonathan Fruoco (Université Grenoble Alpes), to present “Translating Sufism in Medieval England: Chaucer and The Conference of the Birds”
  • Sara Petrosillo (University of California, Davis), to present “Flying, Hunting, Reading: Feminism and Falconry”
  • Shyama Rajendran (George Washington University), to present “Teaching The Legend of Philomela From Ovid to Gower”
We received many, many strong applications this year, and the difficult decision among them was made by a committee of four judges: Roland Betancourt (University of California, Irvine), Liza Blake (University of Toronto), Richard H. Godden (Tulane University), and Robin Norris (Carleton University). Thanks to the judges for their time and effort!
Also, we'd really like to thank the many donors to the BABEL fundraiser, who’ve made these grants possible! We’re continuing to raise $$ until mid-May, which will support travel to the 2017 BABEL conference next fall as well as Kalamazoo 2018. Please spread the word, and give if you can!
In the meantime, the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo (or #Kzoo2017) is rapidly approaching, so here's a compilatio of BABEL and BABEL-adjacent events to add to your calendar. Everyone is welcome to everything!
  • Wed May 10 at 9-11pm MEDIEVAL DONUT 3.0 (Radisson Lobby), social gathering co-sponsored by GW MEMSI (Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute); note the event site
  • Thu May 11 at 3:30pm – BABEL ROUNDTABLE: Feminism with/out Gender (Fetzer 1045)
  • Thu May 11 at 5:00pm - BABEL Working Group Business Meeting (Fetzer 1045)
  • Fri May 12 at 1:30pm – GW MEMSI ROUNDTABLE: Catastrophe and Periodization (Fetzer 1010)
  • Fri May 12 at 3:30pm – BABEL ROUNDTABLE: Access and the Academy (Sangren 1920)
  • Fri May 12 at 5:00pm – BABEL + MATERIAL COLLECTIVE RECEPTION (Bernhard President's Dining Room)
  • Fri May 12 at 9pm-11pm – FESTIVITIES AT BELL'S BREWERY, co-sponsored by ISAS (International Anglo-Saxon Society)
  • Sat May 13 at 10am POSTMEDIEVAL ROUNDTABLE: Atmospheric Medievalisms/Medieval Atmospheres (Bernhard 210)
  • Sat May 13 at 5:45pm – “Whiteness in Medieval Studies: A Workshop,” organized by an open fellowship of Medievalists of Color and hosted by SMFS (Society for Medievalist Feminist Scholarship) during its Business Meeting and Reception (Fetzer 1045); note event website with info and readings
  • Sat May 13 at 9pm – QUEERDIEVALIST gathering for queer medievalists and allies (Radisson Bar)
Anything else to add? Feel free to use the comments section below (comments are moderated so it might take some time for items to post).

Sunday, March 06, 2011

The Wolf Child of Hesse Betrays the Human: AVMEO Preview

by KARL STEEL

I've twice blogged (one and two) on the Wolf Child of Hesse, twice spoken on it, and will talk about him again on Friday as the first speaker at the GW MEMSI AVMEO (Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: Ethics and Objects in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods) conference.

The story (see here), again, goes like this:
Anno Domini MCCCIIII. Quidam puer in partibus Hassie est deprehensus. Hic, sicut postea cognitum est, et sicut ipse retulit, cum trium esset annorum, a lupis est captus [alternately: est raptus] et mirabiliter educatus. Nam, quamcumque predam lupi pro cibo rapuerant, semper meliorem partem sumentes et arbori circumiacientes ipsi ad vorandum tribuebant. Tempore vero hiemis et frigoris foveam facientes, folia arborum et alias herbas imponentes, puerum superponebant, et se circumponentes, sic eum a frigore defendebant; ipsum eciam manibus et pedibus repere cogebant et secum currere tamdiu, quod ex use eorum velocitatem imitabatur et saltus maximos faciebat. Hic deprehensus lignis circumligatis erectus ire ad humanam similitudinem cogebatur. Idem vero puer sepius dicebat se multo carius cum lupis, si in se esset, quam cum hominibus diligere conversari. Hic puer in curiam Heinrici principis Hassie pro spectaculo est allatus.

1304. A certain boy in the region of Hesse was seized. This boy, as was known afterwards, and just as the boy told it himself, was taken by wolves when he was three years old and raised up wondrously. For, whatever prey the wolves snatched for food, they would take the better part and allot it to him to eat while they lay around a tree. In the time of winter and cold, they made a pit, and they put the leaves of trees and other plants in it, and surrounded the boy to protect him from the cold; they also compelled him to creep on hands and feet and to run with them for a long time, from which practice he imitated their speed and was able to make the greatest leaps. When he was seized, he was bound with wood to compel him to go erect in the manner of a human (or “in a human likeness”). However, this boy often said that he much preferred to live among wolves than among men. This boy was conveyed to the court of Henry, Prince of Hesse, for a spectacle.
I have a lot to say about this, primarily, as you might gather from my talk's title, about the postures the boy takes on and what this says about various ways of being in the world. I talk about the story's recognition of the boy as not quite passive and not quite active, about it's just failing to find a "middle voice." I condemn the "happiness script," the "straightening device" (see Sara Ahmed The Promise of Happiness, 91) the adult humans use to disorient the boy from the world and to orient him towards an unchanging heaven. I don't, however, want simply to cheer the boy being down in the muck with the wolves and to scorn the humans for being so intent on protecting their humanity. It's not so easy as that. Something is at stake in the boy's time with the wolves; something is at stake in our stances. I am trying, hesitantly, to get at something that's no doubt been discussed many, many times: the ethical stakes of horizontalist ontologies (to my mind, treated unsatisfyingly here, Vibrant Matter, 104).

What follows, then, is a sneak preview of the current state of the last paragraphs of my talk before the conclusion. If you'd like to argue, argue in comments, or hold your fire till Friday:

The wolves give the child the meliorem partem, the better part of the prey. The Hesse story might be read as one among several medieval stories of children suckled by carnivores, which themselves suggest the prelapsarian (or Messianic) state of human dominion over animals in the peaceable kingdom: just as the lion will lay down with the lamb, so too will human infants lay down with wolves. In this understanding, the child's innocence protects it, and his longing to be back among the wolves may belong to his wish to abandon his humiliated position in the corrupt world into which he's been cast.

We might decide, however, not to read the service the wolves do the boy as representing the honor they owe him as a human, but rather as representing the cherishing the wolves give the boy as a child or, for that matter, as a cub. He gets the best because he needs more. They acknowledge the different precarities between wolf and boy. We might call what they do a more responsible way of being in the world than the ways we watch the humans follow. To protect the boy, the wolves use what trees and other plants throw off; the human technocrats use wood, kill trees, treating the world as only as a set of objects made for human needs. This is a nice contrast, but I'd rather come at that meliorem partem some other way by not forgetting that it is meat. For the boy to be fed, something had to die.

What does it mean to be a companion, or more precisely, concarnian in the woods with wolves; what does it mean to be their messmate? Haraway uses this word often in When Species Meet, for example,
the ecologies of significant others involves messmates at table, with indigestion and without the comfort of teleological purpose from above, below, in front, or behind. This is not some kind of naturalistic reductionism; this is about living responsively as mortal beings where dying and killing are not optional. (74)
Wolves appear rarely in the Erfurt chronicle material, but when they do, they eat people. The chronicle twice (here and here) speaks of an attack in 1271 in which wolves eschewed sheep and instead devoured 30 men, and once mentions a legend of the emperor Nero, who, as some say, fled Rome and succumbed to hunger and thirst in a forest, after which wolves ate his corpse (here). Note too that one manuscript of the Hesse story has the child raptus, not captus, by wolves, which then rapuerant their prey: snatching this child is like snatching any meat. For whatever reasons, something about this young meat strikes them differently; but the story does not forget that when wolves grab a human, they grab it--almost always--to eat it.

This may be a stretch: but if we take melior as not describing the portion size or the cut but as the quality, we might understand the meliorem partem as better than their usual run of meat: not sheep, but perhaps human flesh, better than animal flesh because of its purported great savor and nutritiousness, per any number of medieval imaginations of anthropophagy. I'm reminded of the fifteenth-century hunting manual of Edward of York, which observes that “man’s flesh is so savory and so pleasant that when [wolves] have taken to man’s flesh they will never eat the flesh of other beasts, though they should die of hunger.” I'm reminded, too, of a story I heard on Radiolab, where Barbara Smuts tells about her time among the baboons. Abandoning the pretensions of being only an observing subject among animal objects, she learns to sit like a baboon, to sound like one, and though a vegetarian, she finds herself salivating when she witnesses the baboon troop kill and dismember a young gazelle. She feels this as an encounter with her heritage; we might call it a different way of being in the world; we might also recognize that such differences frame our world differently, remaking certain parts as grievable and others not. Choices will be made, and Smuts' remapped salivary glands choose to betray both her vegetarianism and the gazelle.

Likewise, during his time with the wolves, how has the boy betrayed his humanity? How has he betrayed us? What has been the result of his disalignment from the noble hunters who enter the woods in their own way, imagining their own flesh to be not for eating, who kill some animals to eat, and kill others—wolves—as competitors, with the help of their own domesticated wolves?

(modified image from here, detail of New York, Columbia University, Burke Library at Union Theological Seminary UTS MS 051, f. 143, Eustace standing in the middle of the river with the lion and the wolf on either side, each with one of Eustace's sons in his mouth.)

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

GW MEMSI Conference: Animal, Vegetable, Mineral

by J J Cohen

Animal, Vegetable, Mineral
Ethics and Objects in the Early Modern and Medieval Periods
An interdisciplinary conference sponsored by the GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute


March 11 and 12, 2011
George Washington University
Washington DC

KEYNOTE LECTURE by Jane Bennett, Professor and Chair of Political Theory at Johns Hopkins University, author of Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things and The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings and Ethics

The conference fosters a lively conversation structured around the keynote and five plenary sessions:

We also invite paper, panel and roundtable proposals. Please send one paragraph abstracts or complete panel proposals to gwmemsi@gmail.com by October 15, 2010. To keep the proceedings intimate, conference participation is limited to eighty.

Friday, July 09, 2010

Looming

by J J Cohen

Watch the GW MEMSI blog and the GW MEMSI FB page for an announcement later in the summer involving objects and ethics. And Jane Bennett, Karl Steel, Sharon Kinoshita, Kellie Robertson, Valerie Allen, Carla Nappi, Peggy McCracken, Eileen Joy, Julian Yates, the Tiny Shriner and Julia Lupton.

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Another reason to come to DC: Seminar on Orienting Europe 2/12

by J J Cohen

It's a snow day, I've plugged the kids into the TV for a moment, and now I will plug this event that we at GW have been working on for Friday Feb. 12: a seminar on Orienting Europe, followed by Michelle Warren's Gateway Lecture on"The Postcolonial Past." If you live in the DC area, consider this your gilded invitation. All GW MEMSI events are free and welcome all who would like to attend.

I was going to work on my York 1190 paper, but now it looks like a day of sledding, being attacked by snowballs, and (my daughter's idea) decorating the house for Valentine's Day. I will try to resist my usual urge to make human looking hearts that drip blood as my contribution.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

If you are in DC or want to be: Gateway Lectures 2010

by J J Cohen


The Gateway Lectures introduce their audience to an important field or topic within medieval and early modern studies. The lectures are designed to be a substantial contribution to research and intellectual community -- while remaining engaging to a general audience. They are delivered by renowned scholars who attempt to make their work accessible and inspirational.  

  • January 29: Alf Siewers (Bucknell University), "Ecocriticism." Marvin Center Amphitheatre, 800 21st Street, NW, 4 PM.
  • February 12: Michelle Warren (Dartmouth College), "The Postcolonial Past." Marvin Center Elliott Room 310, 800 21st Street, NW, 4 PM.
  • March 26: Marissa Greenberg (University of New Mexico), "Writing and Space." Rome Hall (Academic Center) 771, 4 PM.
All Gateway lectures are free and welcome all who wish to attend.
 
Also of interest: GW MEMSI will sponsor a symposium entitled "Race?" on Friday, March 5 at 2 PM. The event will feature Ayanna Thompson (Arizona State University), whose work on Shakespeare, early modern culture, and race is widely acclaimed. She will be joined by a panel of GW faculty: Jennifer James, Antonio Lopez, Thomas Guglielmo, Andrew Zimmerman. Marvin Center Amphitheatre, 800 21st Street, NW.

A complete calendar of events can always be found at the GW MEMSI website.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Claustrophilia Seminar e-archive


by J J Cohen

I've just posted the presentations from the recent GW MEMSI seminar on Cary Howie's Claustrophilia: The Erotics of Enclosure in Medieval Literature at the institute's website. For a complete list of participants with biographies, go here.

Here are the papers:
Enjoy ... and feel free to leave your comments here or at the MEMSI site.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

The Messiah Did NOT arrive at the GW MEMSI seminar ...

by J J Cohen

... but some terribly smart people did. Thanks to the 35 audience members and three presenters who made it a success, and check back here soon for the wrap-up post. In the meantime, catch a glimpse of the seminar in action at Thinking with Shakespeare and on Facebook.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Messianic Time and the Timely, or, Mandeville and the Jews (Again)

by J J Cohen

Tomorrow the GW MEMSI seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely convenes. I offer the following in reaction to the three rich papers by Kathy Biddick, Julia Lupton, and Gil Harris ... and as a way of continuing some conversations we've had here at ITM as well.

The untimely is the antidote to the contextualizing bent of historicism, the guarantor that while something may be of its time, it can also carry within a polychronicity that wrenches it out of any meaning system built upon mere synchrony. In its temporal explosiveness messianic time is intimately related to the untimely, since it can activate the past within the present to perturb the arrival of any predetermined future (and by that phrase I mean any future that is either an infinite projection of the present into time to come, or any desired culmination of present events according to which the present moment is one step on a progress ladder that must result in and be given meaning by that coming time). Biddick's paper is the strongest argument that messianic time is not as untimely as it makes itself out to be, pointing out that Islam is inexcluded from (evacuated from, but through that same gesture installed within) both medieval typology and Walter Benjamin's thesis. This vanishing act is a concern of Harris as well ... and perhaps has to do with the fact that a point of overlaps between Christianity and Judaism is in the person/event of the Messiah.

I've written a bit on this blog about the 13th C travel narrative known as the Book of John Mandeville and its depiction of Jews: how a component of Mandeville's imagined Englishness might be his antisemitism; how the book itself perhaps contains the mechanism to critique that lapse in tolerance. As part of my Leeds keynote on Christian-Jewish neighboring, I looked closely at a Messianic passage from Mandeville that has earned endless critical scorn. Here is an excerpt from that talk:
----------------------------
John Mandeville, a travel writer so cosmopolitan that he renders comprehensible even the promiscuous nudist communist cannibals of Lamory, nonetheless has nothing good to say about Jews. The Book’s repeated narration of the Passion makes clear that the Jews are guilty of deicide. In relating a story about a tree in Borneo that bears poison, Mandeville states that a Jew once confessed to him that his people had attempted to eradicate all Christendom with that toxin. He describes the ten lost tribes of the Jews, Gog and Magog, enclosed within the Caspian mountains by Alexander the Great. In this remote prison they await a self-prophesied liberation during the reign of the Antichrist. Cut off from the stream of change that is time, the immured peoples speak only Hebrew. Jews living among Christians therefore teach that language to their children so that when their brethren escape captivity they will be able to communicate:

It is said that they will issue forth in the time of the Antichrist and commit a great massacre of the Christians. And therefore all the Jews who live in all lands always learn to speak Hebrew in the hope that when those of the mountains of Caspie issue forth, the other Jews will know how to talk to them [and lead them into Christendom in order to destroy Christians] … and Christians will yet be in as much and more subjection to them as they have been in subjection to the Christians.

A people without a homeland, the Jews plot to divest all Christians of dominion.

Despite supposedly writing from a post-Expulsion England, the Mandeville-author consistently and innovatively demonizes Jews. Stephen Greenblatt describes this “ungenerous” attitude as the “most significant exception to the tolerance that is impressively articulated elsewhere” (Marvelous Possessions). Iain Higgins writes that the Book’s conspiracy theories might seem future-focused, but they are formulated “to incite ill-feeling against Jews in the present … a hostility verging on paranoia” (Writing East). Benjamin Braude describes Mandeville’s narration of the enclosed Jews and their future triumph under Antichrist as “a blood-curdling passage … a warrant for genocide" (“Mandeville’s Jews among Others").

I wonder, though, if there isn’t more to the story than that … and I wonder if we might even find in Mandeville’s tale of the enclosed Jews not only a paranoid fantasy of how different a proximate Other might be, but an example of Christian attentiveness to the discontented desires of those neighboring them. When at the end the of world the ten lost tribes of the Jews escape their distant and rocky enclosure pour crestiente destruire, to destroy Christendom, we can glimpse no friendship in this stark vision, no coinhabitance or commingling … or can we?

Yes. In this apocalyptic imagining of Christian dominion’s termination we can hear not just an anti-Jewish fantasy of an imperiled Christian world, but an actual Jewish fantasy of such an end – a vision of the future that suggests that Jewish voices from the Middle Ages resonated not just with scholarly wisdom and tearful commemoration of tragedy, but with anger at the smallness of the spaces in which they often found themselves consigned. Israel Yuval, in a remarkable work of revisionary scholarship (Two Nations in Your Womb), has mapped the ways in which Jewish residence among Christians shaped Jewish religious practice. Like Daniel Boyarin, Elliott Horowitz, Ivan Marcus, and David Biale, Yuval’s work stresses that despite the inherited assumption that Jews and Christians inhabited different worlds, both faiths were profoundly changed by living together. Both remained not frozen in time but mutable, open, alive.

Urban adjacency might lead to neighborliness, as we saw in Matthew Paris (a Christian crosses a Jewish threshold to play with friends of another faith) -- or it might not, as when that same threshold is declared by a man like John of Lexington to be the demarcation of another world, one where modernity ends and an ever-repeating past begins. Yuval provides the angry response that could come from that other side of the door once Jewish space has been violently trespassed, once the occupants of a Jewish house are allowed to voice something other than “a Christian fantasy,” as in Copin’s self-condemnation through ventriloquism. This voice might appraise the present in ways very different from its Christian framing, and might speak a passionate desire for a future utterly different from Christian “modern times.”

A prayerbook of English provenance composed no later than 1190 contains this fragment of the Alenu le-shabeah:

[Christians] bow to vanity and emptiness and pray to a god who cannot save – man, ash, blood, bile, stinking flesh, maggot, defiled men and women, adulterers and adulteresses, dying in their iniquity and rotting in their wickedness, worn out dust, rot of maggot [and worm] – and pray to a god who cannot save.

Remember the young Jew of Oxford, the mocker of Saint Frideswide, who killed himself while speaking unrecorded blasphemies? Could these lines offer us a glimpse of what he might have said? Anger at one’s neighbor held no Christian monopoly. Sometimes this Jewish ire took the form of an aggressive fantasy of vengeance in which the King Messiah finally arrived. In a role borrowed from Christian crusading polemic, this Messiah would smite the enemies of Israel and drive them from the land. Keeping in mind that the “Jewish Messiah is the Christian Antichrist” (Yuval 289), the story narrated by the Mandeville-author suddenly becomes a little more complicated.

The prophesied liberation of the enclosed Jews and their termination of Christian world dominion contains something of an extant Jewish vision of revenge, a vision apparently taken into Jewish eschatology from Christian materials. Yuval has persuasively argued that the liberating and vengeance-wielding King Messiah was dreamt by medieval Jews as they overheard their Christian neighbors speak in their polemic of Crusader kings and the reclamation of the Holy Land. Christians in turn overheard Jewish neighbors talk of a Messiah who would deliver them from exile, and dreamed an Antecrist. This Messiah/Antichrist is therefore at once Christian and Jewish – or better yet between Christian and Jew.

In his tale of the future liberation of Jews locked in distant exile, the Mandeville-author may be narrating a paranoid and antisemitic story. Yet he is also recounting angry Jewish words – or words that blend Christian and Jew into a hybrid discourse, an interspace where the relations between the one and the other might be intractably complex, but the anger at subjection and violence to which this vision gives voice is impossible not to hear.

---------------

This medieval Christian Jewish antichrist Messiah is a figure of anger, vengeance, blood. The explosiveness of Messianic time is everywhere evident in him ... and like all explosions triggered by those too ardent for a reconfigured present, this violence has its innocent victims, its neighbors who were simply carrying on with their lives. In its specific language (of Crusade, of worldly kingdom) this Messianic time is time-bound, just as Benjamin's figure of the automaton Turk might be in part contemporary Orientalism, in part a meditation on (as a commentor suggested) Charlie Chaplin.

But I don't think Messianic desires need end in anger, vengeance, blood. Rather, I'd point out that what we witness taking shape in the space between Christian and Jew in Mandeville is something more than hostility. It is also the unfolding of a hope so simple, so essential, so common that I would call it untimely: the hope that the present become more capacious, that the future not repeat the constrictive orthodoxies of the day. It is towards that as yet unknown future, the future in which the Messiah never arrives, that the complexities of Christian-Jewish-Muslim neighboring propels us, even now.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

E-Seminar: Messianic Time and the Untimely

by J J Cohen

This post instigates the electronic portion of the seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely, to be held at the George Washington University on Thursday September 17, 3-5 PM.

The papers may be downloaded here. Any comments made on this blog will form part of the discussion on Sept. 17, and a follow-up post will be published. Eileen Joy may also Twitter the proceedings.

The seminar is sponsored by the GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute. Our three presenters are Julia Lupyon, Kathleen Biddick, and Gil Harris. Some information about each of them may be accessed via this post at the GW MEMSI blog.

The comments are open. Please post!

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

An Untimely Knock Knock Joke

by J J Cohen

Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Paul.
Paul who?
Paul Shakespeare!

If you didn't get that, then you haven't been reading Julia Lupton's paper, and you won't be able to participate in the GW MEMSI / In the Middle e-seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely.

Discussion begins here on Thursday September 10. Start reading!

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Messianic Time and the Untimely: Papers Available for Download

by J J Cohen

The GW MEMSI Seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely

will take place live on Thursday September 17 from 3-5 PM

English Department Seminar Room, GWU

Registration has closed and the seminar is full, but we still want you to participate. Download the three papers and their attachments here.

On Thursday Sept. 10, I will post at In the Middle the start of an e-discussion to which you are most cordially invited to contribute. This conversation will form, we hope, a vital part of the seminar. Comments posted at ITM will become part of the live conversation on Sept. 17. A summary of proceedings will be posted at ITM as well.

Eileen Joy has agreed to live twitter the seminar as it unfolds. Short of installing teleportation devices (for which I submitted the work order last week, but they are unlikely to arrive in time), it's the best way we can bring this event to as many interested participants as possible. The format is experimental; please help us to make it a success.

The paper authors/presenters are:

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Pretty Good Year

by J J Cohen

I've lost most of this Saturday to completing my annual report for the GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute. Now that it's done I'm thinking: not bad for year one. How I directed that behemoth while chairing a department will forever remain a mystery to me.

You can read the whole document here.

Friday, August 14, 2009

News Flash: Seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely to Have Electronic Component

by J J Cohen

Rick Godden was kind enough to suggest something that (I am embarrassed to admit) did not occur to me: the upcoming GW MEMSI seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely will be electronic as well as live. All three presenters have generously agreed to make their papers available here at In the Middle about two weeks before the seminar. Comments made at this blog will become part of the live conversation September 17, and then we will post a summary of responses.

We are open to suggestion as to how to make this seminar as electronically accessible (and useful) as possible. Unfortunately a webcast or podcast is not possible, but we are willing to consider almost anything else. Ideas?

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Messianic Time and the Untimely

by J J Cohen

If you are in DC in mid-September, or want to be .....

Please join us on Thursday September 17 at 4PM for our inaugural event of the 2009-10 year, a seminar entitled

"Messianic Time and the Untimely"


Three papers will be pre-circulated by email on September 1, and should be read in advance by all who plan to participate. On September 17, we will have short presentations followed by open discussion. The presenters are:

1. Kathleen Biddick, "Dead Neighbor Archives and Messianic Time"
2. Julia Lupton, "Paul Shakespeare: Exegetical Exercises"
3. Jonathan Gil Harris, ""The Untimely Mammet of Verona"

The event is free and welcomes all who would like to attend, but space is limited and preregistration is required. To reserve a space and receive the papers in advance, email Lowell Duckert as soon as possible: lduckert@gwu.edu

The seminar will be held in the conference room of the English Department of the George Washington University (Room 771, 801 22nd Street NW Washington DC 20052).

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Short piece on GW MEMSI

by J J Cohen

Follow this link and you can read a brief article on GW's Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute.

If you squint at the picture of yours truly, you can glimpse in the background the piece of modern-looking art that my then four year old daughter created using a discarded carton and some paint.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Another Date to Save: Seminar on Cary Howie, Claustrophilia

by J J Cohen

You know already about the GW MEMSI seminar on Messianic Time and the Untimely. We look forward to seeing you in DC on September 17. Hot off the press, though, is news of our second seminar for the fall semester.

Friday November 13

A GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute seminar on Cary Howie's book Claustrophilia.

The following participants are confirmed for the roundtable:
Details will follow at the GW MEMSI blog, but for the time being save the date!

Friday, May 15, 2009

How to Get the Medieval Studies WE Want


by J J Cohen

Vote here, read and comment here, then click over to here and read Lowell Duckert's account of the Kzoo GW MEMSI panel on using institutional structures to bring about new futures for medieval studies.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

GW MEMSI Spring Events

by J J Cohen

Here's the complete listing of GW Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute vernal festivities, along with a spiffy poster created by Lowell Duckert (click to enlarge).

Events are free and welcome all who would like to attend ... so if you are reading this and live near DC -- or want an excuse to come to Washington and meet the new president -- we'd be pleased to have you join us.

Not that Obama will be joining us, but all you have to do is walk down Penn Ave and you'll probably bump into him. Plus the Tiny Shriner might share the key to the secret bunker where Dick Cheney used to lurk: it's now a fez and scotch storage unit, I've been told, so Tiny has been going there a lot.


Schedule of GW MEMSI Events for 2009

David Wallace (1/30)
"Writing after Catastrophe: Conceptualizing Literary History and the Boundaries of Europe, 1348-1400"
GWU Marvin Center Ampitheatre (800 21st St. NW)
4PM

April Shelford (2/20)
“Reading and Enlightenment in 18th-century Jamaica”
GWU Rome Hall 771 (801 22nd St. NW)
11:30-1:30 PM; lunch seminar with precirculated paper

Andrea Frisch (3/6)
"The Poetics of Forgetting in Sixteenth-century France"
GWU Rome Hall 771 (801 22nd St. NW)
11:30-1:30 PM; lunch seminar with precirculated paper

Lytton Smith (4/3)
“The Unending Medieval and the Edges of Poetry”
GWU Marvin Center Ampitheatre (800 21st St. NW)
4PM

Sponsor of the Thirty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Shakespeare Association of America (4/9-4/11)
Renaissance Washington, DC Hotel (999 9th St. NW)

Stephanie Trigg (4/24)
“Mythic Capital: Medievalism, Heritage Culture and the Order of the Garter, 1348-2008”
GWU Marvin Center Ampitheatre (800 21st St NW)
4PM

Sponsor of the Roundtable “How to Get the Medieval Studies You Want: Institutional Perspectives” at Kalamazoo (5/7-5/11)