Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Lunch Talks (disc.)
Medieval Studies Lunch Talks

Medieval Studies Lunch Talks have been discontinued. 

In the past, the UC Berkeley Medieval Studies program hosted monthly Lunch Talks, which took place on Fridays at 12:00 at the Lewis Latimer Room in the UC Berkeley Faculty Club. While GMB did not host these Lunch Talks, they were a great opportunity for graduate students to hear lectures by outstanding scholars. 

Past Lunch Talks have included:

Spring 2009

May 1
Frank Bezner, Assistant Professor, Classics and Comp Lit, UCB
"September, 1522: Destruction, Trauma, and the Writing of History in Late-Medieval Trier"

April 24
Ralph Hanna, Tutorial Fellow of Keble College and Professor of Paleography, Oxford
"Hermit Space and the Works of John Lacy"

March 6
Brantley Bryant, Assistant Professor of English, Sonoma State
"The Parliamentary Virtues of the Digby 102 Poems"

February 13
Michèle Mulchahey (Leonard E. Boyle Professor Manuscript Studies, University of Toronto)
"Where Palaeography Meets Iconography. Reading the Image of Thomas Aquinas"

 

Fall 2008

September 12
Chris Ocker, Professor of Church History, GTU/San Francisco Theological Seminar
"The Last Farewell: A Ritual Context for Religious Conflict in Late Medieval Germany"

October 3
Emily Thornbury, Assistant Professor of English, UCB
"Who Wrote Anglo-Saxon Poetry?"

November 7
Tommaso di Carpegna Falconieri, Universita' degli Studi di Urbino "Carlo Bo"
"Narrativity and Facticity in Historical Research: The Case of Giannino di Guccio"






Upcoming

Friday, 24 Feb 2012
05:00 PM - 07:00 PM
ASSC Conference - Keynote

Saturday, 25 Feb 2012
10:15 AM - 07:00 PM
ASSC Conference

GMB News

Register now!

Please register for "Philology," the 8th Annual Anglo-Saxon Studies Colloquium Graduate Student Conference, to be held at UC Berkeley 24-25 February 2012. Email ASSC2012@gmail.com before 16 February 2012 with your name, affiliation, and the events you plan to attend.

For more information, click here.

We look forward to seeing you there!

 
The Anglo Saxon Studies Colloquium

Eighth Annual ASSC Graduate Student Conference

"Philology"
University of California, Berkeley
Saturday, 25 February 2012

 

Login

A dose of medieval . . .

Pisces dicti unde et pecus, a pascendo scilicet. Reptilia ideo dicuntur haec quae natant, eo quod reptandi habeant speciem et naturam; quamvis se in profundum inmergant, tamen in natando repunt.

Isidore of Seville, Etymologies, De piscibus, XII.vi

 

If you would like to suggest a medieval blurb to include here, send us a message!