Greetings!
This list announces talks in the greater Boston area pertaining to the study of the
earlymodern period ca. 1450-1750, in any discipline and with any regional specialization.
Please forward announcements, in the format requested at the end of this message, and
e-mail addresses to: earlymod(a)fas.harvard.edu.
Upcoming Events
Wednesday, October 3, 2018, 5:45 pm
Department of History Brown University
The 39th William F. Church Memorial Lecture
"Mediterranean Captivity through Arab Eyes, 1517-1798"
Nabil Matar, Professor of History and English, University of Minnesota
Room 106, Smith-Buonanno, Brown University, 95 Cushing St., Providence, RI
Free and open to the public
October 3, 2018, 4:00pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: “The Virgilian Tradition in Colonial Latin America”
Erika Valdivieso (Brown University), J.M. Stuart Fellow at JCB Library
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Upcoming Events | The John Carter Brown
Library<https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/even…
www.brown.edu
AMERICAN EDEN David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the Early Republic This
illustrated... Learn More
**Friday, October 5, 2018, 12-2 pm
Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies, Boston College
Luncheon Book Presentation: “Global Entanglements of a Man Who Never Traveled”
Dominic Sachsenmaier, Professor at Göttingen University
Boston College, Institute for Advanced Jesuit Studies
Ground level of Simboli Hall, 9 Lake Street Brighton, MA 02135
Join us for a presentation of the recently published book Global Entanglements of a Man
Who Never Traveled (Columbia University Press, 2018), a strikingly original work and a
major contribution to East Asian, transnational, and global history, with important
implications for historical approaches and methodologies. Dominic Sachsenmaier explores
the mid-seventeenth-century world and the worldwide flows of ideas through the lens of a
Chinese Christian’s life, combining the local, regional, and global. Convert Zhu Zongyuan
likely never left his home province.
Website URL:
https://www.bc.edu/centers/iajs/
October 5, 2018, 5:30pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: "AMERICAN EDEN: David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the
Early Republic"
Victoria Johnson, Hunter College, NYC
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
This illustrated lecture by historian Victoria Johnson features her acclaimed new book,
American
Eden<http://americaneden.org/> (Liveright/W. W. Norton, 2018), which both
the Wall Street Journal and Ron Chernow (Alexander Hamilton) have called “captivating.”
When Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr met on a dueling ground in July 1804, they chose
the same attending physician: David Hosack. Family doctor and friend to both men, Hosack
is today a shadowy figure at the edge of a famous duel, the great achievements of his life
forgotten.
Copies of American Eden will be available for purchase.
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Upcoming Events | The John Carter Brown
Library<https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/even…
www.brown.edu
AMERICAN EDEN David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the Early Republic This
illustrated... Learn More
**CHANGE Saturday, October 6, 2018, 9am-6pm
New England Renaissance Conference (NERC) 2018
Theme: "Resistance and Refashioning in the Early Modern World"
Hosted by Assumption College, 500 Salisbury Street, Worcester MA 01609
Panels and Keynote Lecture taking place in the Curtis Performance Hall in the Tsotstis
Family Academic Center
Also a guided visit to the Early Modern Collections of the Worcester Art Museum
Registration Deadline CHANGE: Wednesday, Oct 3, 2018
For further questions, contact: Lance Lazar: llazar (at)
assumption.edu
General Landing Page (including links to the full schedule, registration, and payment):
http://www.assumption.edu/nerc/<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url…
Saturday and Sunday, October 6 and 7, 2018, all day
Massachusetts Historical Society
"Boston Occupied: The British Are Coming… Again!"
Reenactment from Long Warf to Boston Common
Many venues in the City of Boston (see schedule link below)
In October of 1768 the British government sent troops to quell the unrest that had rising
since the passage of the Townshend Acts. Boston was a town of about 16,000 residents and
the arrival of 2,000 soldiers did not calm tensions but rather marked an escalation that
would eventually lead to the Boston Massacre. A reenactment of the arrival of the troops
in Boston Harbor, their parade through Boston, and encampment on the Common will be
reenacted this October.
For more information please visit:
https://revolution250.org/boston-occupied-schedule-of-events/
Wednesday, October 10, 2018, 5:15pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
Play Reading: Arden of Faversham
Room 211, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Harvard English Department Graduate Colloquia
...<https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance-colloquium>
sites.google.com
Welcome! Welcome to Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium! We are a
group of graduate students who meet every one to two weeks to discuss current work in
Renaissance and Early Modern literary studies.
*Thurs Oct 11, 4-6pm
Harvard Government Political Theory Colloquium
"Slaves, Subjects, and Citizens: Jean Bodin on the Boundaries of Political
Membership"
Daniel Lee (Berkeley)
Room K-401, CGIS, Harvard, 1737 Cambridge Street, Cambridge MA
There is a precirculated paper available one week ahead, please contact pmenon129 at
gmail.com<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__gmail.com&…
for a copy.
**Friday, October 12, 2018 - 5:30pm
Shakespearean Studies Seminar, Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard
"To See Thee Fight, To See Thee Foign": Dueling Culture and the Early Modern
English Theatre"
Kim H. Carrell, College of the Holy Cross
Room 133, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/shakespearean-studies
[
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/sites/default/files/Shakespeare.j…
Shakespearean Studies | Mahindra Humanities
Center<http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/shakespearean-s…
mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu
This seminar is designed to explore the broadest range of approaches to Shakespeare's
plays and those of his contemporaries. We welcome post-structuralist, feminist, formalist,
textual, historicist, and performance-based criticism.
Saturday, October 13, 2018
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
16th Annual Graduate Student Conference: "Spaces of Authority"
Keynote: Christopher R. Kyle, Syracuse University
UMass Amherst, 650 E Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002
$10 Entrance Fee includes lunch and breakfast
More Information and Registration:
https://renaissanceconference.wordpress.com/
[
https://s0.wp.com/i/blank.jpg]<https://renaissanceconference.wordpress.c…
Graduate Conference | at the Arthur F. Kinney Center for
...<https://renaissanceconference.wordpress.com/>
renaissanceconference.wordpress.com
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies at the University of
Massachusetts Amherst will host its sixteenth annual graduate student conference on
Saturday, October 13, 2018. We are delighted to welcome historian Christopher R. Kyle of
Syracuse University as our keynote speaker. This year’s conference theme is Spaces of
Authority.
October 17, 2018, 4:00pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: “Customary Arrangements, Amelioration, and the Law in Jamaica, 1786-1838”
Michael Becker (Duke University), Paul W. McQuillen Fellow at JCB Library
Lecture: “The Political Economy of Information: State Intelligence and the Fiscal
Reorganization of the River Plate-Andean Region, 1760-1840”
Felice Physioc (Princeton University), Maury A. Bromsen Memorial Fellow at JCB Library
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Upcoming Events | The John Carter Brown
Library<https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/even…
www.brown.edu
AMERICAN EDEN David Hosack, Botany, and Medicine in the Garden of the Early Republic This
illustrated... Learn More
Wednesday, October 17, 2018, 4 p.m.
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
"TBD"
Richard Ballon, Actor, Director, Writer and Retired from UMass
UMass Amherst, 650 E Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002
http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/events.htm
[
http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/images/mcrs_sidepic_calendar.jpg]<http:…
The Massachusetts Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance
...<http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/events.htm>
www.umass.edu
Events @ the Center . The Center offers lectures, classes, conferences, concerts, and
performances, all of which are open to the community and the general public and most of
which are free of charge.
Thursday, October 18, 2018, 5:50 pm
The Program in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies at Brown University
Lecture: "Crusoe's Absence: Sugar Economics and the Ingenuity of Realism"
Barbara Fuchs, UCLA
The Annmary Brown Memorial, Brown University, 21 Brown Street, Providence, RI 02912
Fri Oct 19, 12:00pm
Early Science Working Group, Harvard
Lecture: "Dyeing in the Renaissance: Labor, Business, and International Exchange in
Florentine Dyer’s Account Books"
Stephanie Leitzel
Room 252, Science Center, Harvard, 1 Oxford St, Cambridge MA
https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/eswg/home
[
https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/files/eswg/files/persian_anatomy.jpg?m=1473…
Early Sciences Working Group - Home | Projects at
Harvard<https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/eswg/home>
projects.iq.harvard.edu
The Early Science Working Group brings together graduate students, post-doctoral fellows
and faculty members to discuss their works-in-progress on the history of ancient, medieval
and early modern knowledge and culture.
Tuesday, October 23, 2018, 6pm
Novel Theory Seminar, Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard University
Cosponsored by the Long Eighteenth-Century Graduate Colloquium
Lecture: "Time, Media, the Eighteenth-Century Novel"
Christina Lupton, University of Warwick
Stuart Sherman, Fordham University
Room 133, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/novel-theory
Novel Theory | Mahindra Humanities
Center<http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/novel-theory>
mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu
The novel is a radically capacious and always evolving genre, open to the full range of
world literature, across periods and locations. This seminar examines the novel and its
various, overlapping functions as aesthetic object, cultural artifact, historical text,
and conceptual resource.
Wednesday, October 24, 2018, 4 p.m.
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
"Monteverdi's Orfeo"
David Gruender, Boston Symphony Orchestra
UMass Amherst, 650 E Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002
http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/events.htm
*Thursday, Oct 25, 2018, 3:30 pm
Catherine Frisone Scott Italian Cultural Studies Fund in memory of John B. Frisone Public
Lecture: "Machiavelli: Yesterday and Today"
Christopher Celenza (Georgetown)
Integrated Sciences Center, 3rd Floor, Rm 3300, University of Massachusetts Boston, 100
Morrissey Blvd., Boston, MA 02125
*Friday, Oct 26 to Saturday Oct 27, 2018
The 7th Annual Ways of Knowing Graduate Conference on Science and Religion
Harvard Divinity School, 45 Francis Ave, Cambridge, MA 02138
https://src.hds.harvard.edu/waysofknowing/2018-conference
**Friday, October 26, 2018, 4 p.m.
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
Five College Book History Lectures - Fall 2018
"Servant-Functions and Author-Functions in Early Modern Europe"
Ann Blair, C. H. Pforzheimer University Professor, Harvard University
UMass Amherst, 650 E Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002
http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/events.htm
October 27, 2018, 4:00pm
John Carter Brown Library
About 1783: Remaking the British Polity in the Wake of the American Revolution Program
Panel of the North American Conference on British Studies
Chair and commentator: Elizabeth Mancke, University of New Brunswick
Lord Carlisle’s Union: Making Peace in Britain, Ireland, and America, 1778-1783
Eliga Gould, University of New Hampshire
The Irish Revolution of 1782 in an Age of Revolutions
Steve Pincus, University of Chicago
Coming to Terms with France: The Benefits and Burdens of Free Trade, 1783-1786
John Shovlin, New York University
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Tues Oct 30, 12:00pm
Early Science Working Group, Harvard
Lecture: "The Lost Serpent: Subterranean Knowledge in the Age of Enchantment"
Whitney Barlow Robles
Room 252, Science Center, Harvard, 1 Oxford St, Cambridge MA
https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/eswg/home
Wednesday, October 31, 5:15pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
"The 36 Bodies of Shakespeare's Henriad" (Graduate Workshop)
Patrick Durdel (Freie Universität Berlin)
Room 211, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Friday, November 2, 2018, 5:30pm
Cosponsored by the Shakespearean Studies Seminar and the Women and Culture in the Early
Modern World Seminar, both Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard University
Lecture: "Turning Chaste: Thomas Dekker, Honest Whores, and the Conversions of
English Courtesans"
Stephen Spiess, Babson College
Room 133, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St, Cambridge MA
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/shakespearean-studies
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/women-and-culture-early-m…
November 7, 2018, 4:00pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: “Collecting Artifacts in the Age of Empire”
Surekha Davies, Historian and writer, InterAmericas Fellow at JCB Library
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Thursday, November 8, 2018, 4pm
The Arthur F. Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies
Lecture: "News, real and fake, from the front: Mapping the great siege of Malta
(1565)"
Jessica Maier, Associate Professor Art History, Mt. Holyoke
UMass Amherst, 650 E Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002
http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/events.htm
Monday Nov 12 5:15pm
Sponsored by the Early Modern History Workshop, Harvard University
Lecture: “The World in the Library” (on knowledge gathering and history writing in early
Latin America)
Valeria Lopez Fadul (Wesleyan)
CGIS S354, Harvard, 1730 Cambridge St., Cambridge
https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/
Tues Nov 13, 12:00pm
Early Science Working Group, Harvard
Lecture: "Renaissance Bodies: The Human Form in Art and Medicine"
Daniele Macuglia
Room 252, Science Center, Harvard, 1 Oxford St, Cambridge MA
https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/eswg/home
Wednesday November 14, 2018, 4:30-6:15pm
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
Lecture: “A Redemptive Figure: Hagar, the Servant, and Queen Christina of Sweden”
Andrea Celli, Italian Literary and Cultural Studies, University of Connecticut
Room 113, Boger Hall, Wesleyan University, 41 Wyllys Ave, Middletown, CT 06457
The seminars are entirely devoted to discussion of previously circulated papers. For a
copy of the paper, if you plan to participate in a meeting, please contact Esther Moran at
emmoran (at)
wesleyan.edu
Wednesday, November 14, 5:15pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
"Pleading the Belly and the Body Politic: Leaticia Wigington and Elizabeth
Cellier"
Marina Leslie (Northeastern)
Room 211, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Saturday, November 17th, 2018, all day
45th Annual New England Medieval Conference
Government and Governance from Late Antiquity to the Renaissance: Representation and
Reality
University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH
Keynote Speakers:
Amy Appleford (Boston University), “Governing Bodies in Late Medieval London”
Jonathan Lyon (University of Chicago), “Was there a Difference Between Lordship and
Governance in Late Medieval Germany?”
Tues Nov 27, 12:00pm
Early Science Working Group, Harvard
Lecture: "‘By the Declining Day’: Time and Temporal Cultures of the Early Modern
Mediterranean"
Maryam Patton, Harvard
Room 252, Science Center, Harvard, 1 Oxford St, Cambridge MA
https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/eswg/home
Thursday, November 29, 5:15pm
Harvard English Department's Renaissance Colloquium
“'Behold, my life is but a distraction': Ascetic Reading, Poetry, and
Prayer"
Amy Appleford (Boston University),
Room 114, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
https://sites.google.com/harvard.edu/english-graduate-colloquia/renaissance…
Friday, November 30, 2018, 5:30pm
Shakespearean Studies Seminar, Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard
Graduate Student Symposium
Talk Title TBA
Room 133, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/shakespearean-studies
Tuesday, December 4, 2018, 5:30pm
Women and Culture in the Early Modern World Seminar, Mahindra Humanities Center, Harvard
University (Chairs: Diana Henderson and Marina Leslie)
Lecture: "Remaking Shakespeare Through Performance"
Karin Coonrod, Yale School of Drama/Compagnia de' Colombari
Room 133, Barker Center, Harvard, 12 Quincy St., Cambridge MA
http://mahindrahumanities.fas.harvard.edu/content/women-and-culture-early-m…
December 6, 2018, 4:00pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: “Doctrine of the Skull: Phrenology and Popular Knowledge in Antebellum America”
Kathrinne Duffy (Brown University), Interdisciplinary Opportunities Fellow at JCB
Library
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
December 6, 2018, 5:30pm
John Carter Brown Library
Lecture: "Frontier Rebels: The Fight for Independence in the American West,
1765-1776: The untold story of the 'Black Boys,' a rebellion on the American
frontier in 1765 that sparked the American Revolution."
Patrick Spero, American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia
In 1763, the Seven Years’ War ended in a spectacular victory for the British. The French
army agreed to leave North America, but many Native Americans, fearing that the British
Empire would expand onto their lands and conquer them, refused to lay down their weapons.
Under the leadership of a shrewd Ottawa warrior named Pontiac, they kept fighting for
their freedom, capturing several British forts and devastating many of the westernmost
colonial settlements. The British, battered from the costly war, needed to stop the
violent attacks on their borderlands. Peace with Pontiac was their only option―if they
could convince him to negotiate.
Copies of Frontier Rebels will be available for purchase.
John Carter Brown Library, 94 George Street, Providence RI 02906
Details:
https://www.brown.edu/academics/libraries/john-carter-brown/events
Mon Dec 10, 12-2pm
Sponsored by the Early Modern History Workshop, Harvard University
Lecture: "Sinful Slumbers: Sleeping in Church and the Prehistory of Boredom"
Daniel Juette (NYU)
Robinson Hall Lower Library, Harvard Yard
https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/
Tuesday December 11, 2018, 4:30-6:15pm
Wesleyan Renaissance Seminar
“Representations of Black Africans and Others in Orlando di Lasso’s Music for the 1568
Wedding of Wilhelm V to Renata of Lorraine”
Eric Rice, Music Department, University of Connecticut
Room 113, Boger Hall, Wesleyan University, 41 Wyllys Ave, Middletown, CT 06457
The seminars are entirely devoted to discussion of previously circulated papers. For a
copy of the paper, if you plan to participate in a meeting, please contact Esther Moran at
emmoran (at)
wesleyan.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 in 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)
Location (Building, Room, St., Address, Institution, City, State)
* Event must take place in the greater Boston area.
Additional info (no more than a couple of sentences)
Website URL
RSVP or Registration information/link