CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

THURSDAY, MARCH 10

ROOM Amberjack Barracuda Grouper Snook Tarpon

1 3 2 4 5 A Chivalry Pastoral Print & Renaissance Spanish 9:00– Care Persona Art Cultural 10:30 am Politics

10 8 6 9 7 B Early Establishing German Dominican Travellers’ 10:45 am– Modern Sanctity Texts Images Tales 12:15 pm

10a Lunch (1:00 pm) 12:15– Digital 2:00 pm Projects Roundtable

12 14 11 13 15 Misreading Mediating Medieval Genoese Urban

SESSION/TIME C 2:00– Marlowe Devotion England Merchants Memory 3:30 pm

17 19 16 18 20 D Subjects & Saints, English Italian Art & 3:45– Objects Shrines & Social Women Literature 5:15 pm Politics Networks

5:30– Conference Reception, Cook Hall Bayfront 7:00 pm

1 CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

FRIDAY, MARCH 11

ROOM Amberjack Barracuda Grouper Snook Tarpon

21 24 22 23 25 E Bishops & Fabrics & Shakespeare’s Classical Women & 9:00– Councils Textiles Royal Tradition Manuscripts 10:30 am Road

30 28 26 29 27 F Scholastic Holy Anglo-Saxon Commerce Cultural 10:45 am– Theology Women Gender & Translation 12:15 pm Commodities

30a Lunch (1:15 pm) 12:15– Performance 2:00 pm Roundtable

Plenary Session I: 2:15– “Mondino’s Assistant: SESSION/TIME 3:30 pm Imagining the Female Anatomist in Medieval ” Paula Findlen, Stanford University

4:00– The Ringling Museum 5:30 pm Tours

5:00– Ringling Museum Reception 6:30 pm Muse Restaurant Terrace

2 CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

SATURDAY, MARCH 12

ROOM Amberjack Barracuda Grouper Snook Tarpon

31 32 34 33 35 G Bodies in Heaven, Bolognese Communes Philanthropy 9:00– Chaucer Earth, & Documents & Control in 10:30 am Allegory S. France

10:45 am- Plenary Session II: 12:00 pm “Performative Reading & the Medieval Book” Claire Sponsler, University of Iowa

Lunch 35a. Beaumont & Fletcher’s 12:15 - The Maid’s Tragedy, ca. 1610 2:00 pm Black Box Theater (12:30 pm)

36 38 37 39 40 Networks I Social Orthodoxy Literary Hagia

SESSION/TIME H 2:00– Topographies in England Voices in Sophia 3:30 pm Transition

41 43 42 44 45 J Networks II Italian Liturgy & Material Perspectives 3:45– Mezzogiorno Society Culture & on 5:15 pm Sacred Space Byzantium

6:30– Twentieth Anniversary Banquet 9:30 pm College Hall Bayfront

3 THURSDAY, MARCH 10

SESSION A | 9:00–10:30 am 1. Chivalry in the Angevin Literary World (Amberjack) Chair: Frederic Baumgartner, Virginia Polytechnic Institute Knights in the Old French Fabliaux Daniel M. Murtaugh, Florida Atlantic University Gifts and Givens in Chaucer’s Book of the Duchess and the Historical Blanche of Lancaster Jamie Fumo, Florida State University

2. Print & Persona in Early Modern England (Grouper) Chair: Nova Myhill, New College of Florida Pasquil: A Roman Statue in London Letters Chris Hill, University of Tennessee at Martin A Closed Door: James I, Henry Jacob and Church Reform, 1603–10 John Morgan, Ryerson University “Is Lisle and Lucas Slain?”: Public Grief in the Elegies of Hester Pulter and Margaret Cavendish Dana Schumacher-Schmidt, Heights University

3. Pastoral Care in Medieval Italy (Barracuda) Organizer: Maureen C. Miller, University of California, Berkeley Chair: Lezlie Knox, Marquette University Byzantine Canon Law and the Greek Christian Spiritual Life in Latin Southern Italy (Twelfth to Thirteenth Centuries) James Morton, University of California, Berkeley Writing Pastoral Visitations: Two Cases from Thirteenth- and Fourteenth- Century Italy Francesca Magnoni, , Italy Canons, Canonries, and Pastoral Care in Northern Italy (1000–1350) Neslihan Senocak, Columbia University

4 Thursday 4. Art of the Italian Renaissance (Snook) Chair: Gail Feigenbaum, Getty Research Institute “Grammar” Issues within the Ionic Order from Late-Antique Spolia to the Renaissance Francesco Marcorin, Università Iuav di Venezia Revealing the Walters Madonna and Child with Saints by Pacino di Bonaguida through Scientific Analysis Glenn Gates, Walters Art Museum Playing with Fire: Did Bernini’s Ecstasy of St. Teresa Cross a Seventeenth-Century Line of Decorum? Franco Mormando, Boston College

5. Spanish Cultural Politics (Tarpon) Chair: David Arbesú, University of South Florida French Monks and Iberian Frontiers: La Sauve Majeure and the Kingdom of Aragon Rebecca Church, Macalester College The Reflected Power of Pedro I in thePatio de las Doncellas Sonia Dixon, Florida State University Comedia and Conquest: Spanish Drama and Imperial Expansion in the New World Ricardo Castells, Florida International University

Coffee Break | 10:30–10:45am

Thursday 5 SESSION B | 10:45 am–12:15 pm

6. Textual Representation in Medieval & Early Modern (Grouper) Chair: Glenn Cuomo, New College of Florida Bewitching Madness: Secret Workings of the Mind in Late Medieval Germany Anne Koenig, University of South Florida The Symbolic Use of Beguines in Medieval and Early Modern Germany Jennifer Kolpacoff Deane, University of Minnesota, Morris Herman the German and German Humanism Thomas Renna, Saginaw Valley State University

7. Travellers’ Tales: The Pilgrim, the Sailor, and the Captive (Tarpon) Chair: Miriam Wallace, New College of Florida Medievalism Now and Then: The Itineraries of William Wey Xiaoyu Edith Zeng, University of Texas at Austin “A number of miracles”: Travel Writing, Romance, and the Case of Miles Philips Timothy A. Turner, University of South Florida, Sarasota-Manatee English Captivity Narratives, Genre History, and Commercial Transformation in the Early Modern Period Daniel Vitkus, University of California, San Diego

6 Thursday 8. Establishing Sanctity: Authority and Patronage in Italian Religious Culture (Barracuda) Chair: Valerie Ramseyer, Wellesley College Elite Benefactions and the Early Medieval Charity Centers of Gregor Kalas, University of Tennessee, Knoxville Appropriating Divinity: Iconography, Functionality, and Authority in Latium Acheropita Copies Catherine T. Niehaus, University of Edinburgh An Old Church Acquires a New Patron: St. John Gualbert and the Basilica of San Miniato al Monte in Florence (ca. 1373–1450) Carol Anderson, Catholic University of America

9. Celebrating the 800th Anniversary of the Foundation of the Order of Preachers: Devotional Imagery and Dominicans in Italy (Snook) Organizer: Amber A. McAlister, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg Chair: Sally Hickson, University of Guelph Dominican Adaptations of the Madonna della Misericordia Katherine T. Brown, Walsh University Polychrome and the Semiotics of Divine Presence: Miraculous Madonnas and a Martyred Saint at Santa Maria Novella, Florence Amber A. McAlister Torquemada’s Meditationes and the Ninth Mode of Prayer: Spiritual Formation in the Dominican Order Angi Elsea Bourgeois, Mississippi State University

10. Early Modern France (Amberjack) Chair: Daniel M. Murtaugh, Florida Atlantic University Writing and Space: Rabelais’s Page as Hypertexted Landscape Leonard Marsh, La Salle University Towards an Ecocritical Exploration of the Late Renaissance Emblem: Vaenius’s Amoris divini emblemata Christine M. Probes, University of South Florida New World Massacres and Old World Rivalries in French Florida and la France Antartique: A Literary Perspective on the Violence of New World Expansion Brendan Rowley, University of Evansville

Lunch | 12:15–2:00 pm

10a. Lunch Roundtable: Digital Projects and Infrastructure (Snook, 1:00 pm) Chair: William R. Bowen, University of Toronto, Scarborough Elena Brizio, Georgetown University, Fiesole Campus Konrad Eisenbichler, University of Toronto Colin Rose, University of Toronto Nicholas Terpstra, University of Toronto

Thursday 7 SESSION C | 2:00–3:30 pm 11. Medieval England (Grouper) Organizer: Boyd Breslow, Florida Atlantic University Chair: Ben Lowe, Florida Atlantic University Ralph Foliot, Royal Clerk, Archdeacon of Hereford Ralph Turner, Florida State University Hunting and Falconry at the Court of King John of England Hugh Thomas, University of Miami John de Bauquell, London Politician and Royal Servant Boyd Breslow

12. Misreading Marlowe (Amberjack) Organizer: Sara Munson Deats, University of South Florida Chair: Flora Zbar, University of South Florida Eroticism in Hero and Leander Robert A. Logan, University of Hartford The Jew of Malta: Monstrous Villain or Scathing Satirist Sara Munson Deats Playing Favorites: Edward II’s Downfall Ann Basso, University of South Florida

13. Genoese Merchants at Home and Abroad (Snook) Organizer & Chair: Maureen C. Miller, University of California, Berkeley Wine and Mercenaries: The Importance of the Genoese in Hafsid Tunisia Joel Pattison, University of California, Berkeley Slavery, Concubinage and the Genoese Merchant residens mercantiliter in the Port of Valencia Debra Blumenthal, University of California, Santa Barbara How “Genoese” was Genoese Trade? The Late Medieval Evidence Jeffrey Miner, Western Kentucky University

14. Mediating Devotion: The Material Culture of Prayer in the Renaissance (Barracuda) Chair: Franco Mormando, Boston College The Impaired and Disabled at the Sacro Monte di Orta Kathleen Peters, Memphis, TN Image and Place in Marian Devotion: Three Cases from Early Modern Italy Sherri Franks Johnson, Louisiana State University Reading Old Books: The Seventeenth-Century Life of St. Bridget of Sweden (1303–73) Mark Peterson, James Madison University

8 Thursday 15. Memory and Commemoration in the Late Medieval Urban Sphere (Tarpon) Organizer: Elizabeth Mattison, University of Toronto Chair: Sarah Cartwright, John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art Remembering Collective Devotion: Remnants of the Bianchi of 1399 in Umbria and Lazio Alexandra Lee, University College, London Commemorating a Confraternity’s Conclave: Painted Arms on the Barcelona Choirstalls Angela D. Glover, University of Toronto

Coffee Break | 3:30–3:45pm

Thursday 9 SESSION D | 3:45–5:15 pm

16. English Social Networks (Grouper) Chair: David Allen Harvey, New College of Florida Gossip and Discipline in Late Medieval London Janelle Werner, Kalamazoo College From Gentleman Born to Gentleman Made: Grants of Arms and the Expanding Definition of Gentility in Late Medieval and Early Tudor England Kristin Canzano Pinyan, Rutgers University Fast Friends: Early Modern English Travelers’ Fellowships Abroad Philip Davis, University of South Florida

17. Theatrical Subjects & Objects (Amberjack) Chair: Claire Sponsler, University of Iowa Staging Disability in Medieval Drama Cameron Hunt McNabb, Southeastern University When God Becomes a Prop: The Bible in Sixteenth-Century Protestant Morality Plays Theresa Tinkle, University of Michigan The Movement of Objects Inside and Outside of Celestina’s Rubbish House Elaine S. Brooks, University of New Orleans

18. Placing Women in Early Modern Italy (Snook) Chair: Sherri Franks Johnson, Louisiana State University Impossible Choices? The MaternalTutela of Widows over Orphans Elena Brizio, Georgetown University, Fiesole Campus Pure le carne tirono: A Close(t) Reading of Machiavelli’s La Mandragola Konrad Eisenbichler, University of Toronto Et in Arcadia ego: Women and/in Roman Academies Paola Giuli, Saint Joseph’s University

10 Thursday 19. Saints, Shrines, and Politics in Medieval Italy (Barracuda) Organizer: Lezlie Knox, Marquette University Chair: Melodie Eichbauer, Florida Gulf Coast University Holy Contenders Caught in the Crossfire: Political Instability and Canonization Efforts in Treviso Janine Larmon Peterson, Marist College Saints and Families in Medieval Rome: Why There Was No St. Margherita (Colonna) Lezlie Knox Shrine Desecration as Political Performance in Medieval Ancona Bianca Lopez, Washington University in St. Louis

20. Art in Literature & Literature in Art (Tarpon) Organizer: David Arbesú, University of South Florida Chair: Virginia Brilliant, John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art The Representation of Meaning in Medieval Hand-Signs David Arbesú Art as Text: La châtelaine de Vergi in a Fourteenth-Century Ivory Chest Philip Allen, University of Florida Imagining the Chivalric World: The Representation of the Tournament in Spanish Golden Age Literature Claudia Demattè, Università di Trento

Conference Reception | 5:30–7:00 pm | Cook Hall Bayfront

Thursday 11 FRIDAY, 11 MARCH

SESSION E | 9:00–10:30 am 21. Bishops & Councils: Ecclesiastical Authority in the Central Middle Ages (Amberjack) Chair: Carol Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara Saints and Winners in Northern England: The Saxons, Vikings, Normans, and St. Cuthbert (ca. 875–ca. 1100) Peter L. Larson, University of Central Florida Ekkehard of Aura and the Lateran Synods of Pope Paschal II T. J. H. McCarthy, New College of Florida Do I Want to Be Diversified? Stephen of Tournai and the Navigating of Episcopal Finances Melodie Eichbauer, Florida Gulf Coast University

22. “Such stuff as dreams are made on”: Shakespeare’s Royal Road (Grouper) Organizer & Chair: Joseph B. Wagner, Kent State University “Sponged” or Becoming the Father in Hamlet Barbara L. Estrin, Stonehill College “The soul of Nero”: The Use and Abuse of Nostalgia inHamlet and Early Modernity Anthony DiMatteo, New York Institute of Technology “You have but slumbered here”: Dream Dimensions in A Midsummer Night’s Dream and The Tempest Marvin Hunt, North Carolina State University

23. The Classical Tradition in Late Medieval & Renaissance Italy (Snook) Chair: Carrie Beneš, New College of Florida Conceptions of Mythological History in Boccaccio’s Genealogy of the Pagan Gods Jon Solomon, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Ancient Spectacles in Fifteenth-Century Rome Anthony D’Elia, Queen’s University Ab Ulna condita: Relics of the Historian Livy in Renaissance Italy Jonathan S. Perry, University of South Florida, Sarasota-Manatee

24. Fabrics & Textiles: Between Faith and Fashion (Barracuda) Chair: William Tronzo, University of California, San Diego A Fashionable Legacy: Textiles, Clothing and Memory in Medieval Italy Joanna Drell, University of Richmond Textual and Textile Bodies: Performing Desire in Late Medieval Iberia Samuel Sánchez y Sánchez, Davidson College The Fabric of the Faithful: Textile Relics in Renaissance Italy Sally Hickson, University of Guelph

12 Friday 25. Women & Manuscripts: Lineage and Family Identity in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century France (Tarpon) Organizer: Kathy M. Krause, University of Missouri–Kansas City Chair: Anne Latowsky, University of South Florida Milk Ties: Negotiating Maternity in the Continuations of the French Seven Sages of Rome Yasmina Foehr-Janssens, University of Geneva Mothers and the Manuscripts of the Crusade Cycle: Text, Image, and History Kathy M. Krause A Tournament of Prayer: The Psalter-Hours of Jeanne of Flanders and theRoman du chatelaine de Coucy Richard A. Leson, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

Coffee Break | 10:30–10:45am

Friday 13 SESSION F | 10:45 am–12:30 pm 26. Re-Evaluating Gender Roles in Anglo-Saxon England (Grouper) Chair: Nicole Guenther Discenza, University of South Florida “Heirs of Noble Lineage”: Exo-Paradisal Humanity in Genesis A Morgan Shnier, New York, NY Ælfgifu of Northampton: Stereotypical and Quasi-Historical Treatments of Cnut’s Concubine Helen Damico, University of New Mexico Beowulf and Byrhtnoth: Medieval Literary Postcolonial Responses Jessica Trant LaBossiere, Pasco-Hernando State College

27. Cultural Translation in Early Modern English Literature (Tarpon) Chair: Julienne C. Empric, Eckerd College The Little Myth of the Hellespont Crossing Erin Felicia Labbie, Bowling Green State University In/digestion: On the Possibility of Eating Well at the Thyestean Banquet Lizz Angello, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, Ovidian Transformation, and the Actor’s Martyred Body on the Early Modern Stage Lisa S. Starks-Estes, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg Paternal Authority and Filial Obedience in Fifteenth-Century Florence and Seventeenth-Century England Taylor Corse, Arizona State University

28. Holy Women in the World of Catherine of Siena (Barracuda) Chair: Konrad Eisenbichler, University of Toronto Women, Religion, and Community in Late Medieval Rome James A. Palmer, Florida State University Catherine of Siena and Books F. Thomas Luongo, Tulane University Visions and (Re)visions: Imagery and Theology in Popular Urban Culture Alison Williams Lewin, St. Joseph’s University

29. Renaissance Commerce & Commodities (Snook) Chair: Dennis Romano, Syracuse University Alvise da Mosto and the Atlantic Trade in Slaves Steven Epstein, University of Kansas Fictional Knowledge: Venetian Claims to the Atlantic Ocean Genevieve Carlton, University of Louisville Hot Like Water for Chocolate: Plotting the Cultural Geography of Coffee and Chocolate Alexander Mirkovik, Eastern Michigan University Gertrude Richards, Florence Edler, and the Medici Manuscripts at Harvard Business School Robert Fredona, Harvard Business School

14 Friday 30. Scholastic Theology: Humanity and Divinity (Amberjack) Chair: Douglas Langston, New College of Florida [Un]Bounded Bodies: The Transgressive Sensuality of Rupert of Deutz Abigail Naomi Owen, University of Toronto Meister Eckhart and the Godhead Beyond God: Interpreting the Henads of Proclus Michael Fagge and Gwendolen Jackson, Ohio Dominican University Love and Beatitude According to Thomas Aquinas Robert Sweetman, Institute for Christian Studies Aristotle and Aquinas on the “Superhuman” Lily M. King, University of South Florida

Lunch | 12:30–2:15 pm

30a. Lunch Roundtable: Modern Performance of Early Modern Plays (Snook, 1:15 pm) Chair: Rhonda Lemke Sanford, Fairmont State University Monica Cross, New College of Florida Jonathan Epstein, FSU Asolo Conservatory

Plenary Session I | 2:15–3:30 pm Welcome: Donal O’Shea President, New College of Florida Presentation of the 2016 Snyder Prize

“Mondino’s Assistant: Imagining the Female Anatomist in Medieval Italy” Paula Findlen, Stanford University

Ringling Museum Tours | 4:00–5:30 pm Organizers: Virginia Brilliant and Chris Jones, John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art Tour I: An Introduction to the Permanent Collections Tour II: Special Exhibition: Ink, Silk and Gold: Islamic Art from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Participants will have free entrance to the John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art; both tours will begin at the Museum’s Visitor Center at 4:00 pm.

Ringling Reception | 5:00–6:30 pm | Muse Restaurant Terrace, John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art

Friday 15 SATURDAY, 12 MARCH

SESSION G | 9:00–10:30 am 31. Sexual & Celestial Bodies in the Works of Geoffrey Chaucer (Amberjack) Chair: Fiona Tolhurst, Florida Gulf Coast University Affecting Women and Masculine (Mis)conduct in Chaucer’sLegend of Good Women Glenn Burger, Queens College and The Graduate Center, CUNY Selling the “Bren” When “The Flour is Goon”: Grain Imagery, Sexual Commerce, and Eucharistic Corruption in the Canterbury Tales Rachel Smith, Portland, OR “To knowe onys forever”: Knowledge, Time, and the Self in Chaucer’s Treatise on the Astrolabe Lisa H. Cooper, University of Wisconsin–Madison

32. Heaven, Earth, & Allegory: Representing and Understanding the Premodern World (Barracuda) Chair: Amber A. McAlister, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg Proto-Object-Oriented Ontology in the Cosmological Diagrams of the Breviari d’amor Joy Partridge, The Graduate Center, CUNY Fortune by the Book Jessen Kelly, University of Utah The Grafting of Trees in Early Modern French Emblems Marc Wiesmann, Skidmore College

16 Saturday 33. Communes & Control: Policy and Administration in Medieval Italy (Snook) Chair: Margery Ganz, Spelman College War as Economic Stimulus in the Tuscan Communes, ca. 1100–ca. 1350 George Dameron, St. Michael’s College An Impermanent Bureaucracy? Public Administration in Republican Florence and Some Notable Notaries Leah Faibisoff, University of Toronto Pro verbis inhonestis et gravibus dictis...contra statum dominii: The Venetian Council of Ten and the Prosecution of Speech, 1310–63 Dennis Romano, Syracuse University

34. Reading Documents from Early Modern Bologna (Grouper) Organizer: Colin Rose, University of Toronto Chair: Nicholas Terpstra, University of Toronto The Complex Ties between Violence and Madness in Early Modern Bologna: A Provisional Appraisal Monica Calabritto, City University of New York Charting Social Mobility through Marriage in the Bolognese Archives Jennifer Mara DeSilva, Ball State University Documenting Crime: Record-Keeping and the Reform of Bologna’s Tribunale del Torrone Colin Rose

35. Philanthropy in Medieval Southern France (Tarpon) Organizer: Kathryn Reyerson, University of Minnesota Chair: Kathy M. Krause, University of Missouri–Kansas City Women and Philanthropy in Medieval Montpellier: A Case Study of Agnes de Bossones Kathryn Reyerson Cardinals and Their Testaments Joëlle Rollo-Koster, University of Rhode Island Per sans e malautes: Care at the Hospital of Saint Esprit in Marseille Caley McCarthy, McGill University

Coffee Break | 10:30–10:45am

Plenary Session II | 10:45–12:00 pm “Performative Reading & the Medieval Book” Claire Sponsler, University of Iowa

Lunch | 12:00–2:00 pm

35a. A Performance of Beaumont and Fletcher’s The Maid’s Tragedy, ca. 1610 (Hamilton Center Black Box Theater, 12:30pm ) Director: Monica Cross, New College of Florida

Saturday 17 SESSION H | 2:00–3:30 pm 36. Networks in Medieval Europe I (Amberjack) Organizer: Emily E. Graham, Oklahoma State University Chair: T. J. H. McCarthy, New College of Florida Network Analysis, Observant Reform, and its Digital Discontents Kathryn Beebe, University of Texas at Arlington Networks in Seventh- and Eighth-Century Rome: Possibilities and Problems Nicole Lopez-Jantzen, CUNY–Queensborough Community College Cultural Coding in the Hortus Deliciarum: Norman Material as Pro-Papal Sign Sarah Celentano, University of Texas at Austin

37. Rejecting, Reevaluating, and Mishandling Orthodoxy in Medieval England (Grouper) Chair: Robert Sweetman, Institute for Christian Studies Dissident Rhetoric and Digestive Distress in Late Medieval English Heresy Jamie Taylor, Bryn Mawr College Talking with the Dead: Anchoritic Influence on Death and Dying in Medieval England Joshua Britt, University of South Florida The Prioress’s Wonder Story: Things Not Quite Signifying the Love of Eternal Things Liam O. Purdon, Doane College

38. Italian Social Topographies (Barracuda) Chair: Paula Findlen, Stanford University Historical Landscapes and the Manifest Past in Jacopo da Varagine’s Carrie Beneš, New College of Florida Measuring Dante’s Infernal Journey: Sandro Botticelli’s Chart of Hell and the Calculations of Antonio Manetti Barbara J. Watts, Florida International University Locating the Sex Trade in the Early Modern City: Space, Sense, and Regulation in Sixteenth-Century Florence Nicholas Terpstra, University of Toronto

18 Saturday 39. Literary Voices in Transition (Snook) Chair: José Alberto Portugal, New College of Florida Commerce vs. Community: The Conflict between Commercial and Pre-Commercial Values in Rutebeuf ’s Le Miracle de Théophile Ashley Powers, Ohio State University The Honor of Letters: The Conflicting Roles Letradosof in Early Modern Spanish Literature Matthew P. Michel, University of Florida Peire Godolin/Pierre Goudouli: The Leading Poet of the Occitan Baroque William Calin, University of Florida

40. The Hagia Sophia: Recent Discoveries (Tarpon) Organizer: Ruth Dwyer, Toronto, ON Chair: Michael Decker, University of South Florida Curtain Rings in the Hagia Sophia as Related to the Celebration of the Mass Neil Moran, Toronto, ON The Emperor Justinian and an Oracle at the Hagia Sophia Ruth Dwyer The Subterranean Tunnels, Wells and Cisterns Beneath the Hagia Sophia Çiğdem Özkan Aygün, Istanbul Technical University

Coffee Break | 3:30–3:45pm

Saturday 19 SESSION J | 3:45–5:15 pm 41. Networks in Medieval Europe II (Amberjack) Organizer & Chair: Emily E. Graham, Oklahoma State University Networks of Dissent: An Approach to the Study of Religious Non-Conformist Communities in Late Medieval Languedoc Delfi I. Nieto-Isabel, University of Barcelona The Early Sorbonne and Spiritual Care of Women: Tracking Pastoral Networks in Medieval France Tanya Stabler-Miller, Loyola University, Chicago Iter directoriorum inquisitorum: The Life History of a Medieval Text, and its Readership Networks Robin Vose, St. Thomas University

42. Liturgy & Society in the Early and High Middle Ages (Grouper) Organizer: Paweł Figurski, Uniwersytet Warszawski and University of Notre Dame Chair: John Romano, Benedictine College Kunstsprache and Vernacular in the Bobbio Missal Erik Ellis, University of Notre Dame Charles the Bald and the Roman Canon of the Mass: Upheaval in Christian Usage of Symbolic Language of Authority Paweł Figurski Celebrating Predecessors: Episcopal Liturgy in Eleventh-Century Lotharingia Pieter Byttebier, Universiteit Gent and Columbia University

43. Built Environments of the Italian Mezzogiorno (Barracuda) Organizer: Carol Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara Chair: Joanna Drell, University of Richmond Intermediality as Poiesis: On the Permanence of the Ephemeral in Twelfth- Century Palermo William Tronzo, University of California, San Diego On the Limit between Heaven and Earth: Holy Men and the Cave Settlements of Matera and the Mercurion, ca. 1000–1200 Kalina Yamboliev, University of California, Santa Barbara Castle Swapping in Southern Lazio Carol Lansing Comment Valerie Ramseyer, Wellesley College

20 Saturday 44. Material Culture in Sacred Space (Snook) Chair: Malena Carrasco, New College of Florida Dextera Domini fecit virtutum: The Hand of God and the Lamb of God Anne-Marie Bouché, Florida Gulf Coast University A Rose by Any Other Name Elizabeth Carson Pastan, Emory University Depictions of the Jewish Altar in Medieval Altarpieces in Hessia Angela Kappeler-Meyer, Philipps-Universität Marburg

45. Perspectives on Byzantium (Tarpon) Chair: David Rohrbacher, New College of Florida Dark and Cold? The Byzantine Dark Age Environment Michael Decker, University of South Florida Female Holy Fools in Eastern Orthodox Tradition Svitlana Kobets, University of Toronto A Crusader Manuscript from Antioch? Reappraising the Provenance of Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, MS Pal. Lat. 1963 Philip Handyside, Stetson University

Twentieth Anniversary Banquet | 6:30–9:30 pm | College Hall Bayfront

Saturday 21 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 2016

Numbers are of sessions except where indicated by page number (as p13). Session chairs and organizers appear in boldface. Allen, Philip 20 DeMattè, Claudia 20 Anderson, Carol 8 DeSilva, Jennifer Mara 34 Angello, Lizz 27 DiMatteo, Anthony 22 Arbesú, David 5, 20, 20 Discenza, Nicole Guenther 26 Aygün, Çiğdem Özkan 40 Dixon, Sonia 5 Basso, Ann 12 Drell, Joanna 24, 43 Baumgartner, Frederic 1 Dwyer, Ruth 40, 40 Beebe, Kathryn 36 Eichbauer, Melodie 19, 21, p26 Beneš, Carrie 23, 38, p26 Eisenbichler, Konrad 10a, 18, 28 Blumenthal, Debra 13 Ellis, Erik 42 Bouché, Anne-Marie 44 Empric, Julienne C. 27 Bourgeois, Angi Elsea 9 Epstein, Jonathan 30a Bowen, William R. 10a Epstein, Steven 29 Breslow, Boyd 11, 11 Estrin, Barbara L. 22 Brilliant, Virginia 20, p15, p26 Fagge, Michael 30 Britt, Joshua 37 Faibisoff, Leah 33 Brizio, Elena 10a, 18 Feigenbaum, Gail 4 Brooks, Elaine S. 17 Figurski, Paweł 42, 42 Brown, Katherine T. 9 Findlen, Paula p15, 38 Burger, Glenn 31 Foehr-Janssens, Yasmina 25 Byttebier, Pieter 42 Fredona, Robert 29 Calabritto, Monica 34 Fumo, Jamie 1 Calin, William 39 Ganz, Margery 33 Carlton, Genevieve 29 Gates, Glenn 4 Carrasco, Malena 44 Giuli, Paola 18 Cartwright, Sarah 15 Glover, Angela D. 15 Castells, Ricardo 5 Graham, Emily E. 36, 41 Celentano, Sarah 36 Handyside, Philip 45 Church, Rebecca 5 Harvey, David Allen 16 Cooper, Lisa H. 31 Hickson, Sally 9, 24 Corse, Taylor 27 Hill, Chris 2 Cross, Monica 30a, 35a Hunt, Marvin 22 Cuomo, Glenn 6 Jackson, Gwendolen 30 Dameron, George 33 Johnson, Sherri Franks 14, 18 Damico, Helen 26 Jones, Chris p15 Davis, Philip 16 Kalas, Gregor 8 Deane, Jennifer Kolpacoff 6 Kappeler-Meyer, Angela 44 Deats, Sara Munson 12, 12 Kelly, Jessen 32 Decker, Michael 40, 45 King, Lily M. 30 D’Elia, Anthony 23 Knox, Lezlie 3, 19, 19

22 Kobets, Svitlana 45 Peterson, Janine Larmon 19 Koenig, Anne 6 Peterson, Mark 14 Krause, Kathy M. 25, 25, 35 Pinyan, Kristin Canzano 16 Labbie, Erin Felicia 27 Portugal, José Alberto 39 LaBossiere, Jessica Trant 26 Powers, Ashley 39 Langston, Douglas 30 Probes, Christine M. 10 Lansing, Carol 21, 43, 43 Purdon, Liam O. 37 Larson, Peter L. 21 Ramseyer, Valerie 8, 43 Latowsky, Anne 25, p26 Renna, Thomas 6 Lee, Alexandra 15 Reyerson, Kathryn 35, 35 Leson, Richard A. 25 Rohrbacher, David 45, p26 Lewin, Alison Williams 28 Rollo-Koster, Joëlle 35 Logan, Robert A. 12 Romano, Dennis 29, 33 Lopez, Bianca 19 Romano, John 42 Lopez-Jantzen, Nicole 36 Rose, Colin 10a, 34, 34 Lowe, Ben 11 Rowley, Brendan 10 Luongo, F. Thomas 28 Sánchez y Sánchez, Samuel 24 Magnoni, Francesca 3 Sanford, Rhonda Lemke 30a Marcorin, Francesco 4 Schumacher-Schmidt, Dana 2 Marsh, Leonard 10 Senocak, Neslihan 3 Mattison, Elizabeth 15 Shnier, Morgan 26 McAlister, Amber 9, 9, 32 Smith, Rachel 31 McCarthy, Caley 35 Solomon, Jon 23 McCarthy, T. J. H. 21, 36, p26 Sponsler, Claire 17, p17 McNabb, Cameron Hunt 17 Stabler-Miller, Tanya 41 Michel, Matthew P. 39 Starks-Estes, Lisa S. 27 Miller, Maureen C. 3, 13 Sweetman, Robert 30, 37 Miner, Jeffrey 13 Taylor, Jamie 37 Mirkovik, Alexander 29 Terpstra, Nicholas 10a, 34, 38 Moran, Neil 40 Thomas, Hugh 11 Morgan, John 2 Tinkle, Theresa 17 Mormando, Franco 4, 14 Tolhurst, Fiona 31, p26 Morton, James 3 Tronzo, William 24, 43 Murtaugh, Daniel M. 1, 10 Turner, Ralph 11 Myhill, Nova 2, p26 Turner, Timothy A. 7 Niehaus, Catherine T. 8 Vitkus, Daniel 7 Nieto-Isabel, Delfi I. 41 Vose, Robin 41 O’Shea, Donal p15 Wagner, Joseph B. 22 Owen, Abigail Naomi 30 Wallace, Miriam 7 Palmer, James A. 28 Watts, Barbara J. 38 Partridge, Joy 32 Werner, Janelle 16 Pastan, Elizabeth Carson 44 Wiesmann, Marc 32 Pattison, Joel 13 Yamboliev, Kalina 43 Perry, Jonathan S. 23 Zbar, Flora 12 Peters, Kathleen 14 Zeng, Xiaoyu Edith 7

23 INFORMATION

Registration The registration table in the Sudakoff Center Lobby will be staffed every day from 8:30 am to 5:30 pm; student volunteers will be available to hand out registration packets, answer questions, and provide extra copies of printed materials. Activities Your registration includes coffee breaks, free entrance to the Ringling Museum for the tours on Friday afternoon, and the receptions on Thursday and Friday evenings. The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art is particularly strong in the Baroque period but also contains some interesting earlier works. You will need your conference badge for admittance to the Ringling Museum on Friday afternoon; if you lose yours, please ask at the registration table for a replacement. If you wish to visit the Museum at another time, normal admission prices will apply; the Ringling is open daily from 10:00 am to 5:30 pm. Internet Access, Computers & Social Media There will be free wireless access for the duration of the Conference in and around the Sudakoff Center; the network is called EVENTSUD, and the password is welcome2NCF (case-sensitive). General-use computers and fee- per-page printing are available on campus in the Jane Bancroft Cook Library. Our website is www.newcollegeconference.org, which contains an online version of the program, interactive local maps, and other useful information. You can also visit us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/newcollegeconference. The official conference hashtag is#newcollegeconference2016 . Twentieth Anniversary Retrospective This year, the New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies celebrates forty years of scholarship and collegiality. In honor of the conference’s founding in 1978, we have created a new digital archive which features a searchable index of all prior programs and PDF copies of materials from the Conference’s early years. This can be reached from the “Conference History” page on our website (www.newcollegeconference.org/previous). For the duration of the Conference the Sudakoff Center Lobby will host a display about the Conference’s past for curious conference-goers to peruse. This will include a poster with newspaper articles and photographs from the Conference’s early years assembled in memory of Conference founder Lee Daniel Snyder (1933–2012) by New College alumna Michelle DiPietro in 2014, as well as laptops for exploring our new online archive. The Jane Bancroft Cook Library, which houses the Conference archives, will also display a range of Conference materials, and welcomes inquiries from any scholars interested in visiting the Conference archives.

24 We also honor Professor Snyder’s memory in the presentation of the second biennial Snyder Prize on Friday, before the first plenary lecture. The Prize, which comes with a cash honorarium, recognizes the most outstanding paper presented by a junior scholar at each Conference. The Snyder Prize is supported by the Lee Snyder Memorial Fund, which welcomes contributions. Flyers are available, or donate online at: http://www.ncf.edu/lee-snyder-memorial-fund.

Book Exhibit There will be a book exhibit by Scholar’s Choice in the main auditorium of Sudakoff Center. Promotional materials will also be available from a number of publishers.

Hotel Shuttles The following are the numbers to call for hotel shuttle pick-up: Marriott Courtyard (941) 355-8140 Holiday Inn (941) 355-9000 The La Quinta Inn (LQI) does not have an in-house shuttle. Accordingly we have arranged for a New College van to run between it and the College at key hours: 8–9am Thursday, Friday, Saturday LQI–Sudakoff 6:30–7:30pm Thursday Cook Hall–LQI 6–7pm Friday Ringling Visitors’ Center–LQI 5-6:30pm Saturday Sudakoff–LQI 9–10pm Saturday College Hall–LQI The trip takes about seven minutes, and the van will simply run back and forth during the appointed times. If you need transportation at a time when the van is not running, the #99 bus runs directly between the LQI (with a stop outside the hotel along Tamiami Trail) and New College (with a stop along Bay Shore Rd, outside Cook Library); alternatively, there are numerous local taxi services and Uber functions fairly well in Sarasota. For links to bus schedules, taxi service phone numbers, and more details of local transport, please ask at the Registration Desk or see the Local Information page of the conference website. =

This conference is supported by the New College Office of the Provost and the New College Divisions of Humanities and Social Sciences, with assistance from the John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art. The New College Business Office, the Office of Communications & Marketing, and Educational Technology Services provided logistical support.

We are particularly grateful to Mr. & Mrs. Abbott of Sarasota for their generous support of the Twentieth Anniversary Conference.

25 Committee Co-Chairs: Carrie Beneš and Nova Myhill, New College of Florida

Program Committee: Virginia Brilliant, John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art Melodie Eichbauer, Florida Gulf Coast University Anne Latowsky, University of South Florida T. J. H. McCarthy, New College of Florida David Rohrbacher, New College of Florida Fiona Tolhurst, Florida Gulf Coast University

Additional Support: Kim Bendickson, Business Office Kevin Çelebi, Educational Technology Services Kristi Fecteau, Social Sciences Daniel Hernandez, Humanities Jessica Rood, Communications & Marketing Scott Swanson, Educational Technology Services Jeff Thomas, Campus Space Scheduling Nicole van der Berg, Provost’s Office Shelley Wilbur, President’s Office

Student Minions: Zakary Morgan Bliss Aruj Sarah Olsen Stetson Cooper Michael Pulsifer Claire Craven Mink Ratcliff Victoria Deal Gabbie Salomon Lily Gonzales Samantha Sanford Angela Hodge Rory Sharp Heather Kendall Kaitlyn Sidwell Meaghan Klos Adelle Singer Lewis Lee Carlyle Styer Victoria McCullough Katie Thurson Eryn McIntyre Justin Williams Adilyne McKinlay Abigail Youngblood

26 Events, activities, programs, and facilities of the New College of Florida are available to all without regard to race, color, religion, age, disability, sex, marital status, national origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, or veteran status, as provided by law and in accordance with the College’s respect for personal dignity.

This program was designed by the New College Office of Communications & Marketing using the Caslon font family. In appreciation of the British Library’s recent commitment to Creative Commons licensing of digital images, images are reproduced from the British Library Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts (http://www.bl.uk/ catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/), featuring three fourteenth-century manuscripts of the Apocalypse: Royal MS 15 D II (the “Welles Apocalypse”; England, 1st quarter of the 14c; http://tinyurl.com/wellesap); Royal MS 19 B XV (the “Queen Mary Apocalypse”; southeast England, 1st quarter of the 14c; http://tinyurl.com/qmaryap) and Yates Thompson MS 10 (Paris, ca. 1370–ca. 1390;http://tinyurl.com/blyates10 ).

27 NOTES

28 ⬆ STAGE OVERPASS & BAYFRONT

BARRACUDA TARPON

MAIN AUDITORIUM: PLENARY SESSIONS

AMBERJACK SNOOK

BOOK EXHIBIT  

COVERED ENTRANCE

ACROSS COFFEE REGISTRATION QUAD: HAMILTON CENTER (Lunch & GROUPER Black Box Theater) ⬇

Harry Sudakoff Center N ☞ New College Conference on Medieval & Renaissance Studies 10-12 March 2016