Greetings!
This list announces talks in the greater Boston area pertaining to the study of the early modern period ca. 1350-1800, in any discipline and with any regional specialization. This year we are announcing online events and activities relevant to the Boston area. Please forward announcements of virtual socials, web-meetings, online exhibits, and application deadlines for future conferences in our region. We’re planning a mailing roughly every two weeks—please therefore send notices of events at least two weeks in advance. Please forward announcements, in the format requested at the end of this message, and e-mail addresses to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu.
For security reasons the list will not disseminate zoom links directly, but we can list an email contact to which to write for further details about attending. Alternatively we can circulate registration information for events. All times are EDT and change to EST on the first Sunday in November.
Tuesday, Sept 29, 4:30pm
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
"Globalizing the Middle Ages: The Market in Poetry in the Persian World"
Shahzad Bashir (Middle East Studies, History, Religious Studies, Brown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Wednesday, September 30, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
Before 'The Raven': The Story of a Forgotten American Type
Speaker: Sarah Rivett, Princeton University
Respondent: Matthew Swedberg, Harvard University
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/raven-story-forgotten-amer…
*Thursday, 10/1/2020 4:00pm to 5:30pm
Dumbarton Oaks Public Lectures <https://earlymodernworld.fas.harvard.edu/event/dumbarton-oaks-public-lectur…>
"Memoryscapes of King Philip’s War: Revisiting Indigenous and Colonial Places, Histories, and Legacies"<https://earlymodernworld.fas.harvard.edu/event/dumbarton-oaks-public-lectur…> (online)
Christine DeLucia (Williams)
Register on the Dumbarton Oaks website until September 30.<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…>
Thursday, October 1, 5pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium, co-sponsored with the Medieval Race Exploratory Seminar
"Premodern Critical Race Studies: A Work in Progress"
Margo Hendricks (Emerita, UC Santa Cruz)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
*Friday, October 2, 2020, from 9am
CMES symposium: The Ascendant Field: Critical Engagements with Ottoman Arabic Literature
Keynote: Hilary Kilpatrick (Independent Scholar)
For a complete program<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…> and registra<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…>tion information, please visit the <https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…> CMES website<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…>.<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.us17.list-2Dma…>
*Monday, Oct. 5, 1-2:30pm
FAS Premodern Race Seminar 2020-21 (Harvard Affiliates)
Please find details here<https://earlymodernworld.fas.harvard.edu/event/fas-premodern-race-seminar-2…>
Monday, Oct. 5, 5-7 pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Tawantisuyo invaded by demons: Inca interventions in Spanish colonial law” (virtual talk)
Arnulf Becker Loria (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"Copy, Patch, and stitch: Making Time and the Album in South Asia" (virtual meeting)
Yael Rice (Assistant Professor of Art History, Amherst College)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
file://localhost/website/ http/::rensem.site.wesleyan.edu:
Tuesday, Oct 6, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"'Our Turn Next': Slavery and Freedom on French and American Stages, 1789-99" (online)
Heather S. Nathans, Tufts University; Comment: Jeffrey Ravel, MIT
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Wednesday, Oct. 7, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Joanne Rappaport and Thomas Cummins. Beyond the Lettered City. Indigenous Literacies in the Andes. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011, with authors present.”
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, October 7, 6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissacne Studies
Orlando Furioso and the Orc: Rare Book Conversation with Jeff Goodhind
This talk will take place via Zoom. RSVP here<https://umass-amherst.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAkd-yorTopGNzCIo1BbBRZ20Tt…>
website: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/orlandorarebook
Thursday, October 8, time TBD
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion: Criticism as Activism (Race in the Renaissance and Today). (Details about our new Open Discussion series to be sent via email. Please feel free to reach out to the colloquium coordinators with any questions or ideas, Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu).
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Tuesday, Oct 13, 2020, 4:30-6pm
Early Modern Workshop at Harvard
“The America Company: from networks to institutions in the Anglo-Dutch seventeenth-century Atlantic” (virtual talk)
Joris van den Tol (Post-doctoral Rubicon Scholar, Harvard University/University of Leiden), Commentator: Sergio Leos
Please register here<https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUvcumvrzwsHdHOt95uWkNkSXH_Fakcxy…> to receive the zoom link.
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
The 41st William F. Church Memorial Lecture
Revisiting Mosquito Empires in the time of COVID-19"
John McNeill (Georgetown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Thursday, October 15, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Kelly Rafey (History, Harvard). Title TBA. (Topic: early modern shorthand)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Thursday, October 15, 2020, 6:00 p.m.
Boston College, Art, Art History, and Film Department
Webinar Lecture:“Black Women in Italian Renaissance Art and in Modern Whitewashing”
Patricia Simons, Professor Emerita, History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
To register for the event: https://events.bc.edu/event/lecture_by_patricia_simons_black_women_in_itali…
Monday, Oct. 19, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Justice for the poor? Jurisdiction and debt-credit relationships (Savoyard State, 18th century)” (virtual talk)
Simona Cerutti (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Ana Pulido Rull. Mapping Indigenous Land. Native land Grants in Colonial New Spain. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 4-6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
'Music, Painting, and the Ideal of the "Renaissance (Wo)Man"'
Walter Denny, Distinguished Professor of Art History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
More information: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/wedsat4denny
Postponed: The 2020 New England Renaissance Conference at Boston College (was: Saturday, October 24, 2020), Theme: “Early Modern Europe: From Below, at the Margins, Behind the Scenes.” Info: Prof. Franco Mormando (mormando (at) bc.edu). We will send news and updates as soon as possible.
Tuesday, Oct. 27, 4:00PM
Early Sciences Working Group and Early Modern Workshop
"The Communications Circuit of Bureaucratic Knowledge: Production Crises and Refining Innovations in Late 16th-Century Potosi" (virtual talk)
Renee Raphael (Associate Professor, History, UC Irvine)
Please register here<https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0pd-2rqjwuEtEuE6BXtXRdJgD_f5_Fh_…> to receive the zoom link.
Tuesday, October 27, 2020, 4:30pm
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
TBA
Marina Rustow (Princeton University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Canceled: SCSC Sixteenth Century Society Annual Conference
The Sixteenth Century Society was scheduled to meet in Baltimore 29 October – 1 November 2020
Organizers of papers, sessions, and roundtables are invited to resubmit their proposals for the coming annual meeting at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront Hotel, 28-31 October 2021, once the new CFP will be sent out early next year.
The website is https://sixteenthcentury.org/
Monday, Nov. 2, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Horrible Sepulture of Mannes Resoun: Drunkenness and the Medieval English Common Law” (virtual talk)
Elizabeth Kamali (Harvard Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Nov. 4, 3-5 pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Virtual Discussion of Larissa Brewer García. Beyond Babel: Translations of Blackness in Colonial Peru and New Granada. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Monday, Nov. 9, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
"Writing the Common Law in Latin in the Late Thirteenth Century" (virtual talk)
Thomas J. McSweeney (William & Mary Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan(a)law.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, November 12, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion: Topic TBA
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Thursday, November 12, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
"Ran Away From Her Master...A Negroe Girl Named Thursday": Examining Evidence of Punishment, Isolation, Trauma, and Illness in Nova Scotia and Quebec Fugitive Slave Advertisements
Charmaine Nelson, Mcgill University
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/“ran-away-her-master…-negr…<https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/%E2%80%9Cran-away-her-mast…>
Nov. 17, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"How Islamic is Islamic Medicine? Text and the Body in Tibb" (virtual talk)
Shireen Hamza (PhD Candidate, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
Wednesday, Nov. 18, 4-6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
'European Museums With of Without Walls: Holding and Beholding Virgil in England between Gutenberg and Milton'
Tim Markey, Worcester Academy
More information: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/wedsat4markey
Monday, Nov. 23, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Legal pluralism: from history to theory and back” (virtual talk)
Emanuele Conte (Università Roma Tre, Italy and EHESS, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Tuesday, November 24, 2020
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
TBA
Amy Remensnyder (History, Brown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Tuesday, December 1, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
"Varieties of Bondage in the Early Atlantic"
Ramesh Mallipeddi, University of Colorado
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/varieties-bondage-early-at…
Tuesday, December 1, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"Caribbean Connections—Panel Discussion" (online)
Charlotte Carrington-Farmer, Rober Williams University; Casey Schmitt, Cornell University; Comment: Ryan Quintana, Wellesley College
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Tuesday, Dec. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"The Centaur Myth in Renaissance Florence" (virtual meeting)
Andrea Moudarres (Associate Professor of Italian, UCLA)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
website: http://rensem.site.wesleyan.edu/
Dec. 15, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"March" (a chapter from her book with Ahmed Ragab) (virtual talk)
Katharine Park (Professor Emerita, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu.
*If you would like your announcement to be posted in an upcoming Early Mod Events listing please send your event details to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu
To be included in the Early Mod Events mailing, the event must take place or (in case of online events) be relevant to the greater Boston area. Announcements are posted at the discretion of the Early Mod Listserv administrator. It would be a great help if you could follow this format:
Day, date, time
Sponsor (if available)
Type of event (ex. Lecture/Symposium/Workshop), Event Title
Person giving talk (in bold), their home institution (if applicable)
Streaming/website URL
Additional info (no more than a couple of sentences)
RSVP or Registration information/link
Greetings!
This list announces talks in the greater Boston area pertaining to the study of the early modern period ca. 1350-1800, in any discipline and with any regional specialization. This year we are announcing online events and activities relevant to the Boston area. Please forward announcements of virtual socials, web-meetings, online exhibits, and application deadlines for future conferences in our region. We’re planning a mailing roughly every two weeks—please therefore send notices of events at least two weeks in advance. Please forward announcements, in the format requested at the end of this message, and e-mail addresses to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu.
For security reasons the list will not disseminate zoom links directly, but we can list an email contact to which to write for further details about attending. Alternatively we can circulate registration information for events. All times are EDT and change to EST on the first Sunday in November.
*Monday, September 14, 4:30am to 11am (10:30am-5pm CET)
Villa I Tatti Fellows' Presentations II: History of Art & Architecture
Speakers from 4:30am: Rebekah Compton, Sarah W. Lynch
Speakers from 8:30am: Andrew Chen, Leslie A. Geddes, Natsumi Nonaka
website: https://itatti.harvard.edu/calendar/upcoming
Tuesday, September 15, 4-6pm
Early Modern World Initiative at Harvard University
2020 Fall Aperitivo (opening event), featuring introductory remarks by Leah Whittington (English) and flash talks by Jeff McDonough (Philosophy), Anne-Marie Eze (Houghton Library), Gordon Teskey (English), and David Atherton (East Asian Languages & Civilizations). The talks will be followed by a virtual reception. Please email earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu to RSVP and get the zoomlink.
*Wednesday, September 16, 8:30am to 11am (2:30pm-5pm CET)
Villa I Tatti Fellows' Presentations III: Music & Performance
Speakers: Mikhail Lopatin, Antonio Chemotti, Alexandros Maria Hatzikiriakos
website: https://itatti.harvard.edu/calendar/upcoming
**Thursday, September 17, 5:15 pm 4pm (change of time!)
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
"Translation and the Erotic in Hero and Leander: Marlowe and His Ovids," Graduate Roundtable.
Katherine Horgan (English, Harvard)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Monday, Sept 21, 2020, 3pm
Harvard Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Cartography
“Clouds, Place, and Poetic Style in Early Modern France”
Prof. Jeffrey N. Peters, University of Kentucky
Registration: https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJctcu-urDsiH9xoDbgdeWvseaF0bA68O5…<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__harvard.zoom.us_meetin…>
Monday, Sept 21, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Shakespeare and the European ius commune” (virtual talk)
R.H. Helmholz (The University of Chicago),
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Sept. 22, 12:00pm-1:00pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"Expertise and Empire: Fortification Building under the English Board of Ordnance, 1660-1688" (virtual talk)
Hannah Kaemmer (PhD Candidate, Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
Tuesday, Sept 22, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"The Horrid Deeds of our Enemies" (online)
Lauren Duval, University of Oklahoma, Comment: Carolyn Eastman, Virginia Commonwealth University
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Wednesday, Sept 23, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
will feature a virtual discussion of Ben Vinson III.Before Mestizaje: The Frontiers of Race and Caste in Colonial Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018, with author present. Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
*Tuesday, Sept 29, 4:30pm
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
"Globalizing the Middle Ages: The Market in Poetry in the Persian World"
Shahzad Bashir (Middle East Studies, History, Religious Studies, Brown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
*Wednesday, September 30, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
Before 'The Raven': The Story of a Forgotten American Type
Speaker: Sarah Rivett, Princeton University
Respondent: Matthew Swedberg, Harvard University
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/raven-story-forgotten-amer…
Thursday, October 1, 5 pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium, co-sponsored with the Medieval Race Exploratory Seminar
"Premodern Critical Race Studies: A Work in Progress"
Margo Hendricks (Emerita, UC Santa Cruz)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Monday, Oct. 5, 5-7 pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Tawantisuyo invaded by demons: Inca interventions in Spanish colonial law” (virtual talk)
Arnulf Becker Loria (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"Copy, Patch, and stitch: Making Time and the Album in South Asia" (virtual meeting)
Yael Rice (Assistant Professor of Art History, Amherst College)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
file://localhost/website/ http/::rensem.site.wesleyan.edu:<file://localhost/website/%20http/::rensem.site.wesleyan.edu:>
Tuesday, Oct 6, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"'Our Turn Next': Slavery and Freedom on French and American Stages, 1789-99" (online)
Heather S. Nathans, Tufts University; Comment: Jeffrey Ravel, MIT
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Wednesday, Oct. 7, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Joanne Rappaport and Thomas Cummins. Beyond the Lettered City. Indigenous Literacies in the Andes. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011, with authors present.”
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
*Wednesday, October 7, 6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissacne Studies
Orlando Furioso and the Orc: Rare Book Conversation with Jeff Goodhind
This talk will take place via Zoom. RSVP here<https://umass-amherst.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAkd-yorTopGNzCIo1BbBRZ20Tt…>
website: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/orlandorarebook
Thursday, October 8, time TBD
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion:Criticism as Activism (Race in the Renaissance and Today). (Details about our new Open Discussion series to be sent via email. Please feel free to reach out to the colloquium coordinators with any questions or ideas, Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu).
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
**Tuesday, Oct 13, 2020, 4:30-6pm
Early Modern Workshop at Harvard
“The America Company: from networks to institutions in the Anglo-Dutch seventeenth-century Atlantic” (virtual talk)
Joris van den Tol (Post-doctoral Rubicon Scholar, Harvard University/University of Leiden), Commentator: Sergio Leos
Please register here<https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUvcumvrzwsHdHOt95uWkNkSXH_Fakcxy…> to receive the zoom link.
*Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
The 41st William F. Church Memorial Lecture
Revisiting Mosquito Empires in the time of COVID-19"
John McNeill (Georgetown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Thursday, October 15, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Kelly Rafey (History, Harvard). Title TBA. (Topic: Early Modern shorthand)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Thursday, October 15, 2020, 6:00 p.m.
Boston College, Art, Art History, and Film Department
Webinar Lecture:“Black Women in Italian Renaissance Art and in Modern Whitewashing”
Patricia Simons, Professor Emerita, History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
To register for the event: https://events.bc.edu/event/lecture_by_patricia_simons_black_women_in_itali…<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__events.bc.edu_event_le…>
Monday, Oct. 19, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Justice for the poor? Jurisdiction and debt-credit relationships (Savoyard State, 18th century)” (virtual talk)
Simona Cerutti (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Ana Pulido Rull. Mapping Indigenous Land. Native land Grants in Colonial New Spain. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 4-6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
'Music, Painting, and the Ideal of the "Renaissance (Wo)Man"'
Walter Denny, Distinguished Professor of Art History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
More information: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/wedsat4denny
Postponed: The 2020 New England Renaissance Conference at Boston College (was: Saturday, October 24, 2020), Theme: “Early Modern Europe: From Below, at the Margins, Behind the Scenes.” Info: Prof. Franco Mormando (mormando (at) bc.edu). We will send news and updates as soon as possible.
**Tuesday, Oct. 27, 4:00PM
Early Sciences Working Group and Early Modern Workshop
"The Communications Circuit of Bureaucratic Knowledge: Production Crises and Refining Innovations in Late 16th-Century Potosi" (virtual talk)
Renee Raphael (Associate Professor, History, UC Irvine)
Please register here<https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0pd-2rqjwuEtEuE6BXtXRdJgD_f5_Fh_…> to receive the zoom link.
*Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
TBA
Marina Rustow (Princeton University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
Canceled: SCSC Sixteenth Century Society Annual Conference
The Sixteenth Century Society was scheduled to meet in Baltimore 29 October – 1 November 2020
Organizers of papers, sessions, and roundtables are invited to resubmit their proposals for the coming annual meeting at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront Hotel, 28-31 October 2021, once the new CFP will be sent out early next year.
The website is https://sixteenthcentury.org/
Monday, Nov. 2, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Horrible Sepulture of Mannes Resoun: Drunkenness and the Medieval English Common Law” (virtual talk)
Elizabeth Kamali (Harvard Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Nov. 4, 3-5 pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Virtual Discussion of Larissa Brewer García. Beyond Babel: Translations of Blackness in Colonial Peru and New Granada. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Monday, Nov. 9, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
"Writing the Common Law in Latin in the Late Thirteenth Century" (virtual talk)
Thomas J. McSweeney (William & Mary Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan(a)law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, November 12, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion: Topic TBA
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
*Thursday, November 12, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
"Ran Away From Her Master...A Negroe Girl Named Thursday": Examining Evidence of Punishment, Isolation, Trauma, and Illness in Nova Scotia and Quebec Fugitive Slave Advertisements
Charmaine Nelson, Mcgill University
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/“ran-away-her-master…-negr…<https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/%E2%80%9Cran-away-her-mast…>
Nov. 17, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"How Islamic is Islamic Medicine? Text and the Body in Tibb" (virtual talk)
Shireen Hamza (PhD Candidate, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
*Wednesday, Nov. 18, 4-6pm
Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
'European Museums With of Without Walls: Holding and Beholding Virgil in England between Gutenberg and Milton'
Tim Markey, Worcester Academy
More information: https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/event/wedsat4markey
Monday, Nov. 23, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Legal pluralism: from history to theory and back” (virtual talk)
Emanuele Conte (Università Roma Tre, Italy and EHESS, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
*Tuesday, November 24, 2020
Brown University Medieval & Early Modern History Seminar
TBA
Amy Remensnyder (History, Brown University)
More information and zoom link at https://blogs.brown.edu/memhs/
*Tuesday, December 1, 2020, 6pm
Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Eighteen-Century Studies
"Varieties of Bondage in the Early Atlantic"
Ramesh Mallipeddi, University of Colorado
More information and zoom registration link: https://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/event/varieties-bondage-early-at…
Tuesday, December 1, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"Caribbean Connections—Panel Discussion" (online)
Charlotte Carrington-Farmer, Rober Williams University; Casey Schmitt, Cornell University; Comment: Ryan Quintana, Wellesley College
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Tuesday, Dec. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"The Centaur Myth in Renaissance Florence" (virtual meeting)
Andrea Moudarres (Associate Professor of Italian, UCLA)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
website: http://rensem.site.wesleyan.edu/
Dec. 15, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"March" (a chapter from her book with Ahmed Ragab) (virtual talk)
Katharine Park (Professor Emerita, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu.
*If you would like your announcement to be posted in an upcoming Early Mod Events listing please send your event details to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu
To be included in the Early Mod Events mailing, the event must take place or (in case of online events) be relevant to the greater Boston area. Announcements are posted at the discretion of the Early Mod Listserv administrator. It would be a great help if you could follow this format:
Day, date, time
Sponsor (if available)
Type of event (ex. Lecture/Symposium/Workshop), Event Title
Person giving talk (in bold), their home institution (if applicable)
Streaming/website URL
Additional info (no more than a couple of sentences)
RSVP or Registration information/link
Greetings!
This list announces talks in the greater Boston area pertaining to the study of the early modern period ca. 1350-1800, in any discipline and with any regional specialization. This year we are announcing online events and activities relevant to the Boston area. Please forward announcements of virtual socials, web-meetings, online exhibits, and application deadlines for future conferences in our region. We’re planning a mailing roughly every two weeks—please therefore send notices of events at least two weeks in advance. Please forward announcements, in the format requested at the end of this message, and e-mail addresses to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu.
For security reasons the list will not disseminate zoom links directly, but we can list an email contact to which to write for further details about attending. Alternatively we can circulate registration information for events. All times are EDT and change to EST on the first Sunday in November.
Thursday, Sept 10, 12-1pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston
John Adams and China Globalizing early America (Brown Bag, online event)
Yiyun Huang, The University of Tennessee-Knoxville
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/event?event=3348
Thursday, Sept 10, 5:30pm
Harvard Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Women, Gender and Culture in the Early Modern World
"Fantasies of Whiteness and Colonial Violence in the Anglo-Portuguese Match of 1662"
Mira Assaf Kafantaris, Ohio State University and the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
To receive the zoom link please contact Sarah Wall-Randell at swallran (at) wellesley.edu
Tuesday, September 15, 4-6pm
Early Modern World Initiative at Harvard University
2020 Fall Aperitivo (opening event), featuring introductory remarks by Leah Whittington (English) and flash talks by Jeff McDonough (Philosophy), Anne-Marie Eze (Houghton Library), Gordon Teskey (English), and David Atherton (East Asian Languages & Civilizations). The talks will be followed by a virtual reception. Please email earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu to RSVP and get the zoomlink.
Thursday, September 17, 5:15 pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
"Translation and the Erotic in Hero and Leander: Marlowe and His Ovids," Graduate Roundtable.
Katherine Horgan (English, Harvard),
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Monday, Sept 21, 2020, 3pm
Harvard Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar on Carthography
“Clouds, Place, and Poetic Style in Early Modern France”
Prof. Jeffrey N. Peters, University of Kentucky
Registration: https://harvard.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJctcu-urDsiH9xoDbgdeWvseaF0bA68O5…
Monday, Sept 21, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Shakespeare and the European ius commune” (virtual talk)
R.H. Helmholz (The University of Chicago),
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Sept. 22, 12:00pm-1:00pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"Expertise and Empire: Fortification Building under the English Board of Ordnance, 1660-1688" (virtual talk)
Hannah Kaemmer (PhD Candidate, Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
Tuesday, Sept 22, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"The Horrid Deeds of our Enemies" (online)
Lauren Duval, University of Oklahoma, Comment: Carolyn Eastman, Virginia Commonwealth University
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Wednesday, Sept 23, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
will feature a virtual discussion of Ben Vinson III. Before Mestizaje: The Frontiers of Race and Caste in Colonial Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018, with author present. Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, October 1, 5 pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium, co-sponsored with the Medieval Race Exploratory Seminar
"Premodern Critical Race Studies: A Work in Progress"
Margo Hendricks (Emerita, UC Santa Cruz)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Monday, Oct. 5, 5-7 pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Tawantisuyo invaded by demons: Inca interventions in Spanish colonial law” (virtual talk)
Arnulf Becker Loria (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Chile)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Tuesday, Oct. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"Copy, Patch, and stitch: Making Time and the Album in South Asia" (virtual meeting)
Yael Rice (Assistant Professor of Art History, Amherst College)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
website: http://rensem.site.wesleyan.edu/
Tuesday, Oct 6, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"'Our Turn Next': Slavery and Freedom on French and American Stages, 1789-99" (online)
Heather S. Nathans, Tufts University; Comment: Jeffrey Ravel, MIT
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Wednesday, Oct. 7, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Joanne Rappaport and Thomas Cummins. Beyond the Lettered City. Indigenous Literacies in the Andes. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011, with authors present.”
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, October 8, time TBD
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion:Criticism as Activism (Race in the Renaissance and Today). (Details about our new Open Discussion series to be sent via email. Please feel free to reach out to the colloquium coordinators with any questions or ideas, Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu).
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Tuesday, Oct 13, 2020, 4:30-6pm
Early Modern Workshop at Harvard
“The America Company: from networks to institutions in the Anglo-Dutch seventeenth-century Atlantic” (virtual talk)
Joris van den Tol (Post-doctoral Rubicon Scholar, Harvard University/University of Leiden), Commentator: Sergio Leos
Please email emework at fas.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, October 15, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Kelly Rafey (History, Harvard). Title TBA. (Topic: Early Modern shorthand)
To receive precirculated paper and zoom link, please email Vanessa Braganza (vbraganza (at) g.harvard.edu) or Karina Mathew (karinamathew (at) g.harvard.edu)
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Thursday, October 15, 2020, 6:00 p.m.
Boston College, Art, Art History, and Film Department
Webinar Lecture:“Black Women in Italian Renaissance Art and in Modern Whitewashing”
Patricia Simons, Professor Emerita, History of Art, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
To register for the event: https://events.bc.edu/event/lecture_by_patricia_simons_black_women_in_itali…<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__events.bc.edu_event_le…>
Monday, Oct. 19, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Justice for the poor? Jurisdiction and debt-credit relationships (Savoyard State, 18th century)” (virtual talk)
Simona Cerutti (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Oct. 21, 3-5pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Discussion of Ana Pulido Rull. Mapping Indigenous Land. Native land Grants in Colonial New Spain. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Postponed:The 2020 New England Renaissance Conference at Boston College (was: Saturday, October 24, 2020), Theme: “Early Modern Europe: From Below, at the Margins, Behind the Scenes.” Info: Prof. Franco Mormando (mormando (at) bc.edu). We will send news and updates as soon as possible.
Oct. 27, 4:00PM
Early Sciences Working Group and Early Modern Workshop
"The Communications Circuit of Bureaucratic Knowledge: Production Crises and Refining Innovations in Late 16th-Century Potosi" (virtual talk)
Renee Raphael (Associate Professor, History, UC Irvine)
Please email emework(a)fas.harvard.edu if you wish to participate in this event.
Canceled: SCSC Sixteenth Century Society Annual Conference
The Sixteenth Century Society was scheduled to meet in Baltimore 29 October – 1 November 2020
Organizers of papers, sessions, and roundtables are invited to resubmit their proposals for the coming annual meeting at the Hilton San Diego Bayfront Hotel, 28-31 October 2021, once the new CFP will be sent out early next year.
The website is https://sixteenthcentury.org/
Monday, Nov. 2, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“The Horrible Sepulture of Mannes Resoun: Drunkenness and the Medieval English Common Law” (virtual talk)
Elizabeth Kamali (Harvard Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Wednesday, Nov. 4, 3-5 pm
Sponsor: The workshop on “Administrating differences: Recent Scholarship on Indigenous and Afro-Latin America” at Harvard
Virtual Discussion of Larissa Brewer García. Beyond Babel: Translations of Blackness in Colonial Peru and New Granada. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020, with author present.
Please email therzog at fas.harvard.edu<mailto:therzog@fas.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Monday, Nov. 9, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
"Writing the Common Law in Latin in the Late Thirteenth Century" (virtual talk)
Thomas J. McSweeney (William & Mary Law School)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan(a)law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Thursday, November 12, time TBA
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Open Discussion: Topic TBA
More information: https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Nov. 17, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"How Islamic is Islamic Medicine? Text and the Body in Tibb" (virtual talk)
Shireen Hamza (PhD Candidate, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
Monday, Nov. 23, 5-7pm
Legal History Workshop at Harvard
“Legal pluralism: from history to theory and back” (virtual talk)
Emanuele Conte (Università Roma Tre, Italy and EHESS, Paris)
Please email Jamie Grischkan at jgrischkan at law.harvard.edu<mailto:jgrischkan@law.harvard.edu> if you wish to participate in this event.
Tuesday, December 1, 5:15pm-6:30pm
Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston: Pauline Maier Early American History Seminar
"Caribbean Connections—Panel Discussion" (online)
Charlotte Carrington-Farmer, Rober Williams University; Casey Schmitt, Cornell University; Comment: Ryan Quintana, Wellesley College
Registration and more information: https://www.masshist.org/2012/calendar/seminars/early-american-history
Tuesday, Dec. 6, 4:30pm, on Zoom
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
"The Centaur Myth in Renaissance Florence" (virtual meeting)
Andrea Moudarres (Associate Professor of Italian, UCLA)
For a copy of the paper and more information about the zoom link, please contact Ester Moran at emmoran at wesleyan.edu
website: http://rensem.site.wesleyan.edu/
Dec. 15, 12-1pm
Early Sciences Working Group at Harvard
"March" (a chapter from her book with Ahmed Ragab) (virtual talk)
Katharine Park (Professor Emerita, History of Science)
For the precirculated paper and zoom link please contact Hannah Marcus at hmarcus (at) fas.harvard.edu .
*If you would like your announcement to be posted in an upcoming Early Mod Events listing please send your event details to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu
To be included in the Early Mod Events mailing, the event must take place or (in case of online events) be relevant to the greater Boston area. Announcements are posted at the discretion of the Early Mod Listserv administrator. It would be a great help if you could follow this format:
Day, date, time
Sponsor (if available)
Type of event (ex. Lecture/Symposium/Workshop), Event Title
Person giving talk (in bold), their home institution (if applicable)
Streaming/website URL
Additional info (no more than a couple of sentences)
RSVP or Registration information/link