Past Early Modern Europe Seminars

SPRING 2024 SEMINARS 

Feb. 13: Ron Harris, "Managing Agencies, Tea and Rubber Plantations, and Company Law in India and Malaya"

Feb. 20:  Alastair Bellany, "Restoring Stonehenge to the Danes"

Feb. 27:  Robert Travers, "Law Between Empires: Late Mughal Politics and The Impeachment of Warren Hastings"

March 5:  Noah Millstone, "Sites of a Book Talk"

March 12:  Paul Halliday, "The Stuff of Law: An Extra-Textual History of Law Across England and Empire in Two Books"

March 26: Mariana Candido, "Gendering Political Leadership: Changing Perspectives on West Central Africa Women’s Roles"

April 9:  Barbara Zepeda, "Law and Religion in the Personal Library of José de Gálvez"

April 23: Cécile Vidal, "The Words, Figures, and Documents of  Slave Suicides"

SPRING 2023 SEMINARS

January 24: Yasmin Haskell, "Who Let the Gods Out? Pagan Powers, Passions, and Their Proxies in Jesuit Latin Epic"

January 31: Evan Heafeli, "Andrew Marvell’s 'Bermudas,' the Bahamas, and the Revolutionary Puritan Atlantic, 1647-1653"

February 14: Bruce Hall, "Where is Islamic Law in Trans-Saharan Trade?"

March 7: Anne Dunlop, "Qingbai in Naples and an Embassy from the Yuan"

March 14: Elizabeth Bearden, "Descending the Mountain: Petrarch's Journey of Mental Disability and Consolation"

March 21: Elizabeth Kassler-Taub, "Elastic Empire: Architecture, Urbanism, and Identity in Early Modern Sicily"

March 28: Joel Blecher, "Profit and Prophecy: Islam and the Spice Trade"

April 4: Thiago Krause, "'That Cursed Bewitching Weed': Consumer Preference and the Global History of Brazilian Tobacco (c. 1620 – 1760)"

April 11: Esther Liberman Cuenca, "Custom, Community, and the Common Good in Urban Law"

April 18: Ewa Lajer-Burcharth, "Basseporte's Hand"

FALL 2022 SEMINARS

Oct. 4: Sharon Strocchia, "Fare la prova: The Use of Human Subjects in Renaissance Drug Trials"

Oct. 25: Bruce Hall, "Re-Reading West Africa’s Oldest Arabic Book: Al-Maghīlī’s ‘Replies’ to Askia al-ḥājj Muḥammad and Songhay Styles of Sovereignty"

Nov. 15: Francesca Trivellato, "Chapter 1: A Different Kind of (In)equality"

Dec. 6: Thiago Krause, "After the Fall (of Recife): Preserving and Recreating Dutch-Brazilian Ties in the South Atlantic, c. 1655-1730"

SPRING 2022 SEMINARS

March 1:  Ayesha A. Irani, "The Auspicious Rise of the Seka: Reimagining the Islamic Conquest of Bengal"

March 8: Ana Lucia Araujo, "An Eighteenth-Century Gift in the Era of the Atlantic Slave Trade"

March 15:  Francesca Trivellato, "The Credit Nexus"

March 22:  Patricia Gaborik, "Mussolini’s Cesare: Roman History as Italy’s Present and Future"

April 5:  Gabriele Pedullà, "Niccolò Machiavelli"

April 12:  Asheesh Kapur Siddique, "The Experience of the Archive: Knowledge and the Making of the Early Modern British Empire"

April 19:  Emily Kadens, "Cheaters in a Moral Economy: Commercial Deceit in England, ca. 1200–1640"

April 26:  Ramnarayan Singh Rawat, "Swami Achutanand: Mofussil Activist and Cosmopolitan Intellectual"

Fall 2021 SEMINARS

October 12:  Jillian Porter, "The Living Line: Origins and Afterlives of the Soviet Queue"

October 19:  Asheesh Saddique, "The Contentious Archive"

October 26:  Ramnarayan S. Rawat, "Bhajans of Liberties: Songs as a Method of Critical Dialogue"

November 2:  Diana Kim, "'Untouchability' and Transnational Politics in Twentieth-Century Korea"

November 9:  Karen Graubart, "Religious Republics in Seville, 1248–1502"

November 16:  Jérémie Foa, "Investigating the Executioners of the Saint Bartholomew's Day
Massacre (France, 1572)"

November 23:  Peter Lake, "On Laudianism: Piety, Polemic, and Politics during the Personal Rule of Charles I"

Spring 2021 SEMINARS

January 19:  Samantha Kelly, "Translating Ethiopian Sanctity: Two Pilgrims in Pisa, 1516"

February 2:  Jeremy R. Schneider, "Reawakening the Ammonites: A Biography of an Extinct Lineage"

February 16:  Angelo Torre, "Ethnography of the Commons"

March 2:  Valeria López-Fadul, "The Etymologies of Phillip II"

March 16:  Isabelle Poutrin, "Corcos and Boncompagni: The Costs and Benefits of Religious Conversion in Sixteenth-Century Rome"

March 30:  Arnaud Orain, "French Merchant Capitalism, State Reform, and Science of Commerce in the Age of Enlightenment"

April 13:  Francesca Trivellato, "What Differences Make a Difference? Global History and Microanalysis Revisited"

April 27:  Simona Cerutti, "The Loving Attention Towards the Poor: Jurisdiction and Market Rules (the Savoyard State in the 18th Century)"

May 11:  Eleanor Hubbard, "Curiosity and Compulsion: The Reformations of an Elizabethan Seaman"

FALL 2020 SEMINARS

October 13: Valeria López-Fadul, "On Knowledge-Gathering, Language, and History Writing in the Spanish Empire"

October 27: Eleanor Hubbard, "Englishmen at Sea: Labor and the Nation at the Dawn of Empire, 1570-1630" (Chapter: A Plundering People)

November 10: Pamela O. Long, "Tiber River Flooding in Rome: Responses to a Recurring Disaster, 1476-1598"

November 24: Jonathan Sheehan, "Gods of Paste: Sacrifice and the Anthropology of Error"

December 1: Rishad Choudhury, "Hajj between Empires: Muslim Pilgrimage and Political Culture after the Mughals" (Chapter 1: Pilgrim Passages)"

SPRING 2020 SEMINARS

January 16: Deirdre Loughridge, Northeastern University, "Man Alone Sings"

January 27: Justin Stearns, New York University Abu Dhabi, "The Place of Sorcery in the Thought of a Seventeenth Century Moroccan Astronomer and Alchemist"

February 3: Hal Parker, Saint Louis University, "The Globalization of Calvinism and Dutch Society"

February 13: Francesca Trivellato with Guillaume Calafat in videoconference, " "The Shipwreck of the Turks": Law of Nations, Sovereignty, and the Boundaries of Hospitality in the Eighteenth-Century Mediterranean"

March 5: Daniel Hershenzon, University of Connecticut, "The Maghreb in Spain: Slave and Muslims in Eighteenth-Century Cartagena"

March 27: Matt Kadane, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, "The Enlightenment and Original Sin"

April 13: Laurie Benton, Vanderbilt University, "The Blood of Households: Private Violence and Legalities of Raiding in Early European Empires"

May 15: Daniel Strum, University of Sao Paulo, "Coevolution of judicial and reputational institutions in contract enforcement across the early Atlantic sugar route"

FALL 2019 SEMINARS

October 10: Hal Parker, Saint Louis University, "Indigenizing Calvinism in the Dutch Empire"

October 28: Beth Plummer, University of Arizona, "No Better than a Brothel"

November 4: Andrew Sartori, New York University, "Metallism and the Social Theory of Money in Seventeenth-Century England"

November 25: Daniel Hershenzon, University of Connecticut, "Religious Artifacts and Slaves in the Early Modern Mediterranean"

December 2: Lisa Regazzoni, Goethe-Universität, "Signs of History. A Historical Inquiry into the Monument as an Object of Knowledge"

 

SPRING 2019 SEMINARS

January 24: Francesca Trivellato, "A Missed Encounter: Burckhardt and Economic Historians"

January 31: Eric Schluessel, "Marketing and Social Structure in Pre-Modern Xinjiang (East Turkestan)"

February 7: Gabriele Pedullà, "Humanist Republicanism: Toward a New Paradigm"

February 21: Seth Kimmel, "Sites of Antiquarianism: Between Seville and San Lorenzo"

March 7: Maartje Van Gelder, "Popular Politics in Early Modern Venice. The Arsenalotti's Protest of 1569"

April 4: Carina Johnson, "Europa Virgo, the Indies, and an Early Modern Family Romance"

April 11: Pier Mattia Tommasino, "Reading the Qur’an Backwards: the story of ms. Magliabechi XXXIV.31"

April 25: Glenda Goodman, "Land and Conversion: New Frameworks for Colonial American Hymnody"

 

FALL 2018 SEMINARS

October 4: Francesca Trivellato, "The Medieval/Early Modern Divide along the Franco-Spanish Border"

October 18: Sabine Go, "Shared burdens: Mutuality, governance constructs, and third-party enforcement in early modern Europe. The case of General Averages in the Netherlands (16th- 17th centuries)”

November 1: Michelle Armstrong-Partida, "Sex and Priestly Masculinities in Late Medieval Europe"

November 15: Seth Kimmel, "Hernando Colón’s Cosmography"

November 29: Earle Havens, "Reading Readers Writing about Reading: The Information Cultures of John Dee and Gabriel Harvey"

December 6: Pier Mattia Tommasino, "Reading the Qur'an Backwards: Orientalism, Science, and Philology in Seventeenth-Century Florence"