Details
This colloquium seeks to explore the enduring effects of Muslim-ruled Iberia and its nearly 800-year impact—from 711 AD to the expulsion of Moriscos from Spain. Moros and moriscos in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia experienced both coexistence and violent intolerance in a predominantly Christian society. During this 1-day colloquium, we will examine themes of cultural pluralism, religious hegemonies, and enduring ideological boundaries across the Atlantic and Mediterranean worlds. We are looking to gather a wide range of professors and graduate students to reflect on and explore the enduring effects of Muslim-ruled Iberia in material culture, religion, language, literature, legal writings—from libraries to food to clothing to art in the Early Modern period and beyond. We are interested in discussing these traces across a variety of media, time periods, and geographies, with questions such as (though not limited to) the following: How do we read the imperial Spanish impulse to eliminate but at the same time rewrite and reclaim its Islamic roots? Where are the morisca voices in colonial Latin America and in the Philippines? How can we teach these traces—of enduring ideological boundaries across the Atlantic and Mediterranean worlds—in the context of literary and cultural studies?
Overall, this colloquium seeks to spark conversations and create a lasting network between young and experienced scholars.
Coffee and boxed lunches will be served.
Colloquium Organizers
Marina Brownlee, Faculty Sponsor
Chloe Wheeler, COM Graduate Student
María Alejandra Peñuela Hoyos, SPO Graduate Student
Schedule
9–10 Welcome Breakfast
Coffee and breakfast provided
10–11:15 Panel I. Visual Traces: Clothing, Art, Architecture
María Alejandra
Pamela Patton
11:15—1 Panel II. Textual Traces: Law and Literature
Ana Fernández-Blázquez
Kate Randazzo
Chloe Wheeler
1 pm - 2:30 pm Lunch Break
Boxed lunch provided
2:30 pm – 4 pm Panel III. Archival Traces and Beyond: Sound and Material Studies
Sherry Velasco
Daniel Hershenzon
4-5pm Closing Discussion: The state of the field
- The Department of Spanish and Portuguese
- The Humanities Council
- The Center for Collaborative History
- The Department of Art & Archeology
- The Department of Comparative Literature
- The Rennaissance and Early Modern Studies
- The University Center for Human Values
- The Department of Religion
Contributions to and/or sponsorship of any event does not constitute departmental or institutional endorsement of the specific program, speakers or views presented.