CUNY-Graduate Center
Medieval Studies
Annual Graduate Student Conference,
March 12, 2010
Intimacy: Family, Fealty, and Friendship in the Middle Ages
We are pleased to announce a graduate student conference to be held on Friday, March 12, 2010 at The City University of New York-Graduate Center in New York, NY.
Possible topics include:
Spiritual Devotion
Bridal Mysticism
Ecstatic Union Family
Bonds and Marriage Beds
Husbands and Wives
The extended family
Parents and Children
Fealty
Liege-Lord Bonds
Chivalric Code
Romance
Courtly Love
Friendship
Adulterous Bonds
The value of friendship
Conflicts of Love and Loyalty
Heterosexual/Homosexual Relationships
Homosocial/Heterosocial Bonds
The priority of friendship over other intimate bonds
According to Aristotle, the social unit upon which political states depend is the family. Indeed, the family is a microcosm of human activity, an environment that, in many ways, determines how its members interpret the realities of their social, cultural, political, economic, and religious circumstances.
The family, however, is not a static social construct. From Late Antiquity to the Late Middle Ages, the changing landscape of the medieval world has helped to shape the nature and objectives of various kinship structures. Whether in the political and economic conflicts between the entrenched nobility and rising mercantile class, or in the religious conflicts resultant from the proliferation of heterodoxical or heretical groups, the Middle Ages involved constant attempts to renegotiate and redefine relationships among people both within and without the networks.
We invite papers from graduate students in all academic disciplines that address the role of the family and gender and the ways these categories relate to the construction of various cultural and socio-political identities. The CUNY Graduate Center Annual Medieval Studies Conference is one of the only student-run conferences in the Northeast. We hope to provide a stimulating and encouraging atmosphere within which students can share new work, shape ideas, and create new discourses.
Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes (approximately 8-9 pages of double-spaced text). Please submit a 250-word abstract and a brief biography (1-3 sentences) as an attached Word document to medieval.study@gmail.com by January 20, 2010. Please include the title of your paper and your e-mail address along with your submission.
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