Category: Schedule

Fall 2019 Schedule

The Early Modern and Mediterranean Worlds Workshop is very pleased to announce our Fall schedule. All sessions will be held on Mondays from 5:00 to 6:30 in Rosenwald 405 unless otherwise noted.
Workshop papers will be circulated through our listserv and website  should be read in advance. You may subscribe to our listserv by following this link. For more information about the workshop and upcoming events please visit our website.
Refreshments are served at all our events, which are free and open to the public. If you have any questions or requests for accommodation, please email the coordinators (danielagtzf@uchicago.edu or bms1@uchicago.edu)

We are looking forward to seeing you this quarter!

Daniela Gutiérrez Flores and Brendan Small

EMMW Spring Schedule

Dear all,

We are excited to share the spring quarter schedule of the Early Modern and Mediterranean Worlds (1200-1800) workshop.
We will be meeting in Rosenwald 405 on alternate Mondays from 5 to 6:30 unless otherwise noted.
Refreshments and grapes will be provided. Please don’t hesitate to let me (jpheil@uchicago.edu) or Filippo (filippopetricca@uchicago.edu) know if you have any questions.
Looking forward to seeing you there,
Filippo and John-Paul

EMMW Spring Schedule

March 28 (please note the odd date — cosponsored with the Political Theory Workshop and presented by the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures)

Gabriele Pedullà (University of Roma 3) – Machiavelli’s Hidden Master: Rediscovering Dionysius of Halicarnassus

Respondent: Federica Caneparo (University of Chicago)

April 2: Panel — “Travel and Travelers in the 18th-century Middle East and North Africa”

Orit Bashkin (Associate Professor in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations)

Basil Salem (Teaching Fellow in the Social Sciences Division)

Moderator: Mohamad Ballan (PhD Candidate, Department of History)

April 5 (cosponsored with the Lumen Christi Institute- please note the odd date and location Swift Hall, Common Room):

David Lantigua (University of Notre Dame): “Early Modern Catholic Social Thought and World Order”

April 16: Craig Kallendorf (Texas A&M University) – On Censored Virgils

April 23 (Cosponsored with the Renaissance workshop): Richard Stier (University of Chicago) – “Devout Humanism’ and Its Problems: George Herbert and François de Sales”

April 30: Panel on Periodization II (more details to follow)

May 14: Armando Maggi (University of Chicago) – “Staging a Demonic Possession: Calderón’s auto sacramental El diablo mudo and Las cadenas del demonio

May 22 (please note the odd date and location: Wieboldt 207): Már Jónsson (Institute of History – University of Iceland) – “The Victims of Witchcraft in 17th Century Iceland”

May 28: Ji Gao (PhD Student, University of Chicago): Publishing Illustrated Books in Sixteenth-Century France – the examples of Guillaume Roville and Benoît Rigaud.

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