IMANA SESSIONS, 54th INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON MEDIEVAL STUDIES 2019


Session 215: Multi-Disciplinary Approaches to Ibero-Medieval Texts and Authors I: Lay Learning, Hermeneutics, and Didacticism: Papers in Honor of Mark D. Johnston

Presider: Amy Austin, Univ. of Texas-Arlington
Bernhard 208
Friday, May 10, 1:30 pm

  • Life after Life: Versions of Llull’s Vita Coaetanea as Didactic Texts
    Pamela M. Beattie, Univ. of Louisville
  • Influences and Intersections: Ãlvaro de Luna’s Didactic Text
    Abby McGovern, Albright College
  • From Post-Troubadour Poetry to Neo-Latin Lyric: Baroque Audiences and the Medieval Author
    Albert Lloret, Univ. of Massachusetts–Amherst
Session 273: Multi-Disciplinary Approaches to Ibero-Medieval Texts and Authors II: Self-Fashioning, Identity Formation, and Models of Life: Papers in Honor of Mark D. Johnston

Presider: John August Bollweg, Univ. of New Mexico–Valencia
BERNHARD 208
Friday, May 10, 3:30 pm

  • Context Is Everything: Advice for Noble Women and Authorial Self-Fashioning in Andrés de Li’s Summa de paciencia and Hernando de Talavera’s “Letter of Advice to the Countess of Benavente”
    Laura Delbrugge, Indiana Univ. of Pennsylvania
  • A Study of Alterity and Hybrid Identity in Multicultural Iberia as Represented in Flores and Blancaflor and Romances Fronterizos
    Carmen de Leon, Temple Univ.
  • Sanctii Vicentii, Beatus vir qui in sapientia morabitur: Vincent of Zaragoza in a Catalan Sermon of Vicent Ferrer
    Alberto Ferreiro, Seattle Pacific Univ.

Ibero-Medieval Association of America (IMANA) Reception and Banquet

Friday, May 10
6:30 p.m – Reception, Fetzer Lobby
7:30 p.m. – Dinner, North Fetzer 1055 (Pre-registration required)

Click here for Banquet information.


Session 360: Herbalists without Borders: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Herbal Medicine in the Iberian World

Presider: Robin M. Bower, Penn State Univ., Beaver Campus
SCHNEIDER 1155
Saturday, May 11, 10:00 am

  • The Latin Picatrix as an Herbal Resource
    Shalen Trask, Univ. of Waterloo
  • Tarsiana’s Electuaries and Sweet Herbs: Women and Medicine in Mester de Clerecia Poetry
    Matthew V. Desing, Univ. of Texas–El Paso
  • Tuberculosis and Medicinal Plants: From Avicenna to Colonial Mexico to Modern Laboratory Testing
    Oscar Beltran, Programa Companeros of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
Session 498: Literature and Court Culture in Medieval Iberia: A Session in Memoriam Nancy Marino

Presider: Paul B. Nelson, Louisiana Tech Univ.
BERNHARD 209
Sunday, May 12, 8:30 am

  • Marino on Manrique
    Gregory Kaplan, Univ. of Tennessee–Knoxville
  • Baena’s Cancionero and the Illusion of Orthodoxy
    Gregory S. Hutcheson, Univ. of Louisville
  • Nobleza, Grandeza, and Letras beyond the Canon: Literary and Textual Production in Trastamara Spain from Juan II of Castile to Carlos I
    Linde M. Brocato, Univ. of Miami
  • ¡Dejad que el lector colija!: los vinculos de Celestina con la tradicion paratextual esopica
    Rau;l Ãlvarez Moreno, Univ. of British Columbia
Session 528: The Politics of Consumption: Feasting and Fasting in Medieval Iberia

Presider: Martha M. Daas
BERNHARD 209
Sunday, May 12, 10:30 am

  • In the Kitchen? Female Saints in the Flos Santorum
    Cristina Guardiola-Griffiths, Univ. of Delaware
  • Breast Is Best in Early Modern Spain
    Emily Colbert Cairns, Salve Regina Univ.
  • Feeding the Machine: Food, Falconry, and Fashioning Hybrid Subjectivity in Pedro Lopez de Ayala’s Libro de la caza de las aves
    Michael O’Brien, Washburn Univ.
  • Medieval Iberian Drinking (and Feasting): Water and Wine
    Michelle M. Hamilton, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities

 


TO ACCESS THE COMPLETE PROGRAM FOR THE KALAMAZOO INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS, CLICK HERE.

Kalamazoo sessions sponsored by the Ibero-Medieval Association of North America 2019
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