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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Medieval Studies
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260501T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260501T150000
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20251215T210606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260408T130049Z
UID:10000626-1777626000-1777647600@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Medieval Matters: Manuscript Culture and the Five Senses in the Middle Ages
DESCRIPTION:This event is open to the public\, however\, registration is required. \nMedieval Matters: Manuscript Culture and the Five Senses in the Middle Ages\, a full day roundtable\, brings together senior and junior faculty from leading East and West Coast institutions to present and discuss current research and methodologies in Old French studies. The roundtable will include a response by Ardis Butterfield (Yale)\, as well as presentations by Eliza Zingesser (Columbia)\, Mary Channen Caldwell (Penn)\, Henry Ravenhall (Berkeley)\, Ariane Bottex-Ferragne (NYU)\, Fay Slakey (Princeton)\, and Julien Stout (Princeton). \nThe title of the roundtable plays on the verb to matter\, the medieval French term matiere—used to designate thematic cycles (matiere de Rome\, de Bretagne\, etc.)—and the modern concept of materiality. The theme foregrounds the physicality of manuscripts\, textual fragments\, and amulets—objects produced\, circulated\, and handled in the Middle Ages—while also approaching poetry and literature as forms of “matter” that resist reduction to mere metaphor. The roundtable aims to explore how literary and poetic forms invite multisensory engagement\, often simultaneously. \nGuiding questions include: \n\nHow does a song\, narrative\, or idea move in and out of different forms of materiality in medieval French manuscript culture?\nHow does this (im)materiality interact with the senses in the production\, transmission\, and reception of medieval French culture?\nWhat happens when\, within a poem\, some senses stand in for others\, or when they converge into “multisensory nodes” that create an intermedial space—perhaps echoing an abstract or “vertical” realm?\nHow are (im)material or (non-)corporeal beings—or parts of beings—involved in the experience of manuscript culture?\n\n\nPLEASE RSVP \n\nThe event will conclude with this year’s Medieval Studies Faber Lecture presented by Marisa Galvez (Stanford University). \nPresented by the Department of French and Italian. Co-sponsored by the Program in Medieval Studies and the Center for Collaborative History. \n\nProgram \n9:00am-9:30am — Welcome and Registration \n9:30am-9:40am — Opening remarks (10 minutes max) \n10:00am-11:30am — Session 1: Touching\, Reading\, Grafting(20 minute presentations followed by 10 minute discussions) \nModerator: Prof. Simone Marchesi (Princeton\, French and Italian) \n\nHenry Ravenhall (UC Berkeley)\, Flamenca and the Erotics of Book-Touching\nFay Slakey (Princeton\, Comparative Literature)\, “De molt bons maitres avez lu”: The Materiality of Text in Two Tristan Narratives\nEliza Zingesser (Columbia)\, Grafting and the Roman de Saint Fanuel\n\n11:30am-1:00pm — Lunch Break (Lunch will be served on campus) \n1:00pm-2:30pm  —  Session 2: Multisensory verticalities  \nModerator: Prof. Daniel Heller-Roazen (Princeton\, Comparative Literature) \n\nAriane Bottex-Ferragne (NYU)\, “Pendu a sa diestre orelle li garira de ce mal”: Body\, Gesture\, and the Materiality of Old French Prayers\nMary Channen Caldwell (Penn)\, Curses\, Songs\, Dances: Moralizing through Senseless Voices and Impaired Bodies in a Medieval Story\nJulien Stout (Princeton\, French and Italian)\, Foreign Chaos: Naming “Formless Matter” in Old French Retellings of the Creation\n\n2:30pm-2:40pm  —  Break \n2:40 pm – 3:00 pm — Response \n\nArdis Butterfield (Yale)\n\n3:30 pm-5:00 pm —  Keynote Lecture (East Pyne 010) \n\nMaris Galvez (Stanford)
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/medievalmatters/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/12/Medieval-Matters.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251204T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251204T131500
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20250818T142025Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251016T191034Z
UID:10000600-1764849600-1764854100@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Byzantium\, the Caucasus and artistic borders in the medieval world
DESCRIPTION:Lunch will be provided. Please RSVP. \nThis lecture will consider some of the issues raised by trying to write a ‘national’ history of art in the twenty-first century. Eastmond will address the questions he is facing as he tries to write a history of the arts of Georgia in the Caucasus. How do we define the borders and benefits of a ‘national’ art\, particularly as art history takes an increasingly global and transnational turn? What value is there in defining an art by geography\, language\, religion and/or ethnicity? And how can we deal with the fuzzy and porous borders that demarcate political\, cultural and religious space in the middle ages? Eastmond will evaluate the risks of his approach\, and try to defend his belief that it is possible to write a national art history without nationalism. \nAntony Eastmond is AG Leventis Professor of Byzantine Art at The Courtauld Institute of Art\, University of London. He is currently a Fellow in Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks. He has worked extensively on the arts of Byzantium and the Caucasus\, and on the fuzzy frontier between the Christian and Islamic worlds. Ironically his last book\, Tamta’s World (2017)\, argued against the delimiting of art history by borders of language\, ethnicity\, religion or geography. \nThis is the last talk in the Fall 2025 Medieval Studies Seminar Series. \n 
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/medieval-studies-lunch-talk-with-antony-eastmond/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/08/AE-picture.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251106T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251106T131500
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20250818T141500Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251015T132027Z
UID:10000599-1762430400-1762434900@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Medieval Studies Seminar Series - "Who is Queer Translation and What is She\, that all her Queens Commend Her?: (Re)Translating Verse from the Old English Exeter Book"
DESCRIPTION:Lunch will be provided. Please RSVP. \n\nTranslation always fails\, at some level. \nTranslation theory has long argued that rendering a text from source to target is imprecise\, messy\, subject to the translator’s desire\, & bound in preconceived narratives about the source culture. Old English poetry is all-too-often read as a monolithic expression representing the ideas\, language\, & beliefs of an entire culture — particularly upon moral or ethical values useful to modern mythologies of a national past. For instance\, scholars have been happy to assume that Queerness had no legitimate place in early England — yet those categories do not exist before the nineteenth century’s “discovery” of heteronormativity. \nThis workshop is based on a simple idea: instead of failing to succeed in locating our Queer ancestors in early English literature\, let’s set out to Fail right up front — and Fail as gloriously as we can. Come have lunch with Dr. Ophelia Eryn Hostetter *12 as we work together at a translation practice located in disruption\, deformation\, play\, Queer joy\, and\, of course\, Failure in the most stylish way possible. \n\nOphelia Eryn Hostetter (she/her) is an Associate Professor at Rutgers University-Camden\, teaching & researching medieval literature and culture\, 500–1500 CE. Her first book\, Political Appetites: Food in Medieval English Romance\, argues the vital connection between food and cooking & the political ambitions of these texts. Dr. Hostetter’s second book\, Teaching “Beowulf”: Practical Approaches (DeGruyter\, 2024\, with Larry Swain)\, is a co-edited collection of pedagogical essays for teachers of this ancient epic. She is also an avid translator\, working from Old English\, Latin & Old French\, frequently publishing her work in literary journals\, & runs the Old English Poetry Project\, an open-access archive of this impressive body of verse rendered into a fresh\, contemporary voice. Dr. Hostetter’s current project questions the way that Old English poetry has traditionally been translated\, limiting how it is interpreted\, obstructing innovative approaches\, and impeding inclusivity in the field. This approach informs her translation work and brings in queer theory\, translation theory\, glitch\, hip hop\, & affective studies alongside more traditional methods such as codicology\, linguistics\, and historicism. Dr. Hostetter’s teaching involves the interplay between medieval and modern\, revealing what the Middle Ages can reveal about our contemporary world. She also is active in public-facing research\, operating a Substack\, Translations Beyond the Horizon\, as well as anticipating the publication of The Queer Life of Riddles (punctum\, 2025) a collection of creative-critical translations of Old English riddles. She is eager to work with students interested in pursuing their own independent research\, in a wide variety of areas. \n\nThis talk is part of our Fall 2025 Medieval Studies Seminar Series. The next talk in this series will be held on December 4 with Antony Eastmond (the Courtauld).
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/who-is-queer-translation-and-what-is-she-that-all-her-queens-commend-her-retranslating-verse-from-the-old-english-exeter-book/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/08/OEH-Trans-workshop1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251002T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251002T131500
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20250722T151056Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250917T182008Z
UID:10000595-1759406400-1759410900@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Medieval Studies Seminar Series - "Publishing in Medieval Studies"
DESCRIPTION:Lunch will be provided. Please RSVP . \nThis lunch talk will focus on book publishing across Medieval Studies from the editor of the ICMA | Viewpoints book series at the Pennsylvania State University Press and of The Middle Ages book series at the University of Pennsylvania Press. \nBetancourt’s visit will continue with a lecture hosted by the Department of Art & Archaeology\, Like the Dawn of Creation: Byzantine Fragments in the Queer Imagination\, on October 2 at 4:30pm in 010 East Pyne. \nRoland Betancourt is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery of Art. He also holds the distinction of Chancellor’s Professor at the University of California\, Irvine and was a 2023 Guggenheim Fellow. He is an expert on the art and culture of the Byzantine Empire\, and his work also looks at the uses of the medieval past in the modern world. His book\, Byzantine Intersectionality: Sexuality\, Gender\, and Race in the Middle Ages (Princeton\, 2020)\, won the Jerome E. Singerman Prize from the Medieval Academy of America and was a finalist for the Award of Excellence in the Study of Religion: Historical Studies by the American Academy of Religion. His forthcoming book\, Disneyland and the Rise of Automation\, will be out with Princeton University Press in early 2026. \n\nThis seminar is part of our Fall 2025 Medieval Studies Seminar Series. Additional talks in this series will be held on October 22 with Eric Goldberg (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)\,  November 6 with Ophelia Hostetter (Rutgers University-Camden) and December 4 with Antony Eastmond (the Courtauld).
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/publishing-in-medieval-studies/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/07/MED-Book-Publishing-Photo-1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250910T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250910T131500
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20250729T211114Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250905T205624Z
UID:10000596-1757505600-1757510100@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Medieval Studies Faculty Colloquium - "Diversity\, identity\, sin: New reflections on the 'birth of the French author' in medieval manuscript culture"
DESCRIPTION:Join Medieval Studies for our first faculty colloquium of the year with Julien Stout\, Assistant Professor of French and Italian. \nLunch will be provided. Please RSVP. \nThis event is only open to Princeton University faculty\, students\, and staff. \n\nBased on Prof. Julien Stout’s new book L’Auteur retrouvé\, this presentation examines a key chapter in the history of authorship—a topic which\, as current debates on generative AI and the criminal liability of writers and creators show\, is anything but “dead”. \nFocusing on vernacular manuscript culture from the 12th to early 14th centuries\, the book explores how the notion of authorship was both invented and subverted in early French-language collections arranged by author. \nThe central argument is that\, in the High Middle Ages\, the “French author” remained a marginal\, often ludicrous idea compared to the established Latin and Occitan traditions of the time. Despite being celebrated in monumental manuscripts\, French writers were often depicted as self-deprecating figures who claimed ownership only of what God could not author—their own sins\, turned into poetry. \nBy examining collections featuring authors such as Adenet le Roi\, Rutebeuf\, and Adam de la Halle\, this presentation argues that French poets—and the editors who transmitted their works—played a key role in redefining authorship\, engaging with broader cultural debates about evolving notions of “identity” and “diversity\,” understood both as individuality and as moral/aesthetic deviation. \n**Location is subject to change pending Fall classroom assignments. \n\nBook Exhibit \nAlain St. Pierre and the Princeton University Library invite the Medieval Studies community to the History reading room in Firestone Library (Floor A: turn left out of the main staircase) each semester to view recently acquired titles in all subject areas of Medieval Studies. The books for fall 2025 will be on display from the afternoon of Tuesday (September 9) through Thursday (September 11). Come browse!
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/medieval-faculty-colloquium-diversity-identity-sin-new-reflections-on-the-birth-of-the-french-author-in-medieval-manuscript-culture/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2023/01/colloquia-image-Barcelona-1-1024x454-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20240228T163000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20240228T180000
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20240126T191505Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240126T191505Z
UID:10000409-1709137800-1709143200@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Race Before Modernity Book Club: Unpacking Historical Perspectives of Race and Ethnicity
DESCRIPTION:The Race Before Modernity Book Club (RBMBC)\, in collaboration with Princeton’s Program in Medieval Studies\, invites you to our upcoming event featuring Suzanne Conklin Akbari (Institute for Advanced Study) and Helmut Reimitz (History). \nJoin us for an engaging discussion on the exploration of race and ethnicity in the premodern era! \nWe will meet on Wednesday\, February 28\, 2024 at 4:30pm in Chancellor Green 105. \nTo register\, please visit here. \nThe registration will be open until February 19\, 2024. \nThis event is open to the public
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/race-before-modernity-book-club-unpacking-historical-perspectives-of-race-and-ethnicity/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2024/01/RBMBCFebruary2024-Poster.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191211T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191211T180000
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20191023T195607Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191023T195607Z
UID:10000298-1576081800-1576087200@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Comparative Diplomatics: What can('t) Greek documents from Egypt tell us about Greek documents from Bactria?
DESCRIPTION:Rachel Mairs (University of Reading) will be presenting on “What can(‘t) Greek documents from Egypt tell us about Greek documents from Bactria?” \nAll are welcome. \nConveners: Tom Conlan (EAS/History)\, Helmut Reimitz (History)\, Marina Rustow (NES/History) \nCoordinator: Brendan Goldman (JDS). \n  \nTo receive announcements about the workshop and brief precirculated readings\, email Brendan Goldman at bgg2@princeton.edu. \n  \nSchedule of Upcoming Presentations: \nDecember 11 (Wednesday)\, 4:30 – 6PM\nRachel Mairs (University of Reading)\n“What can(‘t) Greek documents from Egypt tell us about Greek documents from Bactria?”\nChancellor Green 105 \n 
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/comparative-diplomatics-what-cant-greek-documents-from-egypt-tell-us-about-greek-documents-from-bactria/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191106T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191106T180000
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20191023T195222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191023T195222Z
UID:10000297-1573063200-1573063200@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Comparative Diplomatics -Making a Case: Pahlavi Documents from early Islamic Iran
DESCRIPTION:Khodadad Rezakhani (Research Scholar\, Mossavar-Rahmani Center) will be presenting on  “Making a Case: Pahlavi Documents from early Islamic Iran”. \nAll are welcome. \nConveners: Tom Conlan (EAS/History)\, Helmut Reimitz (History)\, Marina Rustow (NES/History) \nCoordinator: Brendan Goldman (JDS). \n  \nTo receive announcements about the workshop and brief precirculated readings\, email Brendan Goldman at bgg2@princeton.edu. \n  \nSchedule of Upcoming Presentations: \nNovember 6 (Wednesday) 6 PM – 7:30 PM\nKhodadad Rezakhani (Research Scholar\, Mossavar-Rahmani Center) \n“Making a Case: Pahlavi Documents from early Islamic Iran”\nChancellor Green 105 \nDecember 11 (Wednesday)\, 4:30 – 6PM\nRachel Mairs (University of Reading)\n‘What can(‘t) Greek documents from Egypt tell us about Greek documents from Bactria?’\nChancellor Green 105
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/comparative-diplomatics-making-a-case-pahlavi-documents-from-early-islamic-iran/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20191023T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20191023T180000
DTSTAMP:20260504T044510
CREATED:20191023T194536Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191023T194536Z
UID:10000296-1571853600-1571853600@medievalstudies.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Comparative Diplomatics: Multilingual Documents of Medieval Sicily and Peasant Studies
DESCRIPTION:Professor Hiroshi Takayama will be presenting on  “Multilingual Documents of Medieval Sicily and Peasant Studies.” \nAll are welcome. \n  \nConveners: Tom Conlan (EAS/History)\, Helmut Reimitz (History)\, Marina Rustow (NES/History) \nCoordinator: Brendan Goldman (JDS). \n  \nTo receive announcements about the workshop and brief precirculated readings\, email Brendan Goldman at bgg2@princeton.edu. \n  \nSchedule of Upcoming Presentations: \n  \nOctober 23 (Wednesday)\, 6PM – 7:30 PM \nHiroshi Takayama (IAS\, The University of Tokyo) \n“Multilingual Documents of Medieval Sicily and Peasant Studies”\nChancellor Green 105 \nNovember 6 (Wednesday) 6 PM – 7:30 PM\nKhodadad Rezakhani (Research Scholar\, Mossavar-Rahmani Center) \n“Making a Case: Pahlavi Documents from early Islamic Iran”\nChancellor Green 105 \nDecember 11 (Wednesday)\, 4:30 – 6PM\nRachel Mairs (University of Reading)\n‘What can(‘t) Greek documents from Egypt tell us about Greek documents from Bactria?’\nChancellor Green 105 \n 
URL:https://medievalstudies.princeton.edu/event/comparative-diplomatics-multilingual-documents-of-medieval-sicily-and-peasant-studies/
LOCATION:105 Chancellor Green
END:VEVENT
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