by J J Cohen
This week begins the annual pilgrimage of medievalists and their friends to Kalamazoo, Michigan for the FIFTIETH International Congress on Medieval Studies. I'm looking forward to seeing many of you there ... and on behalf of the BABEL Steering Committee want to bring to your attention two events you are most welcome to attend: the BABEL Party Friday at Bells and the BABEL/Material Collective Bar&Business Meeting Thursday (see below).
Here are also some suggestions for sessions to attend. The list is to be read alongside the Material Collective's collation of awesomeness (50 Kalamazoos). Please add your own suggestions to the comments!
THURSDAY 10 AM Fetzer 1005
Carolyn Dinshaw’s Chaucer’s Sexual Poetics, 1990–2015
Sponsor: BABEL Working Group
Presider: Bruce Holsinger
Hermeneutics as Autobiography
Steven F. Kruger, Queens College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Glosynge Is a Glorious Thynge
Emma Maggie Solberg, Bowdoin College
The Tex(t)ual Body
Myra Seaman, College of Charleston
Materna Lingua
Nicholas Watson, Harvard Univ.
Chaucer’s Deadly Text
Lynn Shutters, Colorado State Univ.
Documents and Doctrine: A Case for Chaucer’s Discerning Women
Elizabeth Robertson, Univ. of Glasgow
Response: Carolyn Dinshaw, New York Univ
THURSDAY 3:30 PM Sangren 1710
Critical Imperative: The Future of Feminism
Sponsor: Exemplaria: Medieval / Early Modern / Theory
Organizer: Patricia Clare Ingham, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
Presider: Tison Pugh, Univ. of Central Florida
Feminism beyond Skepticism
Ruth Evans, St. Louis Univ.
New Materialism and the Future of Feminism: The Case of Le Menagier de Paris
Glenn Burger, Queens College and Graduate Center, CUNY
Not Your Mother’s Historical Continuity: Feminism, Historicism, and the Case
of Christine de Pizan
Lynn Shutters, Colorado State Univ.
THURSDAY 5:15 p.m. Fetzer 1035
BABEL Working Group and the Material Collective
Reception with open bar
Please bring your ideas for next year's BABEL + postmedieval sessions!
NOTE FROM EILEEN: we will also be giving away copies of Cohen & Co.'s INHUMAN NATURE and Kathleen Kennedy's MEDIEVAL HACKERS at this reception!
FRIDAY 10:00 AM Bernhard 158
Quantum Medievalisms (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies
Organizer: Eileen Joy, BABEL Working Group
Presider: Angela R. Bennett Segler, New York Univ.
Schroedinger’s Woman
Tara Mendola, New York Univ.
The Piers Plowman Uncertainty Principle
James Eric Ensley, North Carolina State Univ.
Bedetimematter
Christopher Roman, Kent State Univ.–Tuscarawas
Quantum Memory and Medieval Poetics of Forgetting
Jenny Boyar, Univ. of Rochester
Quantum Queerness
Karma Lochrie, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington
AND ALSO FRIDAY 10:00 AM Schneider 2355
False Friends: “Translation,” “Adaptation,” or “Creative Interpretation” of the
Medieval Text?
Sponsor: eth press
Organizer: Chris Piuma, Univ. of Toronto, and David Hadbawnik, Univ. at Buffalo
Presider: David Hadbawnik
The Nonce Taxonomies of Translation and Mary Jo Bang’s Inferno
Lisa Ampleman, Univ. of Cincinnati
The Well of Anachronism: Experimental Translation, Medievalism, and
Gender in Contemporary Poetics
Shannon Maguire, Wilfrid Laurier Univ.
Return to Sender: Re-Flemishing Chaucer’s Flemish Tales in Verhalen voor
Canterbury
Jonathan Hsy, George Washington Univ.
“The harlot is talkative and wandering”: Conduct Literature, Medbh
McGuckian, and the Postcolonial Subject
Katharine W. Jager, Univ. of Houston-Downtown
AND ALSO ALSO FRIDAY 10:00 AM Bernhard 106
The Secret Life of Medieval Plants
Organizer: Rob Wakeman, Univ. of Maryland, and Danielle Allor, Rutgers Univ.
Presider: Rob Wakeman
Human-Plant Assemblages in Cornish Ordinalia Plays, Robert W. Barrett, Jr., Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
What Makes the Cut: Selection and Omission in the Tree Catalog, Danielle Allor
The Secret Life of Dead Plants, Haylie Swenson, George Washington Univ.
“Ripeness is all”: Plants, Oedipal Myths, and King Lear, Vin Nardizzi, Univ. of British Columbia
FRIDAY 1:30 Fetzer 2030
Feeling Medieval: Teaching Emotion in the Middle Ages
Sponsor: TEAMS (The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages)
Organizer: Thomas A. Goodmann, Univ. of Miami
Presider: Thomas A. Goodmann
A Is for Affeccioun: Strategies for the History of Emotions in the Classroom
Rebecca F. McNamara, Univ. of Sydney
“The folk gan laughen at his fantasye”: Contexts for Understanding Emotion
in Several Medieval Genres
Anne Scott, Northern Arizona Univ.
“Parzival’s Fear and Werther’s Loathing”: Teaching Emotions in Medieval
and Modern German Literature to High School Students: An Experiment
Ricarda Wagner, Univ. Heidelberg
Teaching Feeling: Asceticism, Critique, and Affective Piety
Paul Megna, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Object Emotion: Inter- and Extra-disciplinary Graduate Teaching
Stephanie Downes, Univ. of Melbourne
FRIDAY 3:30 Schneider 1140
Lost (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (MEMSI), George
Washington Univ.
Presider: Jeffrey J. Cohen
Lost Speech
Randy P. Schiff, Univ. at Buffalo
Lost Time
Christopher Roman, Kent State Univ.–Tuscarawas
Lost in Love
Lowell Duckert, West Virginia Univ.
Lost English Dual Number Pronouns
Daniel Remein, Univ. of Massachusetts–Boston
Lost at Sea / Adrift
Eileen Joy, BABEL Working Group
Lost Causes
Jonathan Hsy, George Washington Univ.
Lost in Thought
Anne F. Harris, DePauw Univ.
FRIDAY 5:30 Bernhard East Ballroom
Medieval Originality: Looking Back, Looking Forward (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor: Material Collective; Medieval Institute, Western Michigan Univ.
Organizer: Maggie M. Williams, William Paterson
Univ./Material Collective
Presider: Maggie M. Williams
A panel discussion with Eileen C. Sweeney, Boston
College/Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy;
Pamela King, Univ. of Glasgow/Medieval and
Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS); Martha Bayless,
Univ. of Oregon/Platinum Latin; Robert F. Berkhofer,
III, Western Michigan Univ./Haskins Society; James
Borders, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor/Musicology at
Kalamazoo; and, as respondent, Elizabeth
C. Teviotdale, Western Michigan Univ.
FRIDAY 9 PM onwards (some of us might still be there Monday morning)
BABEL Annual Party at Bells Eccentric Cafe 355 E Kalamazoo Ave (an easy walk from the Radisson, where the shuttle bus lets off).
Make sure you ask a member of the BABEL Steering Committee for a wristband so that you can enjoy the fermented beverages in radical conviviality. Also, if you don't know anyone who is a member of BABEL, that is all the more reason to come. All are welcome, but especially YOU.
SATURDAY 1:30 Fetzer 2016
Unsettled Marks: To #;()@?”:—*!… and Beyond! (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Grammar Rabble
Organizer: Richard H. Godden, Tulane Univ., and Shyama Rajendran, George
Washington Univ.
Presider: Shyama Rajendran
☧ Chrismon “Can Be Set Down as a Sign Wherever the Writer Likes”
Damian Fleming, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne
Students, Period
Kisha G. Tracy, Fitchburg State Univ.
In Search of Lost Punctuation: The Medieval Uses and the Modern Absence of
the Paraph
Sarah Noonan, Lindenwood Univ.
You’ve Been Punc’t
Cameron Hunt McNabb, Southeastern Univ.
Tiro and the Druids
Bruce Holsinger, Univ. of Virginia
Poetry /
Chris Piuma, Univ. of Toronto, and David Hadbawnik, Univ. at Buffalo
SATURDAY 3:30 Fetzer 1035
Medieval Ecocriticisms: What Can Medieval Studies Bring to Ecocriticism?
(A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Medieval Ecocriticisms
Organizer: Heide Estes, Univ. of Cambridge
Presider: Jeffrey Cohen
Medieval Reliquaries as Functionally Differentiated Environments
Rachel S. Anderson, Grand Valley State Univ.
Ecocriticism and Medieval Eschatology
Justin Brent, Presbyterian College
Ecolinguistics: Deep Time and Medieval Language Contact
Jonathan Hsy, George Washington Univ.
Medieval Gardens
Allyson McNitt, Univ. of Oklahoma
Animals and Gods without Us in Medieval Religious Literature
Mo Pareles, Northwestern Univ.
The Early Middle English Alliterative Tradition: Husbandry, Class,
Economics, and Ecocriticism
Matthew Pullen, South Dakota State Univ.
Patience, ISIS, and the Ecological Scars of Perpetual War
Rob Wakeman, Univ. of Maryland
SUNDAY
If you make it all the way until Sunday ... well, just stay the night with the rest of us. Seriously. Enjoy a quiet transition into the ending of the semester. Starting later in the afternoon all who are still in Kalamazoo are most welcome to rendezvous, one last time, at Bells for food and drink and conviviality. AND here is a suggestion for your Sunday morning pre-brunch treat (yes! you can eat brunch with us afterwards!):
Sunday 10:30 AM Ecotastrophes (A Roundtable) Fetzer 1010
Sponsor: Oecologies: Inhabiting Premodern Worlds
Organizer: Robert Allen Rouse, Univ. of British Columbia
Presider: Robert Allen Rouse
Plague, English, and Other Natural Disasters
David K. Coley, Simon Fraser Univ.
Cultivating Catastrophe in Medieval Anglo-Welsh Literature
Daniel Helbert, Univ. of British Columbia
Neighboring Wastelands, Catastrophic Hospitality, and Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight
Richard H. Godden, Tulane Univ.
The Shape of Catastrophe
Jeffrey J. Cohen, George Washington Univ., and Lowell Duckert, West Virginia
Univ.
Dark Skies and Black Gardens: Jessie Redmon Fauset’s Harlem Lady in the
Medieval World
Cord J. Whitaker, Wellesley College
(this post has been edited, with some of the comments moved into the main body to offer a more complete Kzoo list)
If the other Friday 10:00AM sessions are overflowing, mosey down the hall to Bernhard 106!
ReplyDeleteThe Secret Life of Medieval Plants
Organizer: Rob Wakeman, Univ. of Maryland, and Danielle Allor, Rutgers Univ.
Presider: Rob Wakeman
Human-Plant Assemblages in Cornish Ordinalia Plays, Robert W. Barrett, Jr., Univ. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
What Makes the Cut: Selection and Omission in the Tree Catalog, Danielle Allor
The Secret Life of Dead Plants, Haylie Swenson, George Washington Univ.
“Ripeness is all”: Plants, Oedipal Myths, and King Lear, Vin Nardizzi, Univ. of British Columbia
What an incredible line up of sessions. I am terribly sad that I won't be there hearing all of these great papers.
ReplyDeleteThere's a lot of good stuff during the Friday 1:30 slot, but anyone who wants to discuss emotion and pedagogy might consider . . .
ReplyDeleteFeeling Medieval: Teaching Emotion in the Middle Ages
Sponsor: TEAMS (The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages)
Organizer: Thomas A. Goodmann, Univ. of Miami
Presider: Thomas A. Goodmann
A Is for Affeccioun: Strategies for the History of Emotions in the Classroom
Rebecca F. McNamara, Univ. of Sydney
“Parzival’s Fear and Werther’s Loathing”: Teaching Emotions in Medieval
and Modern German Literature to High School Students: An Experiment
Ricarda Wagner, Univ. Heidelberg
Teaching Feeling: Asceticism, Critique, and Affective Piety
Paul Megna, Univ. of California–Santa Barbara
Object Emotion: Inter- and Extra-disciplinary Graduate Teaching
Stephanie Downes, Univ. of Melbourne
How about @!#? 2: The search for moar punctuation?
ReplyDelete“Unsettled Marks: To #;()@?”:—*!… and Beyond!
☧ Chrismon “Can Be Set Down as a Sign Wherever the Writer Likes”
Damian Fleming, Indiana Univ.-Purdue Univ.–Fort Wayne
Students, Period
Kisha Tracy, Fitchburg State Univ.
In Search of Lost Punctuation: The Medieval Uses and the Modern Absence of the Paraph
Sarah Noonan, Lindenwood Univ.
You’ve Been Punc’t
Cameron Hunt McNabb, Southeastern Univ.
Tiro and the Druids
Bruce Holsinger, Univ. of Virginia
Poetry /
Chris Piuma, Univ. of Toronto, and David Hadbawnik, Univ. at Buffalo
More lists of #Kzoo2015 sessions:
ReplyDeleteChaucer-related sessions (posting by New Chaucer Society public Facebook page): http://on.fb.me/1PdUo14
DH (Digital Humanities) sessions, collated by Kristen Mapes: http://www.kristenmapes.com/kzoo2015/
And here's what the Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship (SMFS) is doing -- sessions and events: http://smfsweb.org/smfs-at-mc-2015-kalamazoo/
ReplyDeleteAlso on the DH list should be a 7.30 pm Thursday session, in Bernhard 205
ReplyDelete"Revisiting Remediation"
Sponsor:Dept. of English, Ohio Univ
Organizers: Heather Blatt, Florida International Univ., and Mary Kate Hurley, Ohio Univ.
Presider:Mary Kate Hurley
Digital Manuscript Studies: Beyond Digitization and Editions, Angela R. Bennett Segler, New York Univ.
From Text to Turf: Curating Textual Evidence of Anglo-Saxon Land Use, Kevin Caliendo, Rose State College
Recovering Joy: The Changing Fortunes of an Anglo-Saxon Rune,
Peter Buchanan, New Mexico Highlands Univ.
Respondent: Dorothy Kim, Vassar College
thanks for sharing.. :)
ReplyDeleteAlso add to the Friday possibilities a fantastic panel with me (Adrienne), Dorothy Kim, Asa Mittman, and Siobhan Bly Calkin presiding:
ReplyDeleteFRIDAY 3:30 #s295 Jews and Saracens in Early Middle English
"Jew" and "Jewish" as Identifying Terms in Early Middle English, Adrienne Williams Boyarin
Saint Margaret, the Jew, and the Ethiopian in Bodley 34 and Fitzwilliam 370, Dorothy Kim
Response: Manufacturing Race in Early Middle English Manuscripts, Asa Simon Mittman