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I send this along not just because the topic sounds of likely interest
to REED-L's but also because one of the papers will be by a REED
editor.... A.

Abigail Ann Young (Dr), Associate Editor/ Records of Early English Drama/
Victoria College/ 150 Charles Street W/ Toronto Ontario Canada
Phone (416) 585-4504/ FAX (416) 585-4594/ [log in to unmask]
List-owner of REED-L <http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/reed-l.html>
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/reed.html => REED's home page
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~reed/stage.html => our theatre resource page
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~young => my home page
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 5 Oct 1998 13:11:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: Laurie  Postlewate <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To: [log in to unmask]
To: [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask],
    [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask],
    [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask], [log in to unmask],
    [log in to unmask]
Subject: Barnard Conference


The 16th Barnard College Medieval And Renaissance Conference
"Marketplace and Society"
Intersections of the Economic Sphere with the Spheres of Politics,
Religion, and Culture

Saturday, Dec. 5, 1998

Those who would like to pre-register, please copy the form below, and mail
before November 24th to:
Tiffany Dugan, Coordinator for Med/Ren Conference
Barnard College, 3009 Broadway, NY, NY 10027-6598
[log in to unmask]
fax: (212) 854-5845
For information: (212) 854-8021

(The full program is listed below the registration form)

 =======================================================================================================================
REGISTRATION FORM:

Pre-Registration       $40
Walk-in Registration   $50
Alumnae Registration   $35
Senior Citizen         $20
Student (with ID)      $15

(Registration fees include refreshments but not lunch)

Lunch                  $15

Enclosed is a check for $____________ made payable to Barnard College

___________________________________________
Name
___________________________________________
Address
___________________________________________

___________________________________________
City/State/Zip
___________________________________________
Telephone (with area code)
___________________________________________
Institutional Affiliation

Please Circle the sessions you plan to attend (See below)
1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8

Please Send information regarding:
Travel     Hotels     Parking

 =======================================================================================================================

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:

REGISTRATION AND MORNING COFFEE (9:30-10:00)

McIntosh Center
The Barnard Gate is on the West Side of Broadway at 117th St.

PLENARY SESSION  (10:00-12:00)

Richard Goldthwaite, Johns Hopkins University
"The Performance of the Arts Sector of the Florentine Economy in the
Renaissance"

Barbara Hanawalt, Ohio State University
"The Marriage Market in Late Medieval London"

LUNCH  (12:15-1:45)

FIRST AFTERNOON SESSION  (2:00-3:30)

Session 1.
1. Alan M. Stahl, American Numismatic Society
"The Mint in the Life of Medieval Venice"
2. Sara Lipton, SUNY  Stony Brook
"Money, Matter, and Identity in the Albigensian Crusade"
3. Nathaniel Lane Taylor, Harvard University
"Wills, Piety, and Personal Finance in Twelfth Century Catalonia"

Session 2.
1. Kimberly Latta, St. Louis University
"Money, Motherhood, and Marriage in Milton
2. Karen Suben, University of
Maryland
"The Vertues of Pragmatical Men
3. Theresa Coletti, University of Maryland
"Paupertas est donum Dei: Property, Commerce, and Spiritual Desire in Late
Medieval English Drama"

Session 3.
1. Michael Davis, Mt. Holyoke College
"Representation and Reality: Building the College of the Bernardines in
Paris, 1338-44"
2. Toon Van Houdt, University of Leuven
"The Economics of Art in Early Modern Times: Some humanistic and
Scholastic Approaches"
3. Hans Van Miegroet and Neil De Marchi, Duke University "Art Dealers as
Cultural Negotiants"

Session 4.
1. June Hall McCash, Middle Tennessee State University
"Negotiating the Text: Poetics and the Patron"
2. Meradith McMunn, Rhode Island College
"Patrons and Manuscript Production of the Roman de la Rose"
3. Carol Symes, Bennington College
"Medieval Theatre in a Global Marketplace"

BREAK  (3:30-4:00)

SECOND AFTERNOON SESSION (4:00-5:30)

Session 5.
1. James Masschaele, Rutgers University
"The Public Space of the Marketplace in Medieval England"
2. Derek Keene, University of London: Centre for Metropolitan History
"Sites of Desire: City Market Places, What? Where? and When?"
3. Alan Cooper, Harvard University
"Getting to Market: Pontage and Pavage in Medieval
England"

Session 6.
1. Christian Sheridan, Tufts University
"Encressed were or noon: The Canterbury Tales as Interpretive Marketplace"
2. Francesca Pennisi, Yale University
"Face Values: Sex, Money and the Example of Boccaccio3. Roberta L.
Krueger, Hamilton College
"Honor, Virtue, Treasure: Women

Session 7.
1. Anna Maslakovic, Columbia University
"Market Spaces and the Economy of the Sacred: Transformations of the Place
des Jacobins (Lyon)"
2  Beth Anne Lee-De Amici, University of Pennsylvania
"In Negociis Collegii: Sacred Rite as a Medium of Exchange in Medieval
Oxford"
3. Jonathan Gil Harris, Ithaca College,
"The Canker of England

Session 8.
1. Nancy Bradley Warren, University of Michigan,
"The Marketplace and Monastic Identity: The case of the English
Minoresses"
2. Rebecca Winer, Villanova University
"Silenced Partners: Women Investors in Thirteenth-Century Perpignan"
3. Carol Pech, Johns Hopkins University
"Disordered Markets: Money, Gender, and the English Body Politic"

RECEPTION  (5:30-7:00)