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The following is the Fall 1997 SCHEDULE OF CUNY RENAISSANCE  AND EARLY
MODERN EVENTS. Admission is free and open to the public.

CUNY Graduate School                            Martin Elsky, Coordinator
Renaissance Studies Program                             212-642-2346 (Phone)
33 West 42 Street                                       212-642-2205 (Fax)
New York, NY 10036                              <[log in to unmask]>

For more information, consult
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http://web.gc.cuny.edu/dept/renai/ren.htm
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Thursday
September 25
Bernice W. Kliman (Nassau Community College), "Language and Gender in Henry
V." 7:00-9:00 p.m. Room 202, Graduate School (Sponsored by the Society for
the Study of Women in the Renaissance; for further information on SSWR
events, contact Betty Travitsky <[log in to unmask]> or  Susan O'Malley
<[log in to unmask]>)

Thursday
October 30
PAMELA ALLEN BROWN (Columbia University), "From Jest to Earnest: Women as
Players." 7:00-9:00 p.m. This event to take place at The Gallatin School,
NYU, 715 Broadway, 6th floor conference room. (Sponsored by the Society for
the Study of Women in the Renaissance)


Wednesday
November 5
PAOLO FASOLI (Hunter College), "Against Love: Anti-erotic Treatises in the
Renaissance." 6:30-8:30p.m., Room 40-18, Grace Building (Sponsored by The
Graduate Colloquium in Comparative Literature and Italian Studies)

Thursday
November 20
BETTY TRAVITSKY (Center for the Study of Women and Society, CUNY),  "Author
and Subordinate: The Case of Elizabeth Egerton." 7:00-9:00 p.m. Room 202
Graduate School (Sponsored by the Society for the Study of Women in the
Renaissance)

Friday
November 21
CUNY Renaissance Studies Colloquium Series: RENAISSANCE AND EARLY MODERN
CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY: THE PLACES OF IDENTITY, 1500-1700

Fall colloquium
NATION AND DYNASTY: ENGLAND AND THE HABSBURG EMPIRE
4:00-6:00p.m.
3rd-Floor Studio
Graduate School.

THOMAS KAUFMANN (Princeton University), " Nation and Ethnicity vs. Dynastic
Identity in the Art of Early Modern Central Europe"

MALCOLM SMUTS (University of Massachusetts-Boston), "Rituals of Power and
National Identities in Seventeenth-Century Britain"

Reception to follow




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