Program
Vagantes 2003
University of Toronto
March 20-23, 2003
Programme | Tours | Contributors
The second annual Vagantes conference was held at the University of Toronto, March 20-23, 2003 in the Chapel of Victoria College. Four tours and five talks on resources available at the University of Toronto for medievalists were given. The final banquet was held in a Chinese restaurant in Chinatown.
Programme
Thursday March 20
4:30- 4th Annual Boyle Lecture: Prof. Eamon Duffy (University of Cambridge): "In the Margins: Medieval Prayer Books and Their Users"? Alumni Hall, Room 100, St. Michael's College. This series is sponsored by the Friends of the Library of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies to honour the memory of Father L.E. Boyle, O.P., a former Senior Fellow of PIMS and a Professor at the U of T. All are invited.
5:30- Boyle Lecture Reception, co-sponsored by Vagantes, common room of PIMS.
6:30- Pub Night to welcome all
to Vagantes. 2nd floor of Duke of York pub, at corner of Bedford
Rd. and Prince Arthur, one short block north of Bloor, between Avenue Rd.
and St. George. A few steps from the Bedford exit of St. George subway
station.
Friday March 21
All sessions to be held in the Chapel,
2nd floor, "Old Vic" Building, Victoria College.
8:30 - 9:00 Registration, Coffee and Light Breakfast
9:00- Welcome and opening remarks
9:15-10:00 Keynote Address #1
"Performing the Middle Ages: What Do
We Think We're Doing?"
Prof.
David Klausner, University of Toronto
10:00 - 11:30- Session 1: Seeing
is Believing: Texts and Images
Chair: Therese Forgacs (Fine Arts,
UofT)
‘A Penny for Your Text: Economy
and Indulgence in an Israhel van Meckenem Print’
Kathleen
M. Dunn, University of Pennsylvania
‘Classical Ekphrasis and the Construction
of Irish Epic’
Brent
Miles, University of Toronto
‘Lighting the Spark: The Medieval Itty-Bitty
Book Light’
Heather
Blatt, University of Virginia and Janice Safran, Cornell University?
?
11:30 - 11:45 Coffee Break
11:45 - 1:15? Session 2: Family
Affairs: Households and Relations
Chair: Donna Trembinski (History,
UofT)
‘Holy Incest: Dynastic Error and Christian
Metaphor in the Late Medieval Hagiographic Romances’
Margarita
Yanson, University of California, Berkeley
‘Norwegian Fathers, Icelandic Sons:
Pride and Poetry in Egils saga’
Anthony
J. Adams, University of Toronto
‘Playing House: The Public Performance
of Domesticity in the Advent Pageants of the York Mystery Plays’
James
Riddle, University of Wisconsin, Madison
?
1:15 - 2:00 Lunch at the Centre
for Medieval Studies (provided for all registrants)
?
2:00 - 4:00 Tours and Presentations
of Local Resources (click here for details)
4:15 - 4:30 Coffee Break
4:30 - 6:00 Session 3: Who’s
Who? Medieval Constructions of Identity
Chair: Robert H. Henry (Romance Studies,
Cornell University)
‘Byzantine Imperial Costume: Image
Maker of the Emperors’
Catherine
Leahey, Savannah College of Art and Design
‘The Devil's Men Do Penance Too?
Jennifer
Reid, University of Toronto
‘Drengr and maðr: manly men (and women)
in Njls saga’
Kim
Zarins, Cornell University
Saturday March 22
9:30 - 10:00 Breakfast
10:00 - 11:30 Session 4: We
are We: Medieval Constructions of National Identity
Chair: Johanna Kramer (Medieval Studies,
Cornell University)
‘The French Prose Brut and Chronicle
Writing of the Anglo-Norman Regnum’
Heather
Pagan, University of Toronto
‘Saxo Grammaticus: History and the
Rise of National Identity in Medieval Denmark’
Christopher
Bailey, Eastern Illinois University
‘Navigating Borders: Controlling Ambivalence
in Gerald of Wales’ Itinerarium Kambriae’
Lesley
Finn, Columbia University
11:30 - 11:45 Coffee Break
11:45 - 1:15 Session 5: Textual
Orientations
Chair: Susan Small (University of
Western Ontario)
‘El Libro de los hu?spedes:
An Edition’
John
K. Moore, Jr., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
‘Ins e.l cor port, domna, vostra…votz?
Incorporation of Trobairitz Lyric in Pierpont Morgan 819’
Jaye
Puckett, Johns Hopkins University
‘St. Katherine of Alexandria: The Christian
Virgin against 50 Philosophers’
Tina
Chronopoulos, Kings College London, University of London
1:15 - 2:45 Lunch (fend for yourselves)
2:45 - 4:15 Session 6: The
Presence of Absence
Chair: Nancy Kang (English, UofT)
‘Of Weavers, Angels, and the Blind
Minstrel of God: Exploring Contexts for Musical Performance in the York
Corpus Christi Plays’
John
T. Sebastian, Cornell University
‘Henry of Ghent on the Role of Concepts
in Cognition’
Bernd
Goehring, Cornell University
‘Partial Recall: The Sutton Hoo Mounds
as Objects of Collective Memory’
Emily
Brewer, Wake Forest University
4:15 - 4:30 Coffee Break
4:30 - 6:00 Session 7: Holy
War: Conflicts Political, Intellectual, Spiritual
Chair: Amy Airhart (English, UofT)
‘Disturbing the Peace of the Sacred
Monastery: The Battle for Twelfth-Century V?zelay’
John
F. Romano, Harvard University
‘Jacob ben Reuben’s Sefer Milhamot
Hashem: Literary Polemics and the New Testament’
Joshua
L. Levy, New York University
‘Anglo-Saxon Crusades? ?thelstan’s
Tenth-Century Scottish Campaigns’
John
D. Hosler, University of Delaware?
6:00 - 7:00 Meeting to ratify
Vagantes constitution and elect Board (all welcome)
8:00 - on "Extravagantes":
Multiple course banquet dinner at Golden Country Restaurant (466-468 Dundas
St. West, 2nd floor; tickets will be available in advance)
Sunday March 23
9:30 - 10:00 Breakfast
10:00 - 11:00 Keynote Address #2
"How Might We Read Trial Scenes in
Twelfth-Century Literature?"
Prof.
Paul Hyams, Cornell University
11:00 - 12:30 Session 8: Medieval
Transformations: Jobs, Habits, Devotions
Chair: Christina Linklater (Music,
Harvard University)
‘A "Baleful View on the Case of Archdeacons":
The Meteoric Rise and Fall of the Twelfth-century English Archdiaconate’
Winston
Black, University of Toronto
‘Changes in Lay Devotional Experience
and Late Medieval Representations of the "Three Living and the Three Dead"’
Christine
Kralik, University of Toronto
‘Adopting New Habits: Ideas of Custom
in the Correspondence of Peter the Venerable and Bernard of Clairvaux’
Marc
Saurette, University of Toronto
12:30 - 1:00 Concluding remarks.
Explicit.
Vagantes 2003: Tours of University of Toronto Projects and Resources
We are pleased to be
able to offer to conference attendees a number of tours / presentations
of the many research projects and libraries in Toronto of interest to medievalists.
These may be particularly helpful in planning a future research trip
to Toronto. They will run in the early afternoon of
Friday March 21st. Due to time and space limitations, it will not be possible
to see all of them. Below you will find brief descriptions of the different
tours, followed by a timetable. Signing up to attend any of these events
will take place at the reception on the evening of Thursday the 20th and
also on the morning of Friday the 21st. However, if you happen to know
in advance of that time which tours/presentations you would like to sign
up for, you may send
an email to registration@vagantes.org
Massey College: a demonstration of early printing presses and visit to the Robertson Davies library which specializes in the history of the book.
Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies: an introduction to the activities of this research centre and a hands-on presentation of early printed books from this collection. The Erasmus holdings in particular are of international importance.
University of Toronto Art Centre: includes a tour of the Malcove Collection (especially strong in icons and other Byzantine art) and a temporary exhibition of Italian drawings from the National Gallery of Canada.
Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library: a chance to see up close a selection of the manuscript and incunable holdings of UofT's main rare book library, presented by Fisher curators.
Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies Library: an introduction by the librarian to this terrific resource for medievalists in any discipline.
Dictionary of Old English: an overview of this enormous lexicographical project, including comprehensive microfilm resources.
Records of Early English Drama (REED): compilers of county-by-county document collections relating to all aspects of performance in England.
DEEDS (Documents of Essex England Data Set): a database of Latin charters from the High Middle Ages, useful for social and legal history, and now extending beyond original focus to over all of England.
ITER: a major
online portal to medieval and Renaissance studies featuring
a giant bibliographic
database of books, reviews and articles and other electronic resources.
| PIMS Library 2-2:30 | Massey College (Library & Printing Presses) 2-3 | Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies 2-3 |
| DEEDS c. 2:45-3:00 | " | " |
| 3:00 | 3:00 | 3:00 |
| REED 3-3:20 | Art Centre (Byzantine Icons & Italian Dwgs) 3-4 | Fisher Rare Book Library 3-4 |
| Dictionary of Old English 3:20-3:40 | " | " |
| ITER 3:40 - 4 | " | " |
Contributors
We would like to thank all of the sponsors for their generous support:
Centre for Medieval Studies, University of
Toronto
Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies,
University of Toronto
Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
Office of the Vice-President, Government
and Institutional Relations, U of T
Emilio Goggio Chair in Italian Studies, University
of Toronto
Office of the Vice-President and Provost,
University of Toronto
School of Graduate Studies, University of
Toronto
Medieval Academy of America
Graduate Student Union, University of Toronto
Department of Celtic Studies, University
of Toronto
Department of Fine Art, University of Toronto
Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures,
University of Toronto
Department of History, University of Toronto
Department of Classics, University of Toronto
Department of English, University of Toronto
Department of French, University of Toronto
Principal of University College, University
of Toronto
University of Toronto Humanities Centre
Institute for the History and Philsophy of
Science and Technology, U of T
The organizing committee for the 2003 conference includes:
At the University of Toronto:
James Acken, Centre for Medieval Studies
Tuija Ainonen, Centre for Medieval
Studies, co-chair
Amelia Borrego, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Mairi Cowan, Centre for Medieval Studies
Sarah Downey, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Damian Fleming, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Therese Forgacs, Department of Fine
Art
Magda Hayton, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Michael McGinn, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Jess Paehlke, Centre for Medieval
Studies, co-chair
Jessie Sherwood, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Paige Vignola, Centre for Medieval
Studies
Shana Worthen, Institute for the History
and Philosophy of Science and Technology
Suzanne Yeager, Centre for Medieval
Studies
with contributions from: Amy Airhart (Medieval Studies); Kristen Allen (Medieval Studies); Rosemary Beattie (CMS); Winston Black (Medieval Studies); Prof. William Bowen (CRRS); Alice Cooley (Medieval Studies); Mark Crane (History); Heather Crider (Cornell, Medieval Studies); Prof. Konrad Eisenbichler (Italian); Ariella Elema (Medieval Studies); Ionut Epurescu-Pascovici (Cornell , Medieval Studies); John Gagne (Harvard); Clare Gilis (Harvard); Bernd Goehring (Cornell, Medieval Studies); Lindsay Irvin (Medieval Studies); Curtis Jirsa (Cornell, Medieval Studies); Maire Johnson (Medieval Studies); Danielle Joyner (Harvard, History of Art); Nancy Kang (English); Prof. David Klausner (CMS); Aden Kumler (Harvard, History of Art/Medieval Academy of America); Anna Langenwalter (Medieval Studies); Thania Meneses Flores (Fine Art); Brent Miles (Medieval Studies); Daniela Monaldi (IHPST); Edward Moore (Medieval Studies);? Jonathan Newman (Medieval Studies); Heather Pagan (French); Sarah Powrie (Medieval Studies); Jenn Reid (Medieval Studies); Emily Reiner (Medieval Studies); John Sebastian (Cornell, Medieval Studies); Jenifer Sutherland (Medieval Studies); Jennifer Thompson (Medieval Studies); Donna Trembinski (History); Annelies Wouters (Harvard); Kim Yates (CRRS); Gur Zak (Medieval Studies)