| |
Sponsors
The Cook-Cole College of Arts and Sciences
Office of the Longwood Vice-President/Provost
Department of English and Modern Languages
Department of History, Political Science, and Philosophy
Longwood Chapter of Lambda Iota Tau
Longwood History Club
|
General Schedule
(Specific speakers & panels are below the general schedule. Both the Friday and Saturday sessions will be in the Nance Room of the Dorrill Dinine Hall (Building #28 on the official campus map).
Friday, 27 March
| |
| 11:00am—5 pm |
Registration (Dorrill Hall-Nance Foyer) |
| Noon—1:30 |
Session #1 |
| 1:30—1:45 |
Break / Refreshments |
| 1:45—3:15 |
Session #2 |
| 3:30—5:00 |
Session #3 |
| |
|
| 6:00—7:00pm: |
Reception (Dorrill Hall-Tea Room)
|
| 7:00—8:00pm: |
Banquet (Dorril Hall-Nance Room) |
| 8:00—9:00pm: |
First Plenary Address
(Dorrill Hall-Nance Room) |
Saturday, 28 March
| |
| 8:30—11:10am: |
Continental Breakfast (Tea Room) |
| 9:00—10:30am: |
Session #4 |
| 10:45—12:15pm: |
Session #5 |
| Noon—2:00pm: |
Lunch |
| 2:00—3:00pm: |
Second Plenary Address |
| 3:00—3:15pm: |
Afternoon Break |
| 3:15—4:45pm: |
Session #6 |
| |
|
| 7:00–7:45pm: |
Medieval Drama: York Cycle (3 works) |
Sessions and Speakers
Friday, 27 March
SESSION #1: Noon—1:30pm
Dangerous Liaisons
Chair: Kat Tracy, Longwood University
- “Elevation, Virtue, and Suffering: Themes of Impossible Love in Fourteenth Century Narrative”
Catherine Albers, University of Mississippi
- “A Servant of Two Masters: The Balance of Courtly Love and Knightly Honor in The Lais of Marie de France”
Alegra N. Padrón, Florida State University
- “‘Keep Well This New Kinship’: Examining the Legality of Beowulf's Adoption”
Sharon Wofford, University of Mississippi
SESSION #2: 1:45—3:15pm
Marginal Magic
Chair: Melissa Ridley-Elmes, UNC-Greensboro
- “Magic and Femininity as Power in Medieval Literature”
Anna McGill,
East Tennessee State University
- “The Politics and Perils of Alchemy”
Jennifer Bryant, Longwood University
- “A Crown That Is Not a Crown: The Fey Politics of the Fairy Lady”
Savannah Hughes, Florida State University
- “Singing Sirens—How Medieval Misogyny Shaped a Monster”
Kimberly Lynn Morrill, Radford University
SESSION #3: 3:30—5:00pm
Powerful Women
Chair: Jessica Pitts, Florida State University
- “Obedience and Obligation”
Ansley McDurman, The University of the South (Sewanee)
- “Rebranding a She-Wolf: The Vilification and Forgiveness of Isabella of France”
Emily Heim, Longwood University
- “Lex Orandi est Lex Credendi: The Influence of the Laity and the Liturgy on the Doctrinal Debates of the Immaculate Conception and the Medieval Church’s Role as Mother”
Nicolas Novak, Catholic University of America
- “Beowulf’s Wealhtheow: or the Only Sane Character of the Poem”
Ryan Young,
University of Mississippi
RECEPTION 6:00–7:00
Free and open to the public—Dorrill Hall, Nance Room Foyer
BANQUET: 7:00–8:00
(By advance registration only) Dorrill Hall, Nance Room
FIRST PLENARY ADDRESS: 8:00—9:00pm, Lewis Room, Dorrill Hall
Asa Simon Mittman
California State University, Chico
“Bursting Out of Bounds: Jews, Gog and Magog, and the Apocalypse”
Saturday, 28 March
SESSION #4: 9:00—10:30am
Othering and Violence
Chair: Asa Simon Mittman, California State Univ., Chico
- “Beowulf and Judith; Relationships Recasting the Role of Christianity in Beowulf”
Blaise Denton, Florida State University
- “Dead Honor: Justice and Honor Killing in The Physician’s Tale”
P.J. Dominiski, Randolph-Macon College
- “Grendel’s Mother: The Deviant Other in Beowulf”
Cheri D. Molter, Methodist University
- “Outside of the Christian ‘Norm’: Medieval Bestiaries Representing Owls as Being ‘Sinful’ Birds”
Julia Poyer, Radford University
SESSION #5: 10:45—12:15pm
Patrolling the Borders
Chair: Steven Isaac, Longwood University
- “Conflict and Contestation in Early Medieval Italy: Charlemagne, Byzantium and the Imperial Coronation”
Jonathan Dell Isola, American University
- “Medieval Marriages and Law Codes: A Study of Multiculturalism in Medieval Iberia”
Margo Sheffler, Longwood University
- “‘With Many Proverb Divers and Unkouth’: John Lydgate’s Response to Chaucer’s Knight’s Tale in his Siege of Thebes”
Madeline Monk, Randolph-Macon College
- “Manipulation and Memorialization: The Shifting Legacy of Roger II in Twelfth-Century Italy”
Bill Oldham, American University
SECOND PLENARY ADDRESS: 2:00—3:00pm
Stephen Morillo
Wabash College
“Warrior Suicide and the Making and Breaking of Norms”
SESSION 6: 3:15—4:45pm
Passing as the Other
Chair: Ana Grinberg, East Tennessee State
- “The Green Knight and Racial Passing”
Lin Baumeister, Methodist University
- “From Bisclavret to Lupin: Social Anxiety and Werewolves”
Parker Smith, Appalachian State University
- “Monstrous Muslims: The Existential Threat of Islam to the Medieval Christian”
Graham Shelton, Appalachian State University
7:00—7:45pm: MEDIEVAL DRAMA—The York Cycle (The Resurrection, Appearance to Mary Magdalene, and Appearance on the Road to Emmaeus) In the Rehearsal Room of the Communications/Theatre Building
- Performance by Murray State University
Alexis Ash,
Connor Jaschen,
Amber Parker,
Andrew Shepherd,
Keri Mogan,
Raquell Verri,
Erin Froelich, Kris Cole
|