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Sixteenth Annual ACMRS Conference<br />

Humanity <strong>and</strong> the Natural World<br />

in the Middle Ages <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong><br />

11–13 February 2010<br />

Four Points by Sheraton • Tempe, <strong>Arizona</strong>


Sixteenth Annual ACMRS Conference<br />

Humanity <strong>and</strong> the Natural World<br />

in the Middle Ages <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong><br />

11–13 February 2010<br />

Four Points by Sheraton<br />

Tempe, <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Hosted by


<strong>Arizona</strong> <strong>Center</strong> <strong>for</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong> <strong>Studies</strong><br />

ACMRS Staff<br />

Robert E. Bjork<br />

Director<br />

William Gentrup<br />

Assistant Director<br />

Roy Rukkila<br />

Managing Editor<br />

Todd Halvorsen<br />

Manager of Design <strong>and</strong> Production<br />

Audrey Walters<br />

Program Coordinator<br />

Emilie Roy<br />

Research Coordinator<br />

Leslie MacCoull<br />

Editorial Assistant<br />

Research Assistants<br />

Kas<strong>and</strong>ra Castle Kristopher Tiffany<br />

Cyndi DeVito-Ziemer Rebekah Pratt<br />

José Pablo Solis De la Paz<br />

ACMRS Advisory Board<br />

Albrecht Classen<br />

University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Roger Dahood<br />

University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Stephanie F. DeBacker<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Monica Green<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Amy Holbrook<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Frederick Kiefer, Jr.<br />

University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Cynthia Kosso<br />

Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Kari McBride<br />

University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Ian Moulton<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Corine Schleif<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Anne Scott<br />

Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Juliann Vitullo<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

2


General In<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

Conference Hotel: Four Points by Sheraton Tempe, 1333 South Rural Road, Tempe, AZ.<br />

Phone: 888-627-8132, 480-968-3451 (local); Fax 480-968-6262; Web: www.fourpointstempe.com.<br />

The conference room rate is $127 <strong>for</strong> a single or double <strong>and</strong> $10 additional<br />

per person <strong>for</strong> triple or quadruple (plus tax). To get the special rate, let them know you<br />

are attending the ACMRS conference.<br />

Registration will be open Thursday from 3:00–6:00 pm in the Four Points Lobby; Friday,<br />

8:00 am–5:00 pm <strong>and</strong> Saturday, 8:00 am–noon in the Four Points Tempe Lobby.<br />

Welcoming Reception will be held on the Four Points Patio, Thursday 6:00–8:00 pm.<br />

Session Locations: All sessions will be held in the Four Points Tempe conference facilities:<br />

Jerome Room, Ruby Room, Tempe South, <strong>and</strong> Tempe North.<br />

Book Exhibit: Publishers <strong>and</strong> booksellers will display their publications Friday,<br />

8:00 am–5:30 pm <strong>and</strong> Saturday, 8:00 am–4:00 pm in the Four Points West Ballroom.<br />

Beverage Service: Refreshments will be provided in the West Ballroom, Friday <strong>and</strong><br />

Saturday beginning with breakfast at 8:30 am, <strong>and</strong> during session breaks at 10:15 am<br />

<strong>and</strong> 2:45 pm.<br />

Banquet will be held in the Tempe (North & South) Ballroom, Friday 6:00–8:00 pm.<br />

Farewell Reception will be held on the Four Points Patio, Saturday 5:30–7:30 pm.<br />

Acknowledgments<br />

ACMRS would like to thank the ASU College of Liberal Arts <strong>and</strong> Sciences, particularly<br />

Divisional Dean of Humanities, Deborah Losse; the ASU School of International Letters<br />

<strong>and</strong> Cultures; the ASU School of Historical, Philosophical, <strong>and</strong> Religious <strong>Studies</strong>; the ASU<br />

Department of English; the ASU Institute of Humanities Research; the University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

College of Humanities; <strong>and</strong> the University of <strong>Arizona</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong>, <strong>Renaissance</strong>, <strong>and</strong><br />

Re<strong>for</strong>mation Committee (UAMARRC) <strong>for</strong> their financial support of this conference.<br />

Finally, we appreciate the staff at the Four Points by Sheraton Tempe <strong>and</strong> the many<br />

ACMRS volunteers whose assistance is invaluable to the success of this conference.<br />

Thank You <strong>for</strong> Attending the<br />

2010 ACMRS Conference!<br />

3


Conference Sessions Map<br />

Tempe North<br />

Tempe<br />

Ballroom<br />

Parking Lot<br />

Tempe South<br />

Walk across parking lot<br />

to adjacent building<br />

Jerome Room<br />

North<br />

West<br />

Ballroom<br />

East<br />

Ballroom<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Restaurant<br />

Business<br />

<strong>Center</strong><br />

Men<br />

Hotel Lobby<br />

Board<br />

Room<br />

Bar<br />

Fitness<br />

<strong>Center</strong><br />

Women<br />

Pool Patio<br />

Hotel Rooms<br />

4


Thursday, 11 February<br />

Pre-Conference Workshop<br />

1:00–4:30 pm<br />

◊<br />

The <strong>Medieval</strong> Manuscript Workshop<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Timothy Graham, Director of the Institute <strong>for</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>Studies</strong> <strong>and</strong> Professor of<br />

History at the University of New Mexico<br />

Registration<br />

3:00–6:00 pm, Lobby Area<br />

Welcoming Reception<br />

6:00–8:00 pm, Pool Patio<br />

◊<br />

◊<br />

Hors d’oeuvres<br />

Finger s<strong>and</strong>wiches<br />

Spinach <strong>and</strong> artichoke dip<br />

Mini chicken empanadas<br />

Mushroom caps<br />

Vegetable spring rolls<br />

Artesan cheese with crisps <strong>and</strong> crackers<br />

Bar<br />

Hosted wine<br />

Iced tea<br />

Coffee<br />

Water<br />

The reception is sponsored by the ASU College of Liberal Arts <strong>and</strong> Sciences; the ASU School of Historical,<br />

Philosophical, <strong>and</strong> Religious <strong>Studies</strong>; the ASU School of International Cultures <strong>and</strong> Letters; the ASU Institute<br />

<strong>for</strong> Humanities Research; the ASU Department of English; the University of <strong>Arizona</strong> College of Humanities;<br />

<strong>and</strong> the University of <strong>Arizona</strong> <strong>Medieval</strong>, <strong>Renaissance</strong>, <strong>and</strong> Re<strong>for</strong>mation Committee (UAMARRC).<br />

5


Friday, 12 February<br />

Session One<br />

9:00–10:30 am<br />

1a. Miracles, Magic, <strong>and</strong> Nature in Jewish Narrative<br />

<strong>and</strong> Thought<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

Richard Newhauser, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Miracle of the Bees in Joseph <strong>and</strong> Aseneth<br />

Françoise Mirguet, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Lion, the Witch, <strong>and</strong> the Werewolf: Magic <strong>and</strong> Monstrosity in the<br />

Theology of Nature of the Hasidei Ashkenaz<br />

David Shyovitz, University of Pennsylvania<br />

Conceptions of Nature in <strong>Medieval</strong> Judaism<br />

Hava Tirosh-Samuelson, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

1b. Satire, Sub<strong>version</strong>, <strong>and</strong> Spaces in <strong>Renaissance</strong><br />

French Culture<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Deborah Losse, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

“Par craincte de tomber en ceste vulgaire et Satyrique mocquerie”:<br />

Monstronsity as a Satire of Humanity in Sixteenth-Century France<br />

Bernd Renner,Brooklyn College <strong>and</strong> the Graduate <strong>Center</strong>, CUNY<br />

Prometheus <strong>and</strong> the Human Poetics of Maurice Scève<br />

E. Bruce Hayes, University of Kansas<br />

Topographical Umbilicoplasty: Gilbert Cousin’s Burgundiae superioris<br />

Evan Bibbee, Minnesota State University, Mankato<br />

6


Friday, 12 February<br />

Session One<br />

9:00–10:30 am<br />

1c. Cosmic Love <strong>and</strong> Cooking in <strong>Medieval</strong> Romance<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Dhira Mahoney, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Medea’s Magic: Women’s Relationships to the Natural World in Middle<br />

English Romance<br />

Misty Urban, Lewis-Clark State University<br />

Cosmic Romance: The Reunification of Divine <strong>and</strong> Human Love in<br />

Robert Henryson’s Orpheus <strong>and</strong> Eurydice<br />

Mahlika Hopwood, Fordham University<br />

The Raw <strong>and</strong> the Cooked in the Roman de Silence<br />

Robert Sturges, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

1d. Doubting the Cosmos <strong>and</strong> Weather in Seventeenth-<br />

Century English Literature<br />

Tempe South<br />

Chair<br />

David Hawkes, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

None Ends Where He Begun: Donne’s Skepticism in a Polemical Age<br />

Andrew Fleck, San Jose State University<br />

Secularism <strong>and</strong> Individual Application in Seventeenth-Century<br />

Devotional Writing<br />

Katherine Kickel, Miami University<br />

“How like a winter”: The Seasons in Shakespeare’s Sonnets<br />

Roy Neil Graves, The University of Tennessee at Martin<br />

7


Friday, 12 February<br />

Morning Break<br />

10:30–10:45 am, West Ballroom<br />

Session Two<br />

10:45 am–12:15 pm<br />

2a. Humours <strong>and</strong> Complexions: Changing Medical Theories<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

Monica H. Green, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Medical Anthropology in the Late Middle Ages: Peter of Abano <strong>and</strong><br />

Complexionate Medicine<br />

Matthew Klemm, Ithaca College<br />

Poison in the World <strong>and</strong> the Body<br />

Fred Gibbs, George Mason University<br />

Theodoric of York 4.0: Teaching <strong>Medieval</strong> Medicine <strong>and</strong> Natural<br />

Philosophy in the Modern Medical Curriculum<br />

Brenda Gardenour, Saint Louis College of Pharmacy<br />

2b. <strong>Renaissance</strong> Relations to Creation<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Anna Beer, Ox<strong>for</strong>d University<br />

Nature Serving Grace: George Herbert <strong>and</strong> the Natural World<br />

Chauncey Wood, McMaster University<br />

The Tender Trap: Humanity <strong>and</strong> the Natural World in Milton’s Paradise Lost<br />

John Mulryan, St. Bonaventure University<br />

Adam, Eve, <strong>and</strong> the Natural World in the Russian Religious Imagination<br />

J. Eugene Clay, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

8


Friday, 12 February<br />

Session Two<br />

10:45 am–12:15 pm<br />

2c. Discipuli Juncti: Undergraduate Award Papers<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Rosalynn Voaden, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Implications of the Interruption: From Madonna Oretta to the Squire<br />

Leah Faibisoff, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Spenser’s Aristotelian Ethos<br />

Katherine Cook, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Descanting on De<strong>for</strong>mity: The Irregularities in Shakespeare’s Large<br />

Chiasms<br />

Matthew Ramirez, University of Texas at Austin<br />

2d. The Nature of Man’s Relationship with God<br />

Tempe South<br />

Organizer<br />

Alaya Kuntz, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Chair<br />

William E. Bolton, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Margery Kempe’s Vision, Con<strong>version</strong>, <strong>and</strong> Early Life<br />

William E. Bolton, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Incarnational Theology in the Secunda Pastorum<br />

Alaya Kuntz, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Spiritual Crisis <strong>and</strong> Labor in the Secunda Pastorum<br />

Nathaniel Bump, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Intersections between the Natural World <strong>and</strong> the Divine in Tenth-<br />

Century Constantinople<br />

Shawn McAvoy, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

9


Friday, 12 February<br />

Lunch<br />

12:15–1:45 pm<br />

Plenary Session<br />

2:00–3:00 pm<br />

Plenary Session<br />

East Ballroom (Jerome & Ruby)<br />

Welcome<br />

Deborah Losse, Dean of Humanities, College of Liberal Arts <strong>and</strong> Sciences,<br />

<strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Introduction<br />

Robert E. Bjork, Director, ACMRS<br />

Nature <strong>and</strong> Artifice: A Changing Relationship in <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>Renaissance</strong> Europe<br />

Pamela O. Long, Independent Historian, Washington, D. C.<br />

Afternoon Break<br />

3:00–3:15 pm, West Ballroom<br />

10


Friday, 12 February<br />

Session Three<br />

3:15 pm–4:45 pm<br />

3a. The Natural World of Scholasticism: Paris in the<br />

Thirteenth Century<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Organizer<br />

Richard Newhauser, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Chair<br />

Spencer Eliot Young, University of Notre Dame<br />

The Eye of the Eagle: Philip the Chancellor on Synderesis<br />

Nancy Van Deusen, Claremont Graduate University<br />

The Ferment of Worldly Learning: Parisian Theologians <strong>and</strong> the libri<br />

naturales of Aristotle in the Early Thirteenth Century<br />

Spencer Eliot Young, University of Notre Dame<br />

The Nature of Morality / The Morality of Nature: Peter of Limoges on<br />

Seeing the World Rightly<br />

Richard Newhauser, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

3b. Anglo-Saxon Charms <strong>and</strong> Saga Heroes<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Carl Berkhout, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Archaic Magic of Wolf <strong>and</strong> Eagle in the Anglo-Saxon “Wen” Charm<br />

Marijane Osborn, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis<br />

“Water Connects, L<strong>and</strong> Divides”: Revisiting the Narrative Topography of<br />

the Sagas<br />

Maria-Claudia Tomany, Minnesota State University, Mankato<br />

Inside <strong>and</strong> Outside in Gísla saga Súrssonar<br />

Kendra Willson, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

11


Friday, 12 February<br />

Session Three<br />

3:15 pm–4:45 pm<br />

3c. Reconstructing Medical Knowledge in <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>Renaissance</strong> Literature<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Karen Bollermann, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Best Medicine? Medical Education <strong>and</strong> Practice in John of<br />

Salisbury’s Policraticus <strong>and</strong> Metalogicon<br />

Cary Nederman, Texas A&M University & Takashi Shogimen, University of Otago<br />

Malaria in Chaucer’s Time<br />

Anita Obermeier, University of New Mexico<br />

Dr. Rabelais: “Gargantua was born from his mother’s ear?!” Medical<br />

Mysteries <strong>and</strong> their Literal Link to the Natural World<br />

Nathalie Ettzevoglou, University of Connecticut<br />

3d. The Divine Purposes of Nature<br />

Tempe South<br />

Chair<br />

Ian Moulton, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Natural Disaster, Cosmic Purpose, <strong>and</strong> the Limitations of Human<br />

Underst<strong>and</strong>ing in the Meteorological Writings of Pietro Pomponazzi<br />

Craig Martin, Oakl<strong>and</strong> University<br />

The Voice of Nature in Tasso’s Aminta<br />

Patricia Patrick, BYU – Hawaii<br />

12


Friday, 12 February<br />

Featured Per<strong>for</strong>mance<br />

5:00–6:00 pm, East Ballroom<br />

The ASU Early Music Chamber Choir<br />

Per<strong>for</strong>ming medieval <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong> music celebrating the natural world <strong>and</strong> human nature<br />

Sopranos<br />

Alaya Kuntz<br />

Kristen Larue<br />

Lizzie Lee<br />

Dr. Catherine Saucier<br />

Altos<br />

April Cound<br />

Ilona Kubiaczyk-Adler<br />

Biruta Melessa<br />

Cheryl Tucker<br />

Tenors<br />

Travis Clement<br />

Daniel Gerwig<br />

Josiah Hagstrom<br />

Devon Howard<br />

Basses<br />

Joe Kim<br />

Thomas Kushibab<br />

Mike Nesvold<br />

Colby Picton<br />

Banquet<br />

6:30–8:30 pm, Tempe Ballroom<br />

Appetizers<br />

Fresh baked rolls<br />

Fresh salad with cucumbers, tomatoes, carrots, croutons, <strong>and</strong> dressing<br />

Dinner<br />

Choice of:<br />

Chicken Sienese<br />

Roast Sirloin of Beef with Au Jus<br />

Poached Wild Alaskan Salmon Filet with Lemon <strong>and</strong> Dill<br />

Grilled Portobello Mushroom Pyramid<br />

Chef’s Selection of Dessert<br />

Beverages<br />

Water, Iced tea, Coffee, Decaf<br />

Wine<br />

13


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Four<br />

9:00–10:00 am<br />

4a. Natural Law <strong>and</strong> Church Authority<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

Albrecht Classen, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Protecting the Holy: Limitations of Burial ad sanctos in Early <strong>Medieval</strong> Ravenna<br />

Edward Schoolman, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

Human Rights, Natural Law, <strong>and</strong> Authority in the Late <strong>Medieval</strong> Church<br />

Katherine E. Meyers, University of New Mexico<br />

4b. The Wilderness as Inner/Under-World<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Heather Maring, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Wilderness <strong>and</strong> Fairy in “Sir Orfeo”<br />

Paul Gaffney, Hiram College<br />

The Forest: Symbol <strong>for</strong> Man’s Own Nature?<br />

Carlie Shurtliff, University of Utah<br />

4c. Catholic <strong>and</strong> Protestant Views of the Book of Nature<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Miriam Y. Miller, University of New Orleans, Emerita<br />

“Otrosi semeja el omne al arbol trastornado”: Nature, Man <strong>and</strong> Morality<br />

in Don Juan Manuel’s Libro del cauallero et del escudero<br />

Maria Cecilia Ruiz, University of San Diego<br />

The Lutheran Book of Nature<br />

Kathleen Crowther, University of Oklahoma<br />

14


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Morning Break<br />

10:00–10:15 am, West Ballroom<br />

Session Five<br />

10:15–11:15 am<br />

5a. Natural Harmonies <strong>and</strong> Ontologies<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

Cynthia Kosso, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Nature’s Good Husb<strong>and</strong>ry: Life Indoors <strong>and</strong> Out in Bartholomeus<br />

Anglicus’s On the Properties of Things<br />

Anthony Colaianne, Virginia Tech<br />

The Souls of Rocks <strong>and</strong> Plants<br />

Eleanor Kaufman, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

5b. <strong>Medieval</strong> Body Worlds<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Robert Sturges, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Bursting Brains <strong>and</strong> Laudable Pus: The Spectacular Economy of Flesh<br />

<strong>and</strong> Fluids in <strong>Medieval</strong> Medicine <strong>and</strong> Drama<br />

Sarah M. Owens, Adams State College<br />

Visible Virgins <strong>and</strong> their Problematic Female Bodies: Per<strong>for</strong>mances<br />

of Virginity in Seinte Margarete <strong>and</strong> in St. Julian of Norwich’s Book of<br />

Showings<br />

Alissa Magorian, Cali<strong>for</strong>nia Polytechnic State University<br />

15


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Five<br />

10:15–11:15 am<br />

5c. Symbolic <strong>and</strong> Spiritual Places<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Juliann Vitullo, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Spatiality in Dante’s Vita Nuova: Human Beings on Earth, in the Cosmos,<br />

<strong>and</strong> in Heaven<br />

Dino Cervigni, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill<br />

The Right Fit: Exploratory Piety <strong>and</strong> the Navigatio sancti Brendai abbatis<br />

Blair Citron, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis<br />

5d. Patronage <strong>and</strong> Politics in the Late Middle Ages <strong>and</strong> the<br />

<strong>Renaissance</strong> (continued as 6d.)<br />

Tempe South<br />

Chair<br />

Fred Kiefer, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Patterns in Court Per<strong>for</strong>mances under Elizabeth I<br />

James Forse, Bowling Green State University<br />

Lodgers as Rational Economic Actors: Humanity, Botany, <strong>and</strong> Profit at<br />

the Inns of Court<br />

John Garrison, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis<br />

Facilitating the Lieta Fine: Governmental Oversight <strong>and</strong> Plot Resolution<br />

in Sixteenth-Century Italian Comic Theater<br />

Erica Westhoff, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

The Portrait of Edward Grimston: Contextualizing an Artifact<br />

Compton Reeves, Ohio University<br />

Morning Break<br />

11:15–11:30 am, West Ballroom<br />

16


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Six<br />

11:30 am–12:45 pm<br />

6a. Forests <strong>and</strong> Mountains in Germanic Culture<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

John Alex<strong>and</strong>er, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

ze walde nâch âventiure reit: An Ecocritical Approach to the Forest of<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> German Arthurian Romance<br />

Michael P. Hougentogler, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

Mountains as Epistemological Challenges in <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> Early<br />

Modern Literature<br />

Albrecht Classen, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Crossing the Boundaries of the Civic, the Natural, <strong>and</strong> the Supernatural<br />

Wm. Brad<strong>for</strong>d Smith, Oglethorpe University<br />

6b. Nature, the Natural Order, <strong>and</strong> the “Sweet Science” in<br />

<strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong> Music<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Catherine Saucier, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Interplay of Presence <strong>and</strong> Meaning in Carolingian Music Theory<br />

Blair Sullivan, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Los Angeles<br />

Root, Branch, <strong>and</strong> Flower: Lineage <strong>and</strong> Fecundity in the Versified Offices<br />

<strong>for</strong> St. Anne<br />

Michael Alan Anderson, Eastman School of Music<br />

For “such as desire to . . . taste . . . so ravishing a Sweet Science”: Self-Help<br />

Lute Books in Early Modern Engl<strong>and</strong><br />

Tom Flanigan, Idaho State University<br />

17


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Six<br />

11:30 am–12:45 pm<br />

6c. The Language of God<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Sherry L. Reames, Emerita, University of Wisconsin, Madison<br />

Julian of Norwich <strong>and</strong> the Word of God<br />

Barbara Zimbalist, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia, Davis<br />

The Apophatic Metaphor in The Cloud of Unknowing<br />

Ronald Stottlemyer, Carroll College<br />

6d. Patronage <strong>and</strong> Politics in the Late Middle Ages <strong>and</strong> the<br />

<strong>Renaissance</strong> (continued from 5d.)<br />

Tempe South<br />

See 5d. (pg. 16) <strong>for</strong> details.<br />

Lunch Break<br />

12:45–2:00 pm<br />

ACMRS Advisory Board Luncheon<br />

12:45–2:00 pm, Pool Patio<br />

18


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Seven<br />

2:00–3:30 pm<br />

7a. Decoding Nature: Flora <strong>and</strong> Fauna in <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> Early<br />

Modern Art<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Chair<br />

Lori Eshleman, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Retrieving Nature: Decoding the Content of Germanic Animal Art<br />

Christopher Roberts, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Freiberg’s Tulip Pulpit: Hybrid Nature <strong>and</strong> Civic Politics<br />

Guita Lamsechi, University of Toronto<br />

Friar Bernardino de Sahagun’s “Florentine Codex” in Light of <strong>Medieval</strong><br />

Traditions<br />

Laura Kilian, University of Oregon<br />

7b. Allegorizing <strong>and</strong> Domesticating the Natural World<br />

Ruby Room<br />

Chair<br />

Mary Bjork, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

To Tame “Wild Nature”: Humans <strong>and</strong> the Domestication of the Natural<br />

World in Early Modern Engl<strong>and</strong><br />

Joanna Kucinski, North Carolina Central University<br />

“The Queen in the Tempest”: An Important New Manuscript Source <strong>for</strong><br />

Relationships between Early Modern English Natural Science <strong>and</strong> the<br />

Humanities<br />

David Evett, Clevel<strong>and</strong> State University<br />

19


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Seven<br />

2:00–3:30 pm<br />

7c. Werewolves <strong>and</strong> Falcons in <strong>Medieval</strong> French Literature<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Markus Cruse, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

“Guillaume de Palerne”: The Shifting of Shape <strong>and</strong> Identity<br />

Erika Hess, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Deduit d’Oisiaus: <strong>Medieval</strong> Reflections of Lost Pastimes<br />

Leslie Jacoby, San Jose State University<br />

7d. Infidels, Heretics, Witches, <strong>and</strong> the “Other”: Issues<br />

of Humanity in the Later <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong> Early Modern<br />

European Universe<br />

Tempe South<br />

Organizer <strong>and</strong> Chair<br />

Charles Connell, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Silencing the Witch: Demonizing <strong>and</strong> De-Humanizing Female Speech<br />

<strong>and</strong> Sexuality in Early Modern Scotl<strong>and</strong><br />

Sierra Dye, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Issues of Humanity in the Rhetoric of Crusade Preaching<br />

Charles Connell, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Experiencing the Other: Franks, Cosmopolitans, Networks, <strong>and</strong> Cross-<br />

Cultural Relationships<br />

William Marty, Northern <strong>Arizona</strong> University<br />

Afternoon Break<br />

3:30–3:45 pm, West Ballroom<br />

20


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Eight<br />

3:45–5:15 pm<br />

8a. Medicine, Race, <strong>and</strong> the Natural World in Sixteenth- <strong>and</strong><br />

Seventeenth-Century Mexico <strong>and</strong> Japan<br />

Jerome Room<br />

Dedicated to Asunción Lavrin, ASU Professor Emerita of Latin American History<br />

Organizer <strong>and</strong> Chair<br />

Maureen Ahern, The Ohio State University<br />

Mistaken Identities in the New World: Misinterpretations of the<br />

Natural World in Sixteenth-Century New Spain<br />

Millie Gimmell, University of Tennessee<br />

Trans<strong>for</strong>mative Topographies: The Natural World in Andrés Pérez de<br />

Ribas’s History of the Triumphs of Our Holy Faith (1645)<br />

Maureen Ahern, The Ohio State University<br />

A Holy Alliance of God <strong>and</strong> Nature: Jesuit Conceptions of Race in the<br />

Sixteenth Century<br />

Daniel T. Reff, The Ohio State University<br />

8b. Harlots, Catholics, <strong>and</strong> Villains: How Identity Gets Lost<br />

in Early Modern Engl<strong>and</strong><br />

Ruby Room<br />

Organizer <strong>and</strong> Chair<br />

James Wermers, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

Arguing with Davis: The Stones on Gliki’s Grave<br />

David Buchalter, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Bloody Depictions of the Early Modern Whore of Babylon<br />

Carmen Ortiz Henley, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Session 8b. continued on p. 22<br />

21


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Eight<br />

3:45–5:15 pm<br />

A Body Poetic: Identity in English <strong>Renaissance</strong> Lyric<br />

James Wermers, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

The Need to Leave <strong>for</strong> New Worlds: Travel Narratives <strong>and</strong> <strong>Renaissance</strong> Drama<br />

Cyndi Headley, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

8c. Humans <strong>and</strong> Beasts: Boundaries <strong>and</strong> Identities in Nature<br />

Tempe North<br />

Chair<br />

Roger Dahood, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

The Watchdogs of the Soul: The Role of Dogs in the Spiritual Salvation of<br />

Robert the Devil<br />

Laurence Erussard, Hobart <strong>and</strong> William Smith College<br />

“The animal that no one dares name”: Digby 86 <strong>and</strong> the Construction of<br />

Linguistic Identities in Post-Conquest Engl<strong>and</strong><br />

Mimi Godfrey, Folger Shakespeare Library<br />

Poaching in Middle English Popular Literature<br />

Jacqueline Stuhmiller, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee<br />

22


Saturday, 13 February<br />

Session Eight<br />

3:45–5:15 pm<br />

8d. Medical <strong>and</strong> Sexual Misogyny in <strong>Medieval</strong> <strong>and</strong><br />

<strong>Renaissance</strong> Society<br />

Tempe South<br />

Chair<br />

Retha Warnicke, <strong>Arizona</strong> State University<br />

“The Prince’s grace person”: Prince Edward, Children’s Embodiment,<br />

<strong>and</strong> Per<strong>for</strong>mative Masculinity in Early Modern Educational Theory <strong>and</strong><br />

Practice<br />

Eric De Barros, Colgate University<br />

Diseases <strong>and</strong> Casualties This Week: Women <strong>and</strong> the Tabulating of Death<br />

in Early Modern London<br />

Richelle Munkhoff, University of Colorado, Boulder<br />

Of Incontinence <strong>and</strong> Incontinentia: Women’s Flatulence in Rustico Filippi<br />

Fabian Alfie, University of <strong>Arizona</strong><br />

Farewell Reception<br />

5:30–7:30 pm, Pool Patio<br />

Light hors d’oeuvres<br />

Hosted wine, beer, soft drinks, <strong>and</strong> bottled water<br />

Cash bar<br />

Thank You <strong>for</strong> Attending the<br />

2010 ACMRS Conference!<br />

23


A<br />

Ahern, Maureen, 21<br />

Alex<strong>and</strong>er, John, 17<br />

Alfie, Fabian, 23<br />

Anderson, Michael Alan, 177<br />

B<br />

Beer, Anna, 8<br />

Berkhout, Carl, 11<br />

Bibbee, Evan, 6<br />

Bjork, Mary, 19<br />

Bjork, Robert E., 2, 10<br />

Bollermann, Karen, 12<br />

Bolton, William E., 9<br />

Buchalter, David, 21<br />

Bump, Nathaniel, 9<br />

C<br />

Castle, Kas<strong>and</strong>ra, 2<br />

Cervigni, Dino, 166<br />

Citron, Blair, 166<br />

Classen, Albrecht, 2, 14, 17<br />

Clay, Eugene J., 8<br />

Colaianne, Anthony, 16<br />

Connell, Charles, 20<br />

Cook, Katherine, 9<br />

Crowther, Kathleen, 15<br />

Cruse, Markus, 20<br />

D<br />

Dahood, Roger, 2, 22<br />

DeBacker, Stephanie F., 2<br />

de Barros, Eric, 23<br />

DeVito-Ziemer, Cyndi, 2<br />

Dye, Sierra, 20<br />

E<br />

Erussard, Laurence, 22<br />

Eshleman, Lori, 19<br />

Ettzevoglou, Nathalie, 12<br />

Evett, David, 19<br />

F<br />

Faibisoff, Leah, 9<br />

Flanigan, Tom, 177<br />

Fleck, Andrew, 7<br />

Forse, James, 16<br />

G<br />

Gaffney, Paul, 14<br />

Gardenour, Brenda, 8<br />

Garrison, John, 16<br />

Gentrup, William, 2<br />

Gibbs, Fred, 8<br />

Gimmell, Millie, 21<br />

Index of Participants<br />

Godfrey, Mimi, 22<br />

Graham, Timothy, 5<br />

Graves, Roy Neil, 7<br />

Green, Monica, 2, 8<br />

H<br />

Halvorsen, Todd, 2<br />

Hawkes, David, 7<br />

Hayes, Bruce E., 6<br />

Headley, Cyndi, 22<br />

Henley, Carmen Ortiz, 21<br />

Hess, Erika, 20<br />

Holbrook, Amy, 2<br />

Hopwood, Mahlika, 7<br />

Hougentogler, Michael P., 17<br />

J<br />

Jacoby, Leslie, 20<br />

K<br />

Kaufman, Eleanor, 16<br />

Kickel, Katherine, 7<br />

Kiefer, Jr., Frederick, 2, 16<br />

Kilian, Laura, 19<br />

Klemm, Matthew, 8<br />

Kosso, Cynthia, 2, 16<br />

Kucinski, Joanna, 19<br />

Kuntz, Alaya, 9<br />

L<br />

Lamsechi, Guita, 19<br />

Long, Pamela O., 10<br />

Losse, Deborah, 3, 6, 10<br />

M<br />

MacCoull. Leslie, 2<br />

Magorian, Alissa, 16<br />

Mahoney, Dhira, 7<br />

Maring, Heather, 14<br />

Martin, Craig, 12<br />

Marty, William, 20<br />

McAvoy, Shawn, 9<br />

McBride, Kari, 2<br />

Meyers, Katherine E., 14<br />

Miller, Miriam Y., 15<br />

Mirguet, Françoise, 6<br />

Moulton, Ian, 2, 12<br />

Mulryan, John, 8<br />

Munkhoff, Richelle, 23<br />

N<br />

Nederman, Cary, 12<br />

Newhauser, Richard, 6, 11<br />

O<br />

Obermeier, Anita, 12<br />

24<br />

Osborn, Marijane, 11<br />

Owens, Sarah M., 16<br />

P<br />

Patrick, Patricia, 12<br />

Pratt, Rebekah, 2<br />

R<br />

Ramirez, Matthew, 9<br />

Reames, Sherry L., 18<br />

Reeves, Compton, 16<br />

Reff, Daniel T., 21<br />

Renner, Bernd, 6<br />

Roberts, Christopher, 19<br />

Roy, Emilie, 2<br />

Ruiz, Maria Cecilia, 15<br />

Rukkila, Roy, 2<br />

S<br />

Saucier, Catherine, 177<br />

Schleif, Corine, 2<br />

Schoolman, Edward, 14<br />

Scott, Anne, 2<br />

Shurtliff, Carlie, 14<br />

Shyovitz, David, 6<br />

Smith, Wm. Brad<strong>for</strong>d, 17<br />

Solis De la Paz, José Pablo, 2<br />

Stottlemyer, Ronald, 18<br />

Stuhmiller, Jacqueline, 22<br />

Sturges, Robert, 7, 16<br />

Sullivan, Blair, 177<br />

T<br />

Tiffany, Kristopher, 2<br />

Tirosh-Samuelson, Hava, 6<br />

Tomany, Maria-Claudia, 11<br />

U<br />

Urban, Misty, 7<br />

V<br />

Van Deusen, Nancy, 11<br />

Vitullo, Juliann, 2, 166<br />

Voaden, Rosalynn, 9<br />

W<br />

Walters, Audrey, 2<br />

Warnicke, Retha, 23<br />

Wermers, James, 21, 22<br />

Westhoff, Erica, 16<br />

Willson, Kendra, 11<br />

Wood, Chauncey, 8<br />

Y<br />

Young, Spencer Eliot, 11<br />

Z<br />

Zimbalist, Barbara, 18

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