Spring 2023 Events

Friday, January 27: “Seeking a Distant Cure: Health Care and Travel in the Medieval Western Mediterranean,” Professor Nicole Archambeau (History, Colorado State).

Time: 5:00 pm

Place: Zoom

Click here to view poster.

In the fourteenth century people of all social levels traveled significant distances for health care. Narrative sources reveal the ill searched for a better doctor at a time when university-trained medical practitioners were an exciting new alternative. Sufferers sought out distant saints when local options did not work, and numerous people traveled to specialists, saintly and secular, for specific health problems. In contrast to modern assumptions that people in medieval Europe rarely traveled, evidence shows that the sick were willing to travel very far from home in search of a remedy.

This lecture was sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the Department of History.

Friday, February 10: “Miracles and Medicine: New Evidence for Healing in a Medieval Monastery,” Professor Winston Black (History, St. Francis Xavier University).

Time: 5:00 pm

Place: Zoom.

Click here to view poster.

Before the development of independent hospitals in the later Middle Ages, some of the best medical care could be found in monastic infirmaries, where monks and nuns provided natural remedies and spiritual support for patients, the elderly, pilgrims, and orphans. The Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk, England, was one of the largest monasteries in medieval Europe, and was renowned for its medical care, but historians know little about actual healing practices there. In this lecture, Dr. Winston Black discussed the recent discovery of a twelfth-century medical and religious handbook produced at Bury St Edmunds and used it to reconstruct the healing practiced there in a transitional period of medical history.

This lecture was sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the Department of History.

Friday, March 3: Professor Emma Lipton (English, University of Missouri).

2 pm, 7191 Helen C. White: Workshop for graduate students and faculty.

5 pm, 7191 Helen C. White: Public lecture, “Witnessing and the Theatrical Temporality of York’s ‘Last Judgment’.”

This talk argued that the York play’s depiction of the asynchrony of the act of legal witnessing—which always occurs in the present but speaks to past experience—provides a means of theorizing the complex temporality of the performance of the York Plays. In contrast to modern theater, individual Biblical episodes were performed repeatedly throughout the day on wagons at stations along a route that round through the streets of medieval York, so that a variety of episodes were performed at the same time. The “Last Judgment” draws on a theological model of time in which past and present interact to comment both on witnessing and on its own medium. The play’s disjunctions of temporality invite us to consider the ways that interactions between law and theatricality can potentially promote social change.

Click here to view poster.

Sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the department of English.

Friday, March 24: Professor Wendy Turner (History, Augusta University).

2:00 PM, Hagen Room, Elvehjem: Workshop for graduate students and faculty. Contact Dr. Walton Schalick for the reading (schalick@wisc.edu).

5:00 PM, Elvehjem L150, Public lecture: Age, Disability, and Retirement in Later Medieval England.”

Many post-modern people are shocked to learn that anyone lived to old age much less retired in the Middle Ages. Yet many people lived well past the most common age of retirement, 60 years old. Some medieval individuals retired early because of work-related disabilities. Other retired once age-related disabilities made continued work or community responsibilities impossible. This talk is about all of these things—ages and what they meant in medieval society, age-related disabilities and how those might change a person’s status in the community, and medieval retirement: what it looked like, and who might get to have one.

Click here to view event poster.

This lecture was sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the Department of History.

 

Thursday, April 6, 4 pm: Dr. Carole Biggam (English Language, University of Glasgow).

4:00 PM, Elvehjem L150, Public Lecture: “The Search for Tyrian Purple in Early Medieval England.”

The prestigious and highly expensive purple dye known by various names such as Tyrian Purple and Imperial Purple was closely associated with the Roman and Byzantine emperors and others in the most exalted levels of Mediterranean society. This talk will investigate the possibility, as unlikely as it may seem, that shellfish purple dye was seen in Early Medieval England, on the very edge of the “civilized” world. How could the early English afford such southern luxury? In investigating the situation in England, it is necessary to step into the realms of zoology, archaeology, linguistics, early literature and chronicles, art history, and chemical research, since this subject is fascinatingly multidisciplinary.

Click here to view poster.

This lecture is sponsored by the Department of Art History.

Friday, April 21: Graduate Association of Medieval Studies (GAMS) Colloquium with keynote speaker Dr. Erin Sweany (English, University of Indiana-Bloomington). Details TBA.

Sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the departments of English and History.

Friday, May 5: Professor Nicole Rice (English, St. John’s University).

Nicole Rice is Professor of English at St. John’s University. She is the author of Lay Piety and Religious Discipline in Middle English Literature (Cambridge, 2008), co-author of The Civic Cycles: Artisan Drama and Identity in Premodern England (Notre Dame, 2015), and author of numerous articles on late medieval religious culture, social life, and expressive modes such as prose, poetry, and drama. He most recent book is Hospitals and Literary Production in England, 1350-1550 (Notre Dame, 2023).

2:00pm, 7191 Helen C. White, Workshop for graduate students and faculty.

5:00pm, 7191 Helen C. White, Public Lecture. This talk explores late medieval English hospitals as cultural and literary institutions: sites for the writing, copying, reading, and performance of diverse texts. The discussion will touch on a range of genres, including drama, medical works, poetry, and satire.

Sponsored by the Anonymous Fund and the departments of English and History.