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The Seven Deadly Sins as Cultural Constructions in the Middle Ages
NEH Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers
12 July – 13 August 2004 at Clare Hall, University of Cambridge
This seminar will examine the cultural construction of moral thought in the Middle Ages using the categories of the Seven Deadly Sins, critically review recent scholarship on the sins, and make maximum use of the unique manuscript, research, and human resources available in Cambridge. The seminar will seek to deepen the participants' appreciation for the ways in which the conception of morality in the Middle Ages was a response to varying cultural factors, and will make the study of the sins available for inclusion in the participants' regular college instruction. The format of the seminar will combine individual presentations, guest lectures, and excursions to manuscript collections in Cambridge and to St Mary's Church, Hardwick.
The seminar will be directed by Richard G. Newhauser, Professor of English and Medieval Studies, Trinity University (San Antonio) and will feature lectures by the following faculty:
- Richard Beadle, Department of English, University of Cambridge
- István Bejczy, Department of History, Katholieke Universiteit, Nijmegen, Holland
- Paul Binski, Department of History of Art, University of Cambridge
- David Ganz, Department of English and Classics, King's College, University of London
- Ian Goodyer, MD, Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge
- Nigel Harris, Department of German Studies, University of Birmingham
- Sylvia Huot, Department of French, University of Cambridge
This seminar means to attract participants from a wide variety of disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Participants will receive a stipend of $ 3,250.
For information and application materials to the contact below.
For further information: see our website
DEADLINE for applications: March 1, 2004
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