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MEMS Graduate Student Talks: Childhood as Metaphor in Gallus Anonymous

DATE CHANGE. A talk by Matt Koval, Thursday, April 21, 4 pm, Pugh Hall 120: “Childhood as Metaphor in the Medieval Polish Chronicle Gallus Anonymous” Scholars since the 1990’s have argued that children were far more important in medieval life than previous scholars assumed. But just how important was the consciousness of childhood in the […]

Medieval Archaeology Mini-Conference

Friday, April 1, 3:30 PM ~~ Marston Science Library, Room L136: New Perspectives on Medieval Archaeology. A mini-conference Speakers: Aleks Pluskowski, University of Reading, United Kingdom “Re-evaluating the fear of wolves in late medieval Europe: A multi-disciplinary survey of converging ecological and cultural change” Santiago Castellanos, University of León, Spain “Between kings and peasants: archaeological […]

Kalamazoo Congress sessions 2016

MEMS is sponsoring five sessions at the International Congress for Medieval Studies at Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo (May 12-15, 2016) Florin Curta is responsible for our involvement with these wonderful sessions (see below). In addition, the Congress will host the following presentations by UF faculty and graduate students: Session 53, Thursday, May 12 1:30 The […]

UF Honors Program in Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS in Mannheim): Explorations of the Holy Roman Empire

The 2016 program will be especially exciting! Look under “courses” for more information! Participate in the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Study’s summer program abroad in Mannheim, Germany:  Study and travel in Europe and earn six credits of upper-division Humanities credit.  Work closely with UF Center Directors Bonnie Effros (Professor of History, Rothman Chair […]

MEMS Graduate Student Talks: “The Example of Benvenuto Da Imola”

Alberto De Simoni (Classics), “Tradition in Its Making: the Example of Benvenuto Da Imola” Thursday, February 11 2:30-3:30 160 Pugh Hall Some 50 years after Dante’s death, Benvenuto is already the 14th commentator of the Divine Comedy. Benvenuto exhibits at least some familiarity with the work of his predecessors. Although he almost always neglects to […]

Mediterranean Crosscurrents in Juan Latino’s Song of John of Austria

Elizabeth R. Wright, Associate Professor of Spanish, University of Georgia A Brown-Bag Lunchtime Seminar, Thursday February 11, 12:00 (Keene-Flint 05—History Conference Room) Scholars of the African Diaspora celebrate Juan Latino (ca. 1516 – ca. 1590) as the first sub-Saharan African to publish a book of poems in a European language. Elizabeth Wright will discuss how […]

Call for Papers

Another year for MEMS Graduate Student Talks is upon us! Last year we had a number of remarkable presentations, and we hope to add to this in Spring 2016. If you have something you would like to present, please send an email  to Matthew B. Koval, who is organizing these talks. Presenters usually speak for […]

Blanton on Historiographies of Time

Friday, November 20 at 4:00 PM in Pugh 160,the third MEMS Graduate Student Talk of the semester Tim Blanton (History) “Whose Time? Which Past?: Some Reflections on Medieval and Modern Historiographies of Time” We are constantly under the surveillance of clocks. We wake up in the morning to the sound of an alarm; we anxiously […]