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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

 *Beyond Borders: *
*Mutual Imaginings of Europe & the Middle East (800-1700)*
BARNARD COLLEGE
Saturday, December 3, 2016

The 25th biennial conference of the Barnard Medieval & Renaissance Studies
Program brings together scholars whose work challenges the stark border
between Europe and the Middle East during the long period between 800-1700.
Rather than thinking of these areas in isolation, this
interdisciplinary conference reveals the depth of their mutual influence,
exploring how trade, war, migration, and the exchange of ideas connected
East and West during their formative periods. Distant worlds were not only
objects of aggression, but also, inextricably, of fantasy and longing, as
Jewish, Muslim, and Christian thinkers looked to each other to understand
their own cultural histories and to imagine their futures. Plenary speakers
are Nabil Matar of the University of Minnesota and Nancy Bisaha of Vassar
College. A preliminary schedule is pasted below.

*You can register HERE
<https://www.regonline.com/registration/checkin.aspx?EventId=1888093&MethodId=0&EventSessionId=&startnewreg=1>.*



*PRELIMINARY PROGRAM*

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Barnard Hall
3009 Broadway
New York, NY 10027

*Registration and Breakfast *
8-9, Sulzberger Parlor


*Plenary I*9-10, Held Lecture Hall

Nancy Bisaha, Vassar College

“From Medieval Christendom to Renaissance Europe: The Shifting Place of
Muslims in the Pre-Modern World”

*Session I : The Politics of the Border*
10:15-11:45, Held Lecture Hall

Cristelle Baskins, Tufts University
"Habsburgs and Hafsids on the Border of Christendom"

Enass Khansa, Harvard University
"Negotiating Legitimacy in the Andalusian Caliphate & the Catholic Kingdoms
of Iberia"

K. A. Tuley, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
"An Ensemble Performance : Sovereignty in the Eastern Mediterranean Theater
in the Thirteenth Century"

Sabahat Adil, University of Colorado-Boulder
"Locating al-Andalus, or Where Does al-Andalus Begin and End and Why Does
it Matter ?"

*Lunch*
12-1

*Plenary II*
1-2, Held Lecture Hall

Nabil Matar, University of Minnesota
"The Protestant Reformation and its aftermath in early modern Arabic
sources"

*Session II : Trade and Artistic Exchange *
2:15-3:45, Held Lecture Hall

Heather Madar, Humboldt State University
"The Sultan’s Face Looks East and West : Sixteenth-Century European and
Ottoman Sultan Portraiture"

Antje Bosselmann-Ruickbie, University of Mainz
"Byzantine Ornaments : Cultural Transfer in the Thirteenth to Fifteenth
Centuries"

Winston Black, Assumption College
"Perversion and Perfection in the Orient : Twelfth-Century European
Fantasies of Eastern Spices"

*Session III : The Literature of Religious Interchange*
4-5:30, Held Lecture Hall

Hossein Kamaly, Barnard College
"The Christian Reformation : From a Shī‘a Catholic to an Augustininan Prior
Turned Muslim"

John Paul Hampstead and Amrita Dhar, University of Michigan
"From Marrakesh to the Tower of London : Constructing a Jesuit Martyrology,
1580-82"

Islam Issa, Birmingham City University
"Dialectical Interchanges : Milton, the English Renaissance, and the Arab
Nahdah"



*Concluding Discussion*5:30-6:30, Held Lecture Hall


*Wine and Cheese Reception*
6:30-7:30, Sulzberger Parlor

**** QUESTIONS? *Please contact Rachel Eisendrath, [log in to unmask]

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