UPDATE: Zoom Event: Early Modernity Beyond the West: Carlos Grenier (Florida International University)
Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
CREEES Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
History Department
450 Jane Stanford Way, Building 260, Stanford, CA 94305
252
Join us for the third seminar, on Tuesday, January 17, at 4:30pm in Pigott Hall 252 for a conversation with Professor Carlos Grenier (Florida International University) on: Early Modernity through Biographical History: The Yazıcıoğlu Family of the Fifteenth-Century Ottoman Frontier
The seminar is part of the series, Early Modernity Beyond the West, which will take place in the winter and spring 2026.
Early Modernity Beyond the West aims to investigate whether and how the concept of early modernity can be extended to Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia between the 15th and the 18th centuries. The project brings together professors, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students from Stanford and from other institutions, who work in the early modern field in history, art history, literature, and religion. In this way, the group fosters reflection on the features and issues of early modernity.
Assessing the breadth and relevance of early modernity for Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia helps reconsider the concept on a global scale. In turn, defining early modernity as a transnational concept allows for more accurate analyses of each region’s specificities. Hence, the group’s guiding questions are: What are the defining traits of early modernity? What are the specificities of local experiences of early modernity? How do these specificities combine to delineate early modernity as a transnational concept?
The series is a Research Unit within the DLCL and takes place in collaboration with the Abbasi Program, CMEMS, CREEES, the Department of History, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, EALC, Religious Studies, and Renaissances.
RSVP for the Carlos Grenier talk and to access the Zoom link.