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2014 Byzantine Studies Conference, Vancouver, Canada

 

This year’s Byzantine Studies Conference will be held at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada, November 6-9, 2014.

Final version of the Abstracts of Papers

See the Draft of the conference program below:

PROGRAM

Thursday, November 6, 2014

4:30-6:30PM

Registration, Reception, and Welcome
Founders Hall – Segal Building, 500 Granville Street
6:30-8:30 First Board Meeting

Friday, November 7, 2014

8:30 AM Welcome
Segal Building, 500 Granville Street
Dimitris Krallis, Simon Fraser University

9:00-11:30 Session 1
1A Session in honor of Erica Cruikshank Dodd: The visual culture of Byzantium in a Mediterranean context

Chair: Lesley Jessop, University of Victoria, B.C

  • “Visual Theology in Early Byzantine and Islamic Art”
    Rico Franses, American University of Beirut
  • “Three Women and their Icons in the Context of the Crusades”
    Annemarie Weyl Carr, Southern Methodist University
  • “Two 13th Century Icons from the Monastery of St. Catherine: Byzantine or Crusader”
    Jaroslav Folda, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  • “The Silks of Palermo in Philagathos’ Ekphrasis and the Byzantine Textile Industry of the Twelfth Century”
    Evanthia Baboula, University of Victoria

Respondent: Anthony Cutler, Pennsylvania State University

1B The Self in Byzantine Poetry

Chair: Derek Krueger

  • “Autobiography or Autography: Seeking the True Self in Gregory of Nazianzus’ Poemata de seipso”
    Suzanne Abrams Rebillard, Ithaca, NY
  • “Ephrem’s Economic ‘I’ and the Problem of Early Byzantine Authorship” Jeffrey Wickes, Saint Louis University
  • “Blindness and Self-Recognition in Nonnos of Panopolis’ Metaphrasis of John 9”
    Scott F. Johnson, Georgetown University and Dumbarton Oaks
  • “Social and Personal Self in Tzetzes’ Chiliades”
    Aglae Pizzone, University of Geneva
  • “Depictions of the Self in the Poems of Manuel Philes”
    Marina Bazzani, University of Oxford

11:30-11:45 AM-Coffee Break

11:45AM-1:15PM-Session 2
2A The Emperor and the Church, Part One

Chair:

  • “Theodosius II and the First Council of Ephesus”
    George Bevan, Queen’s University
  • “When the Emperor Changed his Mind”
    Patrick Gray, York University
  • “Victory Over the Enemy of the Church: The Empire, the Church and the Council of Nicaea”
    Edward Mason, University of Kentucky
2B Byzantine Monumental Art

Chair:

  • “The Economy of Salvation at the Red Monastery Church, Upper Egypt”
    Elizabeth Bolman, Temple University
  • “Painting and Ideology in 14th-Century Mistras: The Iconographic Program of the Gallery in the Virgin Hodegetria”
    Nektarios Zarras, The University of the Aegean
  • “The Protevangelium of James and the wall mosaics in the (Justinianic?) Eufrasiana”
    Thomas E Schweigert, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater

1:15-2:15 P.M.- Lunch

2:15-3:45 P.M.-Session 3
3A Erōs and Logos: Sexual Desire in Byzantine Literature

Chair: Margaret Mullett, Dumbarton Oaks

  • “What Love Is This?: Divine Fantasy in Symeon the New Theologian’s Erotes”
    Derek Krueger, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
  • “Inventive Logos, Coercive Erōs: The Poetics of Passion in Eustathios Makrembolites’ Hysmine and Hysminias”
    Christina Christoforatou, Baruch College, CUNY
  • “Furtive Eros, Thieving Aphrodite: Transgressive Desire in the Cycle of Agathias”
    Steven D. Smith, Hofstra University
3B Two Columns and a Stylite

Chair: Eunice Dauterman Maguire, Johns Hopkins University

  • “The Narrative Reconfiguration of an Imperial Monument: How the Bronze Horseman Became Heraclius”
    Elena N. Boeck, DePaul University
  • “Pillars of the Community: Stylites as Architecture”
    Shannon Steiner, Bryn Mawr College

3:45-4:00 P.M.- Coffee Break

4:00 P.M.-6:00 P.M- Session 4
4A Byzantine Women

Chair: Alice-Mary Talbot, Dumbarton Oaks

  • “Early Byzantine Sarcophagi and the Iconography of Educated Susanna”
    Catherine C. Taylor, Brigham Young University
  • “East and West Marry: Considering Translatio as Women’s Work in Bridging Mediterranean Empire”
    Megan Moore, University of Missouri
  • “From the Imperial Palace to the Province: The Early Formation of Byzantine Marriage Ritual”
    Gabriel Radle, Yale Institute of Sacred Music and Dumbarton Oaks
  • “Motherhood in Late Byzantium: Blessing, purification and penitential rites pertaining to childbirth and child loss”
    Nina Glibetic, Yale University
4B Objects in Context: Material Spatiality and Byzantine Textiles
Sponsored by The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture

Co-chairs: Jennifer Ball, Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center, CUNY; Gudrun Buehl, Dumbarton Oaks; and Elizabeth Williams, Dumbarton Oaks

  • “‘Numerous Escort’: Liturgical Objects in Concert during the Late Byzantine Great Entrance”
    Tera Lee Hedrick, Northwestern University
  • “Shaping Experience: Curtains and Veils in Middle and Late Byzantium”
    Maria G. Parani, University of Cyprus, Nicosia
  • “Furnishing the Household Memory Theater in Late Antiquity”
    Thelma K. Thomas, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University
  • “Woven Architecture and the Early Byzantine Sense of Human Space”
    Eunice Dauterman Maguire, Johns Hopkins University

6:10-7:30 Reception (co-sponsored by the International Center of Medieval Art and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture)

7:30-9:00 Keynote Speech
Segal Building, 500 Granville Street

Saturday, November 8, 2014

9:00AM-11:00 AM Session 5
5A Byzantines and Latins

Chair: Teresa Shawcross, Princeton University

  • “Greek Scripts and Latin Elites: (Re)Presenting Byzantine Lordship in Pre-Norman Southern Italy”
    Norman Underwood, University of California-Berkeley
  • “Symbiosis: The Survival of Greek Christianity in the Norman Kingdom of Sicily”
    Frank McGough, The Ohio State University
  • “Socio-Economic Continuity and Political Unity in Frankish Achaea, 1204-1259”
    Kevin Bloomfield, The Ohio State University
  • “Fleeing the Image Breakers: Ecclesiastical Refugees in Italy”
    Joseph Western, Saint Louis University
5B Byzantine Art

Chair: Anthony Cutler, Pennsylvania State University

  • “Divinely-Mandated Regime Change: Elijah and “Macedonian” Dynastic Ideology in the Paris Gregory”
    Christopher Timm, Florida State University
  • “They Who First Are Granted the Divine Enlightenment: Angels, Translucency, and Light in Byzantine Art”
    Magdalene Bethge Breidenthal, Yale University
  • “Epigrams and the Presentation of Relics in the Middle Byzantine Period”
    Brad Hostetler, Florida State University
  • “A Reinterpretation of Silk in the Middle Byzantine Period”
    Julia Galliker, University of Birmingam, UK

11:00-11:15 A.M.-Coffee Break

11:15 A.M.- 1:15- Session 6
6A Byzantine Texts and Textuality

Chair: Stephen Reinert, Rutgers University

  • “Praise of a Teacher or Periautology?: Theodore II Laskaris’ Self-Representation in the Encomium of George Akropolites”
    Aleksandar Jovanović, Simon Fraser University
  • “Teaching Methods and Educational Practice in the Eleventh Century” Sergei Mariev, Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich
  • “Byzantinophilia in the Letters of Grigor Magistros Pahwaluni?”
    Anna Linden Weller, Rutgers University
  • “Rethinking the biography of Anna Komnene”
    Leonora Neville, University of Wisconsin Madison
6B The Eloquence of Art: Session Dedicated to Henry Maguire

Chair: Rossitza B. Schroeder, Graduate Theological Union

  • “King David Narratives in the Dura-Europos Synagogue”
    Kära L. Schenk, Austin, TX
  • “New Evidence for Middle-Byzantine Court Dress: The Clasp from Tahancha”
    Warren T. Woodfin, Queens College, CUNY
  • “The Kanon for “He who is at the Point of Death” and its Iconography in Leimonos MS 295”
    Vasileios Marinis, Yale University
  • “A Byzantine Cameo and the Rhetoric of Paradise”
    James A. Magruder, III, Johns Hopkins University

1:15-3:15 P.M. Business Lunch

3:15-4:45 Session 7
7A Audience and Intent: Patrons and Innovation in Church Fresco Iconography

Chair: Erica Cruikshank Dodd

  • “Jaroslav I’s Political Ideology in the Northern Chapels of Saint Sophia, Kiev”
    Sarah C. Simmons, Florida State University
  • “And their eyes were opened: the perceptions of Christ’s Miracle Cycle in the early Palaiologan period”
    Maria Alessia Rossi, Courtauld Institute of Art, London
  • “Antiquarianism in Late Byzantine Mystras”
    Andrea Mattiello, University of Birmingham, UK
7B The Emperor and the Church, Part Two

Chair:

  • “What Was the Council in Trullo?”
    David Olster, University of Kentucky
  • “Bishop and Imperial Court, 350-430 CE: Tracing Patterns of Social Interaction across Multiple Letter Collections”
    Adam M. Schor, University of South Carolina
  • “Emperor and Church Politics, 484-518: The Eastern Reception of Papal Primacy Claims”
    Dana Iuliana Viezure, Seton Hall University

4:45-5:00 P.M. – Coffee Break

5:00-7:00 P.M.-Session 8
8A. Cultural Exchange in the Frankish Levant (Sponsored by the International Center for Medieval Art –ICMA)

Chair: Cecily Hilsdale, McGill University

  • “Spaces of Encounter and Plurality: Architectural Transformation at the Sanctuary of St. George in Lydda”
    Heather A. Badamo, University of Chicago
  • “The Authority of Place and the Church of the Nativity”
    Lisa Mahoney, DePaul University
  • “Jerusalem as ‘Middle Ground’: Eastern Christian Art and Identity in the Crusader Period”
    Glenn Peers, University of Texas at Austin
  • “‘Lest some discord arise’:The Resafa Heraldry Cup at the Siege of Acre” Richard A. Leson, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
8B Byzantine Theology and Worship

Chair: Geoffrey Greatrex, University of Ottawa

  • “Ps.-Dionysius the Areopagite’s Festival Rhetoric: Theoria at the Dormition”
    Byron MacDougall, Brown University
  • “Repentant Demons in Medieval Syrian Orthodox Thought”
    Elizabeth Anderson, Yale University
  • “Bishops Behaving Badly: The Life and Times of Theophilus of Alexandria”
    Young Richard Kim, Calvin College
  • “Polemics and Emperors in Theodoret’s Ecclesiastical History”
    Joseph J Reidy, Saint Louis University
  • “Pulcheria Redivivus: The Cult of the Virgin and the Nestorian Controversy”
    Stephen J. Shoemaker, University of Oregon

7:30-10:00 Reception at The Bill Reid Gallery 8:30 Second Board Meeting

Sunday, November 9, 2014

9:00 A.M-12:00 P.M. Session 9
9A Byzantine Monks and Saints

Chair: Alexander Angelov, College of William and Mary

  • “Monks, Monasteries and Holy Mountains: the Monastic Topography of Byzantine Thrace (10th-14th centuries)”
    George Makris, University of Birmingham
  • “Picnics, Processions, and Panegyreis in The Miracles of Thekla”
    Linda Honey, Millarville, Alberta CA
  • “Nature and Conflict in Byzantine Lakonia”
    Alexander Olson, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • “Theodoros Balsamon’s Monks: Byzantine Monasticism in the Commentaries on the Canons”
    Hannah Ewing, Rollins College
9B Byzantine Archaeology and Numismatics

Chair: Kostis Kourelis, Franklin & Marshall College

  • “Constantinople’s Gate to the Mediterranean World: An Archaeological Study of the Harbor of Theodosius in Yenikapı”
    Ayşe Ercan, Columbia University
  • “Transition or Decline? Hierapytna and Crete in the Seventh Century A.D.”
    Scott Gallimore, Wilfrid Laurier University
  • “The Imperial Image Imprinted: Circulation, Materiality, and Translation in Kievan Coinage, c. 988-1240”
    Alexandra Kelebay, McGill University
  • “A Matter of Degree: A Re-Assessment of the Evidence for Urban Continuity Despite Disruption in Seventh-Century Byzantium”
    Daniel J. E. Kelly, St. John’s University
9C Byzance après Byzance: Byzantine Hues in the Cultural and Historical Canvas of the Modern Balkans

Chairs: Dimitris Krallis, Simon Fraser University, and Thomas Kuehn, Simon Fraser University

  • “Resurrecting the (Byzantine?) Law: State Formation and Legal Debates in Nineteenth Century Greece”
    Evdoxios Doxiadis, Simon Fraser University
  • “Between Culture and Politics: Identity, the Balkan Enlightenment, and the Greek War of Independence”
    Alex Tipei, Indiana University, Bloomington
  • “Resisting the West, Excluding the Byzantine: The Heritage of Turkey’s Heritage Institutions”
    Daniel David Shoup, Oakland, California

Recent Acquisitions: Authority in Byzantium

dustjacket of the book - red with circular mosaic of Christ in black and white

Authority in Byzantium, edited by Pamela Armstrong (Ashgate, 2013)

 

Authority in Byzantium is volume 14 in the series of publications by the Centre for Hellenic Studies, King’s College, London. In addition to a preface (xxi) and introduction (1-6) by editor Pamela Armstrong, the book contains twenty-five articles that are divided among the nine sections. There is an index.

Part I The Authority of the State

Jonathan Shepard, “Aspects of Moral Leadership: The Imperial City and Lucre from Legality,” 9-30
Ruth Macrides, “Trial by Ordeal in Byzantium: on whose Authority?”, 31-46
Sergey Ivanov, “A Case Study: The Use of the Nominative on Imperial Portraits from Antiquity to Byzantium,” 47-58
Susan Reynolds, “Response,” 59-61

Part II Authority in the Marketplace

Cécile Morrisson, “Displaying the Emperor’s Authority and Kharaktèr on the Marketplace,” 65-82
Johannes Koder, “The Authority of the Eparchos in the Markets of Constantinople (according to the Book of the Eparch),” 83-108
Chris Wickham, “Response,” 109-110

Part III The Authority of the Church

Jane Baun, “Coming of Age in Byzantium: Agency and Authority in Rites of Passage from Infancy to Adulthood,” 113-135
Günter Prinzing, “The Authority of the Church in Uneasy Times: The Examples of Demetrios Chomatenos, Archbishop of Ohrid, in the State of Epiros, 1216-1236,” 137-150
Miri Rubin, “Response,” 151-152

Part IV Authority within the Family

Christine Angelidi, “Family Ties, Bonds of Kinship (9th-11th Centuries), 155-166
Anne P. Alwis, “The Limits of Marital Authority: Examining Continence in the Lives of Saints Julian and Basilissa, and Saints Chrysanthus and Daria,” 167-179
Janet Nelson, “Response,” 181-183

Part V The Authority of Knowledge

Paul Magdalino, “Knowledge in Authority and Authorised History: The Imperial Intellectual Programme of Leo VI and Constantine VII,” 187-209
Charalambos Bakirtzis, “The Authority of Knowledge in the Name of the Authority of Mimesis,” 211-226
Dionysios Stathakopoulos, “On Whose Authority? Regulating Medical Practice in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries,” 227-238
Alexander Murray, “Response,” 239-243

Part VI The Authority of the Text

Albrecht Berger, “Believe It or Not: Authority in Religious Texts,” 247-258
Alicia Simpson, “From the Workshop of Niketas Choniates: The Authority of Tradition and Literary Mimesis,” 259-268
Marc D. Lauxtermann, “‘And many, many more’: A Sixteenth-Century Description of Private Libraries in Constantinople, and the Authority of Books,” 269-282

Part VII Exhibiting Authority in Provincial Societies

Leonora Neville, “Organic Local Government and Village Authority,” 285-295

Part VIII Exhibiting Authority in Museums

Maria Vassilaki, “Exhibiting Authority: Byzantium 330-1453,” 299-323

Part IX Authority in Byzantine Studies

Ljubomir Maksimović, “George Ostrogorsky St Petersburg, 19 January 1902–Belgrade, 24 October, 1972,” 327-335
Vera von Falkenhausen, “Hans-Georg Beck,” 337-343
Elizabeth Jeffreys, “Robert Browning,” 345-353