Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley

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Workshops

Each semester a group of graduate students will submit their work up for discussion and comments by their peers. Each meeting will be devoted to the productive criticism and development of the essay, article, conference paper, or dissertation chapter at hand. The dialogue tends to be highly stimulating and helpful for all of the participants. 

Spring 2010:

  • February 5th - Benjamin A. Saltzman – “Suspicion, Secrecy, and the Hermeneutics of Elene
  • February 26th - Katie Malczyk - "'Daz aber dû verswîgen solt:' Self Muting of the Female Lyric Voice in Reinmar" 
  • March 5th - Matthew Sergi – "A People's History of the English Language"
  • March 12th - R. D. Perry - "Ostentatious Orthodoxy: E Museo 35 & Spectacular Religiosity in Fifteenth-Century England"
  • April 2nd - Molly Jacobs - "Looking Back: Helga's Gazing in Gunnlaug's Saga"
  • April 9th - Andrea Lankin – TBA
  • April 16th - Alani Rosa Hicks-Bartlett - "The “Shameful Kiss,” or Disguise, Dissimulation, and Delation: Female Victory in the “Berenger au long cul” and “Castia Gilos'"

 

Fall 2009:

  • October 2nd - Andrea Lankin - Title: "Absent Histories and the Elided Expulsion in Laud Misc. 108"
  • October 9th - Katie Malczyk - Title: "An Education in Misogyny: Six Dialogues on the Dangers of Women in the Manuale Scholarium"
  • October 23rd - Molly Jacobs - Topic:  TBA (Skaldic poetry)
  • November 6th - Benjamin Saltzman - Topic: Late Anglo-Saxon rules of confraternity and formula letters for announcing the death of a monk
  • November 20th - Matthew Sergi - Topic: Gaming/dice/sport and the religious politics of chance in the Chester cycle

 

 

The high cross at Monasterboice, Ireland (Photo Credit: Benjamin Saltzman, 2007)






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

 

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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!