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MRGSA Third Annual Graduate Conference: Metamorphosis in Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Co-sponsored by CMRS)

MRGSA Conference
October 23 - October 24, 2015
12:00AM - 12:00AM
Denney Hall, Room 311 (Friday); Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room, Ohio Union, 3rd Floor. (Saturday)

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2015-10-23 00:00:00 2015-10-24 00:00:00 MRGSA Third Annual Graduate Conference: Metamorphosis in Medieval and Renaissance Studies (Co-sponsored by CMRS) MRGSA will be holding its third graduate student conference on October 23-24, 2015. This year’s conference examines the theme of “Metamorphosis,” and features fifteen student presenters from within and outside OSU.The conference also includes a keynote address by Prof. Karl Whittington and a closing roundtable with OSU professors. 2015 Conference Schedule Friday, October 23Registration and Panel 1 will be in Denney Hall, Room 311, located at 164 West 17th Ave.2:00-3:00 PM Registration3:00-4:20 PM Panel 1: Pain and GenderChair: Ashley Powers, OSU Department of French and Italian“From Pain to Peace: Aemilia Lanyer as Philosopher of Pain”Cecilia Morales, University of Michigan“Reborn: Saint Margaret of Antioch and Caesarean Delivery”Aimee Caya, Case Western Reserve University“ ‘Her life was beastly and devoid of pity, / And being dead, let birds on her take pity:’ Jezebel’s Punishment and Asymmetrical Discipline in Titus Andronicus”Heather Frazier, Ohio State University4:20-5:00 PM Break5:00-6:00 PM Keynote Address by Prof. Karl Whittington“Returning to Lorenzetti's Government Frescoes: The Metamorphosis of Meaning over Time”Introduced by Rebecca Howard, OSU Department of History of ArtThompson Library, Room 165Karl Whittington is an Associate Professor in the Department of History of Art at Ohio State University. He specializes in the history of science, gender and sexuality, and image theory as they relate to medieval art and architecture. His recent book, Body-Worlds: Opicinus de Canistris and the Medieval Cartographic Imagination, was a finalist for the Charles Rufus Morey Book Award in 2015.6:00 PM   Reception (Thompson Library, Room 165) Saturday, October 24Saturday’s panels will be held in the Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room, Ohio Union, 3rd Floor.9:00-9:30 AM Breakfast Buffet and Registration (Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room)9:30-10:50 AM Panel 2: Cross-Cultural ExchangeChair: Daniel Knapper, OSU Department of English“The Black African: Exotic Otherness in the Renaissance’’ Leann Schneider, Kent State University“Transitions in 9th Century Old English Education and Identity: External Translatio in Alfred’s ‘Preface’ to Pope Gregory’s Pastoral Care”Clinton Morrison Jr., Texas Tech University “King Balthazar’s Metamorphosis: Christian Universalism, Afroiberian Confraternities, and Blacks in Military Orders in Medieval and Renaissance Europe”Miguel A. Valerio, Ohio State University11:00 AM-12:20 PM Panel 3: Sex and the SoulChair: Carmen Meza, OSU Department of English“Private Desires: Malbecco and Early Modern Sexual Interiority”Joseph Gamble, University of Michigan“Into the ‘Watch-towre’: ‘Goodfriday, 1613 Riding Westward’” Jonathan Wanner, Catholic University of America“Steel Grows Soft as the Parasite’s Silk”: The Metamorphosis of Performing the Roman Custom in Shakespeare’s CoriolanusMayra A. Cortes, University of California, San Diego12:20-2:00 PM    Lunch Break (Participants on their own or with MRGSA officers)2:00-3:20 PM Panel 4: Poets and Their Poetry: Mutable Forms, Fluid PersonasChair: Anne Malcolm, OSU Department of English“The Fate of the Artist in the Metamorphoses and New Arcadia”Philip Gilreath, College of Charleston“Thomas Hoccleve’s ‘Encombrous Thogt’ in Another Form”Travis Neel, Ohio State University“Finding the Perfect Dietie Diett: Donne’s ‘Love’s Deity’ and ‘Love’s Diet’ as Answer Poetry about Choice”Brice Anders Peterson, Pennsylvania State University3:30-4:50 PM Panel 5: Perspectives on DeathChair: Shannon Turner, OSU Department of History“The Miraculous Death and Christina Mirabilis”Kristen Herdman, Case Western Reserve University“Bonum est mortis meditari: Meanings and Functions of the Medieval Double Macabre Portrait Individual Presentation”Dominique DeLuca, Case Western Reserve University“Wonder and the Living Dead: The Personification of Death in Pastoral Texts from 1250-1350”Katherine Werwie, Morgan Library and Museum4:50-5:30 PM Coffee Break (Thompson Library, 11th Floor)5:30-6:30 PM Closing Roundtable: Agents of ChangeThompson Library, 11th Floor, Campus Reading RoomFeaturing Ohio State professors Alison Beach (Department of History), Sarah-Grace Heller (Department of French and Italian), Leslie Lockett (Department of English), and Sarah Neville (Department of English). SponsorsMRGSA gratefully acknowledges the funding and support we have received from the following sources: The Center for Medieval and Renaissance StudiesThe Department of EnglishThe Department of French and ItalianThe Department of Germanic Languages and LiteraturesThe Department of History of ArtThe Department of LinguisticsThe Department of Spanish and PortugueseThe Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies  For updates, please visit the MRGSA Conference Page. Denney Hall, Room 311 (Friday); Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room, Ohio Union, 3rd Floor. (Saturday) Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies cmrs@osu.edu America/New_York public

MRGSA will be holding its third graduate student conference on October 23-24, 2015. This year’s conference examines the theme of “Metamorphosis,” and features fifteen student presenters from within and outside OSU.

The conference also includes a keynote address by Prof. Karl Whittington and a closing roundtable with OSU professors.

 

2015 Conference Schedule

 

Friday, October 23

Registration and Panel 1 will be in Denney Hall, Room 311, located at 164 West 17th Ave.

2:00-3:00 PM Registration

3:00-4:20 PM Panel 1: Pain and Gender

Chair: Ashley Powers, OSU Department of French and Italian

  • “From Pain to Peace: Aemilia Lanyer as Philosopher of Pain”
    Cecilia Morales, University of Michigan
  • “Reborn: Saint Margaret of Antioch and Caesarean Delivery”
    Aimee Caya, Case Western Reserve University
  • “ ‘Her life was beastly and devoid of pity, / And being dead, let birds on her take pity:’ Jezebel’s Punishment and Asymmetrical Discipline in Titus Andronicus
    Heather Frazier, Ohio State University

4:20-5:00 PM Break

5:00-6:00 PM Keynote Address by Prof. Karl Whittington

“Returning to Lorenzetti's Government Frescoes: The Metamorphosis of Meaning over Time”
Introduced by Rebecca Howard, OSU Department of History of Art
Thompson Library, Room 165

Karl Whittington is an Associate Professor in the Department of History of Art at Ohio State University. He specializes in the history of science, gender and sexuality, and image theory as they relate to medieval art and architecture. His recent book, Body-Worlds: Opicinus de Canistris and the Medieval Cartographic Imagination, was a finalist for the Charles Rufus Morey Book Award in 2015.

6:00 PM   Reception (Thompson Library, Room 165)

 

Saturday, October 24

Saturday’s panels will be held in the Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room, Ohio Union, 3rd Floor.

9:00-9:30 AM Breakfast Buffet and Registration (Interfaith Prayer and Reflection Room)

9:30-10:50 AM Panel 2: Cross-Cultural Exchange

Chair: Daniel Knapper, OSU Department of English

  • “The Black African: Exotic Otherness in the Renaissance’’ 
    Leann Schneider, Kent State University
  • “Transitions in 9th Century Old English Education and Identity: External Translatio in Alfred’s ‘Preface’ to Pope Gregory’s Pastoral Care
    Clinton Morrison Jr., Texas Tech University 
  • “King Balthazar’s Metamorphosis: Christian Universalism, Afroiberian Confraternities, and Blacks in Military Orders in Medieval and Renaissance Europe”
    Miguel A. Valerio, Ohio State University

11:00 AM-12:20 PM Panel 3: Sex and the Soul

Chair: Carmen Meza, OSU Department of English

  • “Private Desires: Malbecco and Early Modern Sexual Interiority”
    Joseph Gamble, University of Michigan
  • “Into the ‘Watch-towre’: ‘Goodfriday, 1613 Riding Westward’” 
    Jonathan Wanner, Catholic University of America
  • “Steel Grows Soft as the Parasite’s Silk”: The Metamorphosis of Performing the Roman Custom in Shakespeare’s Coriolanus
    Mayra A. Cortes, University of California, San Diego

12:20-2:00 PM    Lunch Break (Participants on their own or with MRGSA officers)

2:00-3:20 PM Panel 4: Poets and Their Poetry: Mutable Forms, Fluid Personas

Chair: Anne Malcolm, OSU Department of English

  • “The Fate of the Artist in the Metamorphoses and New Arcadia
    Philip Gilreath, College of Charleston
  • “Thomas Hoccleve’s ‘Encombrous Thogt’ in Another Form”
    Travis Neel, Ohio State University
  • “Finding the Perfect Dietie Diett: Donne’s ‘Love’s Deity’ and ‘Love’s Diet’ as Answer Poetry about Choice”
    Brice Anders Peterson, Pennsylvania State University

3:30-4:50 PM Panel 5: Perspectives on Death

Chair: Shannon Turner, OSU Department of History

  • “The Miraculous Death and Christina Mirabilis”
    Kristen Herdman, Case Western Reserve University
  • Bonum est mortis meditari: Meanings and Functions of the Medieval Double Macabre Portrait Individual Presentation”
    Dominique DeLuca, Case Western Reserve University
  • “Wonder and the Living Dead: The Personification of Death in Pastoral Texts from 1250-1350”
    Katherine Werwie, Morgan Library and Museum

4:50-5:30 PM Coffee Break (Thompson Library, 11th Floor)

5:30-6:30 PM Closing Roundtable: Agents of Change

Thompson Library, 11th Floor, Campus Reading Room

Featuring Ohio State professors Alison Beach (Department of History), Sarah-Grace Heller (Department of French and Italian), Leslie Lockett (Department of English), and Sarah Neville (Department of English).

 

Sponsors

MRGSA gratefully acknowledges the funding and support we have received from the following sources: 

  • The Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
  • The Department of English
  • The Department of French and Italian
  • The Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures
  • The Department of History of Art
  • The Department of Linguistics
  • The Department of Spanish and Portuguese
  • The Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies

 

 

For updates, please visit the MRGSA Conference Page.