UNC Colloquium on Premodern Literature and Culture: Jamie Taylor (Bryn Mawr)
Donovan Lounge, 2nd Floor, Greenlaw Hall Chapel Hill, NC, United States“Indigenous Sovereignties in the Wife of Bath's Tale”
“Indigenous Sovereignties in the Wife of Bath's Tale”
“Trauma, Aurality, and the Wounded Orrmulum Manuscript (c. 1170)”
A special two-day symposium featuring a lecture by Professor Luciana Villas Boas (Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro) and a workshop by Professor Marden Nichols (Georgetown). Location TBD.
On Jan. 31, at 5:15pm, we'll be screening the short film Il Moro, followed by a 30-minute Q&A with the film's director, Daphne Di Cinto, in Donovan Lounge.
A special, one-day symposium featuring three important new voices in the study of Old English Literature: Amy Clark (Wake Forest), Stephen Hopkins (UVa), and Jennifer Lorden (William & Mary).
An undergraduate-focused event discussing The Witcher, led by Dr. Taylor Cowdery
Duke Medieval and Early Modern Works-in-Progress To receive the precirculated materials for the event, and for any questions, contact Dr. Kate Driscoll (Dept. of Romance Studies) at kate.driscoll@duke.edu. A workshop series for colleagues at Duke to present their work-in-progress on premodern … Read more
“Writing Radegund: Baudonivia, Venantius Fortunatus, and Gregory of Tours”
Cushman: “Ghostly Manslaughter” Kraebel: “Collectors and Editors: Four Early Rolle Anthologies” Rozenski: “Mystical Texts: The Representation of Books and Writing in the Works of Medieval Female Visionary Authors”
Cowdery: “Downward Mobility in the Canterbury Tales: Chaucer’s Manciple and Cook” Schwebel: “Palm Sunday, Roman Triumphs: A Crossover” Orlemanski: “Voice's Metonymy in Chaucer's House of Fame”