Symposium
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Annual Medieval Studies Symposium
Since 1989, graduate students at Indiana University's Medieval Studies Institute have annually organized symposia on medieval topics. The ongoing mission of the conference is to foster discussion on contemporary issues in medieval studies. Although the symposium is organized by graduate students at Indiana University, presenters include undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty from a diverse range of disciplines and institutions. In addition to several paper panels and readings in medieval languages, the symposium also includes a keynote address given by a distinguished medieval scholar.
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Knights, Pilgrims, Scholars and Dreamers: Wandering in the Middle Ages
April 1, 2011 – April 2, 2011From the traveling tales of the Canterbury pilgrims to Mohammad's night journey, to itinerant jongleurs, to Lancelot's descent into madness and Dante's descent into Hell, physical and spiritual wandering was an important motif in the Middle Ages.
We interpret the idea of wandering broadly to encompass voyage, crusade, pilgrimage, religious instruction, translation, travel narratives (including travel to the "other world"), quests for wisdom and wanderings into foolishness, diaspora and migration, expulsion, and scientific exploration, development and discovery. Our explorations of wandering will be complemented by the Early Music Institute's April Fool's weekend concert featuring "the wise and the foolish." With this collaboration in mind, we welcome papers from any and every discipline, on topics that address any facet of wandering in the Middle Ages.
IU Medieval Studies Institute is please to announce that Professor Bernard McGinn, Divinity School, University of Chicago, will present the keynote on Saturday, April 2nd. The tentative title for his presentation is "Paul and Dante: Mystical Pilgrims to the Infinite."
Friday, April 1
1:00-2:15 Woodburn 101Panel 1 Moderated by: Victor Pereira
Title: Mapping the Self: Wandering and Representation
Richard Barrett, Indiana University, Department of History
"Stational Liturgy and the Fermentum in Late Antique Rome"
Michael Pifer, University of Michigan, Department of Comparative Literature
" The Threshold of Dignity: Performing the Human in Medieval
Armenian and Persian Wandering"
2:30- 4:00 Woodburn 101Panel 2 Moderated by: Richard Barrett
Title: Reports from the Field: Wandering and Encounters with the Phenomenal World
Erik Inglis, Oberlin College, Department of Art
"The Worthless Stories of Pilgrims': The Art Historical Imagination of
Medieval Travelers"
Jon Arnold, University of Tulsa, Department of History
"Why Not Stay Home? Sidonius and Ennodius on the Inconveniences of
Travel"
Audrey Becker, Marygrove College, Department of English
"Dangerous Migration in The Mabinogi"
5:00-5:45 Beck Chapel "Via lata gradior" Early Music Institute Concert
7:00-10:00 Woodburn House Dinner and Readers Circle
Saturday, April 29:00-10:30 Woodburn 101
Panel 3 Moderated by: Kerilyn Harkaway-Kreiger
Title: Diegetic Topographies: Wandering and Encounters with the Phenomenal World
Tamara Carrell, Indiana University, Department of English
" Le Chevalier au Lion and Monastic Exile in the Middle Ages"
Nathan Mertes, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of English
"Green Screen: Illegible Signification in Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight"
Stephanie Opfer, University of Toledo, Department of English
"Piers Plowman in Wonderland"
11:00-12:00 Woodburn 101Dr. McGinn Keynote "Paul and Dante: Pilgrims to the Infinite"
12:15-1:15 Lunch IMU, Federal Room
1:30-3:00 Woodburn 101Panel 4 Moderated by: Diane Fruchtman
Title: Reception: Intertextual Wandering
Donka Markus, University of Michigan, Department of Classical Studies
" The Counter-Virgilian Narrative in St. Brendan's Navigatio"
Frederika Schmadel, Indiana University, Department of Folklore
" A Medieval Oedipus: Gregorius, the Good Sinner'
Katherine Weikert, University of Winchester, Department of Archeology
"Two Women of Wessex: Parallel Lives in the Twelfth Century"
3:15-4:25 Woodburn 101Panel 5 Title: Crossing Boundaries: Wandering and the Rhetoric of Encountering the Other Moderated by: Emily Houlick-Ritchey
Yanay Israeli , University of Michigan, Department of History
" Rethinking Conversion: 'Faith,' Exchange and Baptism in the
Chronicles of the First Crusade"
Michelle Kustarz, Wayne State University, Department of English
" Crossing Over: Purgatory Narratives and Mandeville's Travel
through the Vale Perilous"
4:40-5:40 Woodburn 101Panel 6 Title: Journeys into Digital Medieval Studies
Dot Porter, Indiana University
Digital Medievalist, Digital Librarian, Indiana University
Grant Simpson , Indiana University, Department of English
6:00 Closing Dinner - Ballantine Hall, 004 -
The Foreign, The Familiar, and the Fantastic in the Middle Ages
March 26, 2010 – March 27, 2010Traditional notions of the Middle Ages conceive of its peoples as insular and close-minded, as living in a period of willful ignorance that lies in stark contrast to the cosmopolitanism and inquisitiveness that characterizes the Renaissance. This conception of medieval peoples as being ignorant of other cultures has recently been challenged by scholars who point to moments of contact with the foreign. The fact remains, however, that in the Middle Ages there existed a tenuous relationship between the familiar and the foreign.

