Stanford - Berkeley - Princeton - Toronto Colloquium on Medieval German Studies
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This two-day colloquium features graduate work by students from the four above named institutions conducting research in the area of medieval German studies. Their papers are available to be read in advance (contact Kathryn Starkey at starkey [at] stanford.edu (starkey[at]stanford[dot]edu) for access to the DropBox folder). The afternoon sessions will be devoted to discussing the papers. Two highlights of the colloquium will be talks by Sally Poor (Princeton) and Markus Stock (Toronto) at Stanford and Berkeley respectively. Access to all events is free and open to the Stanford/Berkeley communities.
Schedule:
Discussion of pre-circulated graduate papers
1:30-2:15PM
Der Wechsel: Forms of Dialogue and
Media of Exchange
Erik Born, University of California,
Berkeley
2:20-3:05PM
Picturing Histories and Telling Times: How vision
becomes narrative in the Annolied
Gráinne Watson, Stanford
University
3:10-3:55PM
Spaces ad elevationem: the
Interplay of Visual-Acoustic Mise-en-Scène and Imagination
Nicola Vohringer,
University of Toronto
4:00-4:45PM
dum se vertit et bipertit motus in
contrarios: The Divided Subject in Twelfth-Centry Latin
and Middle High German Love Lyric
Kenneth Fockele, University of California,
Berkeley
Sponsored by the Department of German Studies, CMEMS, and the Department of Religious Studies