Thursday, May 13, 2010

MMSM: Kalamazoo 2010 Sessions 1 of 4 (Thursday)

The following represent the medieval-popular-culture and medievalism-themed sessions for this year's International Congress on Medieval Studies currently in progress (from Wednesday, 12 May, through Sunday, 16 May) at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The complete program and corrigenda can be accessed at http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/sessions.html.

Society sponsored events are colored red in the list below.



THURS., 13 MAY

10:00-11:30 AM

SESSION 11: VALLEY I, ROOM 100
The Body in Early Modern Drama
Organizer: Anna Riehl, Auburn Univ.
Presider: Craig E. Bertolet, Auburn Univ.
Le roi ne meurt jamais: How the Structure of Revenge Affects the King’s Body in Elizabethan Revenge Tragedies
Emily King, Tufts Univ.
“Why this is when men are ruled by women”: Subverting and Usurping Women’s Roles in Richard III
Christie-Anne Putnam, Auburn Univ.
“The Symbol and Mirror of Rome”: Lavinia’s Body and the Rome in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus
JeriLynn Rosenberger, Auburn Univ.
“The Soul of Your Complexion”: Heart/Mind Balance in Measure for Measure
Mary Mechler, Auburn Univ.


SESSION 15: VALLEY I, ROOM 106
The Other, the Outsider, and the Outlaw in Medieval Romance
Organizer: Michael Wenthe, American Univ.
Presider: Michael Wenthe
PAPER 4 OF 4: Feste and the Bare Life: Twelfth Night’s Translation of the Romance Other
Craig Dionne, Eastern Michigan Univ.


SESSION 16: VALLEY I, ROOM 107
Papers in Honor of Alan T. Gaylord I: Performance
Organizer: Elise E. Morse-Gagne, Tougaloo College, and Susan Yager, Iowa State Univ.
Presider: Alan Baragona, Virginia Military Institute
PAPER 3 OF 3: Performance in Class, in Gaylord’s Workshops, in the Chaucer Studio: Fun, Folly, and Serious Business
Mary Hamel, Mount St. Mary’s Univ.


SESSION 18: VALLEY I, ROOM 110
Beowulf, Bakhtin, and Beyond: Literary Theory and Old English Texts
Organizer: Mary Kate Hurley, Columbia Univ.
Presider: Mary Kate Hurley
PAPER 3 OF 3: Beowulf, Bakhtin, and the Theory of Epic
Bruce Gilchrist, Bishop’s Univ.


SESSION 22: FETZER 1035
Continuity and Difference: What Distinguishes Medievalism from Neomedievalism? (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO)
Organizer: N. M. Heckel, Univ. of Rochester
Presider: Karl William Fugelso, Towson Univ.
A roundtable discussion with Carol L. Robinson, Kent State Univ.–Trumbull; Amy S. Kaufman, Wesleyan College; Harry Brown, DePauw Univ.; Brent Addison Moberly, Indiana Univ.–Bloomington; Kevin A. Moberly, Old Dominion Univ.; Cory Lowell Grewell, Thiel College; and Nils Holger Petersen, Københavns Univ.


SESSION 25: FETZER 1060
Papers in Memory of Karl Heinz Göller
Organizer: Richard Utz, Western Michigan Univ.
Presider: Richard Utz
PAPER 2 OF 3: Postcolonialism and Cosmopolitanism in King Arthur (2004)
Christoph Houswitschka, Otto-Friedrich-Univ. Bamberg
PAPER 3 OF 3: Queen Elizabeth I and Her Translation of Boethius’s Consolatio philosophiae
Noel Harold Kaylor, Jr., Troy Univ.


SESSION 26: FETZER 2016
El Cid: The National Hero of Spain
Sponsor: Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Paul E. Larson, Baylor Univ.
Presider: Paul E. Larson
Law and Literature in the Poema de Mio Cid: Theoretical Underpinnings
Michael P. McGlynn, Wichita State Univ.
La religiosidad: Tinte propagandista en el Poema de Mio Cid
Jaime Leaños, Univ. of Nevada–Reno
El Cid and the Franco Regime
Sarah Apffel, Baylor Univ.


SESSION 27: FETZER 2020
NEH Summer Institute “J. R. R. Tolkien: The Real and Imagined Middle Ages” One Year Later
Organizer: Judy Ann Ford, Texas A&M Univ.–Commerce
Presider: Judy Ann Ford
Just a War Theory to Rule All Them History Classes? A Model for High School
Paul Wexler, Needham High School
Free Will and the Enemy: A Study in the Dichotomy of the Orcs
James Tustin, Clark High School
By Paths Appointed
Leta Edwards, NEH Summer Institute on Tolkien
Beowulf and the Early Middle Ages
Ethan Dolleman, NEH Summer Institute on Tolkien
The Symbolic Power of Water
Diana Caddell, Austin Community College
Tolkien as Father
Sandra Pettit, NEH Summer Institute on Tolkien


SESSION 30: SCHNEIDER 1120
The Bow and the Canon: Teaching Robin Hood in the Survey (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Envoi: A Review Journal of Medieval Literature
Organizer: James I. McNelis, III, Wilmington College
Presider: James I. McNelis, III
A roundtable discussion with Leigh Smith, East Stroudsburg Univ.; Stuart A. Kane, Stonehill College; Melissa Ridley-Elmes, Carlbrook School; and Lorraine Kochanske Stock, Univ. of Houston.

SESSION 31: SCHNEIDER 1140
Heroic Poetry of the Edda and Its Afterlife
Sponsor: Viking and Medieval Scandinavia
Organizer: Carolyne Larrington, St. John’s College, Univ. of Oxford
Presider: Carolyne Larrington
PAPER 3 OF 3: Wagner, Morris, and the Sigurd Figure: Confronting Freedom and Uncertainty
David Ashurst, Durham Univ.


SESSION 37: BERNHARD 157
Dante, Fruits of an NEH Seminar I: Historical and Literary Perspectives on the Comedy
Sponsor: NEH Summer Seminar on Dante
Organizer: Christopher Kleinhenz, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Presider: Thomas Parisi, Saint Mary’s College
PAPER 4 OF 4: Dante and Game Theory: Strategic Interaction in Inferno
John Alcorn, Trinity College


SESSION 39: BERNHARD 204
Publishing Chaucer, Lydgate, and Hoccleve from Manuscript to Print
Sponsor: Early Book Society
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.
Presider: Mary Morse, Rider Univ.
Caxton’s Canterbury Tales: “It Does Exactly What It Says on the Tin”
Barbara Bordalejo, Univ. of Birmingham
Writing Fame: Renaissance Chaucer Editions’ Epitaph Transcriptions and the Construction of Chaucer
Arnold Sanders, Goucher College
Sixteenth-Century Readers of the 1721 Chaucer
David Sprunger, Concordia College
Literary Men, Kings, and Princes: Nineteenth-Century Facsimiles and Medieval Literary History
Siân Echard, Univ. of British Columbia


SESSION 51: SANGREN 2301
Teaching King Arthur and Ethnicity/Race (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: TEAMS (The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages)
Organizer: Anita Obermeier, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider: Karolyn Kinane, Plymouth State Univ.
A roundtable discussion with Dorsey Armstrong, Purdue Univ.; Kevin J. Harty, La Salle Univ.; Christine M. Neufeld, Eastern Michigan Univ.; Anita Obermeier; Meg Roland, Marylhurst Univ.; and Bonnie Wheeler, Southern Methodist Univ.


SESSION 56: WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Using Digital Resources for Teaching Medieval Studies (A Workshop)
Sponsor: Digital Initiatives Advisory Board, Medieval Academy of America
Organizer: Dorothy Carr Porter, Royal Irish Academy
Presider: James C. Cummings, Univ. of Oxford
The workshop examines useful Web sites, tools, and projects for teaching medieval studies and methods to be used by both intructors and students for evaluating online resources. Pre-registration is recommended, walk-ins will be welcome pending available space. The fee for Medieval Academy members/non-members is $15/$25 students, $25/$35 non-students for pre-registration, and $35/$45 for walk-ins. To register, contact Dot Porter at dot.porter@gmail.com. The workshop is limited to 35 participants.



1:30-3:00 PM

SESSION 58: VALLEY II 201
Chivalry and the Effects of War: Comparative Approaches across Borders and Time
Sponsor: Dept. of History, Univ. of Rochester
Organizer: Craig M. Nakashian, Southeast Missouri State Univ.
Presider: Craig M. Nakashian
PAPER 3 OF 3: The New “Knight Errantry”? Privateering and the Elizabethan Chivalric Revival
Peter Sposato, Univ. of Rochester


SESSION 68: VALLEY I 105
Why Arthur? Reflections on the International Appeal of the Matter of Britain in thePost-medieval World (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Villains of the Matter of Britain and the Society for the Study of Popular Culture and the Middle Ages
Organizer: Michael A. Torregrossa, Alliance for the Promotion of Research on the Villains of the Matter of Britain/Society for the Study of Popular Culture and the Middle Ages
Presider: Mikee Delony, Abilene Christian Univ.
Glorious Gods: The Eschatology of Camelot
Joshua Fullman, Southern Illinois Univ.–Carbondale
Arthur’s Popularity: Legacy, Hybridity, and Salvation
Matthew T. Hanson, Cornell Univ.
Crafting the Witch: The Transformation of Morgan le Fay
Heidi J. Breuer, California State Univ.–San Marcos
Perception and Joy: Political Commentary in Dryden’s King Arthur and Milton’s Paradise Lost
Kara Larson Maloney, Binghamton Univ.
Arthur and Merlin go to France: Arthurian Fantasy in French
Anne Berthelot, Univ. of Connecticut


SESSION 69: VALLEY I 106
Shakespeare and Otherness
Sponsor: Shakespeare at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Linda Shenk, Iowa State Univ.
Presider: Joseph F. Stephenson, Abilene Christian Univ.
The Alien Other of La Pucelle in Shakespeare’s I King Henry VI
Jason R. Gildow, Independent Scholar
Revenge Is But a Wilderness of Tigers
Jessica Trant, Univ. of South Florida
Reading Lucretius in Elsinore
Christopher Crosbie, North Carolina State Univ.


SESSION 76: FETZER 1035
Time, Space, Place I: Internal Geographies in Neomedieval Electronic Media
Sponsor: Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO)
Organizer: N. M. Heckel, Univ. of Rochester
Presider: Ryan T. Harper, Univ. of Rochester
Taking the Long Road: Transportation and Shrinking Geographies in Virtual Neomedieval Worlds
Thomas Rowland, St. Louis Univ.
(Re)Mapping Geography and Dynasty: Culture, Religion, and Cartography in Crusader Kings: Deus Vult
Jason Pitruzzello, Univ. of Houston
Neomedieval Heroic Spaces: Vermin-Infested Cellars and Beyond
Chad Simpson, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor


SESSION 88: SCHNEIDER 1255
Global Progeny
Sponsor: Scholarly Community for the Globalization of the Middle Ages
(SCGMA)
Organizer: Gabriel Gryffyn, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider: Maria Cecire, Univ. of Chicago/Univ. of Oxford
Zen Dog: Lian Hearn’s Otori Pentalogy
Sheng-mei Ma, Michigan State Univ.
The Percival Complex: Understanding the Role of the Imperfect Hero in the Global Popularity of Juvenile Manga Series
Lorna Wolcott Cooper, Lubbock Christian Univ.


SESSION 89: BERNHARD 105
In Honor of Tom Shippey I: Philology
Organizer: William F. Hodapp, College of St. Scholastica
Presider: William F. Hodapp
PAPER 2 OF 2: The Wisdom of Philology
Michael S. Nagy, South Dakota State Univ.
PAPER 3 OF 3: Them Philologists: Philological Practices and Their Discontents from Nietzsche to Cerquiglini
Richard Utz, Western Michigan Univ.


SESSION 92: BERNHARD 204
The Index of Middle English Verse: From Text to Database
Sponsor: Early Book Society
Organizer: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.
Presider: John Block Friedman, Kent State Univ.–Salem
The Index of Middle English Verse: Printed or Electronic?
Linne R. Mooney, Univ. of York
The iMEV: From Reference Book to Database
David H. Radcliffe, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univ.
The iMEV: An Open-Access, Web-Based Edition of the Index of Middle English Verse: Prototype Demonstration
Daniel W. Mosser, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univ.


SESSION 94: BERNHARD 209
Is Medieval Studies Undergoing a Paradigm Shift? (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor: Digital Medievalist
Organizer: Peter Robinson, Univ. of Birmingham
Presider: Rebecca Welzenbach, Univ. of Michigan–Ann Arbor
A panel discussion with Larry J. Swain, Univ. of Illinois–Chicago; Benjamin Albritton, Stanford Univ.; Daniel Paul O’Donnell, Univ. of Lethbridge; Nicole Guenther Discenza, Univ. of South Florida; and Melodie Harris Eichbauer, Florida Gulf Coast Univ.


SESSION 98: BERNHARD 211
Characters and Characterization in Medieval French Theater
Organizer: Mario B. Longtin, Univ. of Western Ontario
Presider: Mario B. Longtin
PAPER 2 OF 2: François Villon: Poet, Character, and Movie Star
Corneliu Dragomirescu, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris/Univ. of California–Los Angeles


SESSION 100: SANGREN 2204
Early Medievalisms: 1600 to 1900
Sponsor: Center for Medieval Studies, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Organizer: Elissa Hansen, Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
Presider: Elissa Hansen
An Unpublished Seventeenth-Century Anglo-Saxon Glossary by Nathaniel Spinckes in the Bodleian Library, Oxford
Dabney A. Bankert, James Madison Univ.
Enlightened Medievalisms: On the Function of the Medieval in the Scottish Enlightenment
Ken Fullam, Univ. of South Carolina
Medievalism, Post-1848 Czech Nationalism, and the Beginnings of Medieval Archaeology in Bulgaria and Ukraine
Florin Curta, Univ. of Florida


SESSION 101: SANGREN 2209
Teaching Tristan: Interdisciplinary Strategies for Approaching Literature and Culture
Sponsor: Tristan Society
Organizer: James L. Zychowicz, Tristan Society
Presider: Christopher R. Clason, Oakland Univ.
Learning from Generational Differences: The Lexicon and Rhetoric of Love in Gottfried von Strassburg’s Tristan
Salvatore Calomino, Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
Teaching Tristan’s Teaching: Assessing the Merits of a Courtly Education
Joshua M. H. Davis, Univ. of Montana
Teaching Tristan: Sources for Music
James L. Zychowicz


SESSION 104: SANGREN 2302
Motets and the Like
Sponsor: Musicology at Kalamazoo
Organizer: Cathy Ann Elias, DePaul Univ.; Julia Wingo Shinnick, Univ. of Louisville; and Mary E. Wolinski, Western Kentucky Univ.
Presider: Sarah Carleton Latta, Univ. of Toronto
PAPER 3 OF 3: Teaching the Motet and Medieval Performance Practice to Undergraduate
Music Theory Student through a Comparison of Written Editions with Recorded Performances
Richard O. Devore, Kent State Univ.


SESSION 108: WALDO LIBRARY CLASSROOM A
Using Digital Resources for Research in Medieval Studies (A Workshop)
Sponsor: Digital Initiatives Advisory Board, Medieval Academy of America
Organizer: Dorothy Carr Porter, Royal Irish Academy
Presider: James C. Cummings, Univ. of Oxford
The workshop examines Web sites, tools, and projects that may be of use for medievalists from a variety of disciplines, as well as methods to be used by scholars for evaluating such tools. Pre-registration is recommended, walk-ins will be welcome pending available space. The fee for Medieval Academy members/non-members is $15/$25 students, $25/$35 non-students for pre-registration, and $35/$45 for walk-ins.
To register, contact Dot Porter at dot.porter@gmail.com. The workshop is limited to 35 participants.



3:30-5:00 PM

SESSION 113: VALLEY II 202
In Honor of Tom Shippey II: Medievalism
Organizer: William F. Hodapp, College of St. Scholastica
Presider: William F. Hodapp
Ulterior Alteriority: The Middle Ages and Global Periodicity
Peter H. Goodrich, Northern Michigan Univ.
Really Ancient Druids in British Medievalist Drama
Clare A. Simmons, Ohio State Univ.
Middle-Earth and the Waste Land: Greenwood, Apocalypse, and Post-War Resolution
Edward L. Risden, St. Norbert College


SESSION 131: FETZER 1035
Time, Space, Place II: Neomedieval Electronic Media and the Construction of Community
Sponsor: Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO)
Organizer: N. M. Heckel, Univ. of Rochester
Presider: Carol L. Robinson, Kent State Univ.–Trumbull
Navigating the Labyrinth and Ascending to the Shadow Council: The Mapping and Discourse of Vampire Communities in Online Application Games
Vanessa M. Bosley, Xavier Univ./Cincinnati State Technical and Community College
“My Friends and Allies”: Medieval Games, Interactivity, and Social Play in Social Network Applications
Serina Patterson, Univ. of Victoria
Mapping the Medieval Outlaw as Media Creature: Robin Hood and Electronic Fan Productions
Valerie B. Johnson, Univ. of Rochester


SESSION 133: FETZER 1055
The Crusades: New Directions
Sponsor: Texas Medieval Association (TEMA)
Organizer: Paul E. Chevedden, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Univ. of California–Los Angeles
Presider: James R. King, Midwestern State Univ.
PAPER 2 OF 3: Teaching Crusades Historiography to Senior High School Students: New Directions Down Under
Anthony Dale, Inverell High School


SESSION 136: FETZER 2020
Dress and Textiles II: Imagined and Re-imagined
Sponsor: DISTAFF (Discussion, Interpretation, and Study of Textile Arts, Fabrics, and Fashion)
Organizer: Robin Netherton, DISTAFF
Presider: Robin Netherton
PAPER 4 OF 4: Deconstructing and Reconstructing Sixteenth-Century Clothing in Film
Melanie Schuessler, Eastern Michigan Univ.


SESSION 137: FETZER 2030
Constructions of Joan of Arc: Fifteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Sponsor: International Joan of Arc Society/Société Internationale de l’étude de Jeanne d’Arc
Organizer: Jane Marie Pinzino, Florida State Univ.
Presider: Craig Taylor, Centre for Medieval Studies, Univ. of York
Engendering Fama at the Nullification Trial of Joan of Arc
Gail Orgelfinger, Univ. of Maryland–Baltimore County
Scriptural Interpretations in the Rehabilitation of Joan of Arc
Jane Marie Pinzino
“Occupying” Her Place in History: Joan of Arc in Postwar France
Stephanie L. Coker, Univ. of Mississippi


SESSION 139: SCHNEIDER 1155
Old English Poetry
Presider: Joyce Hill, Univ. of Leeds
PAPER 4 OF 4: A Recitable Performing Text: Notes on Translating Beowulf into Chinese
Stella Wang, Univ. of Rochester



5:30 PM
FETZER 1035
Medieval Electronic Multimedia Organization (MEMO)
Business Meeting


5:45 PM
FETZER 1045
Medieval and Renaissance Arms and Armor Display
Sponsor: Higgins Armory Museum
Organizer: Amy West, Higgins Armory Museum
Presider: Annamaria Kovacs-Mitchell, Independent Scholar
A display of reproduction arms and armor with a focus on German and Italian styles. Items will include museum-quality historical arms and armor reproductions and stage arms reproductions. Exhibitors include armorers, sword smiths, historians,
and experimental archaeologists who will discuss the reconstruction of production and use based on historical evidence, and also stage combatants who will discuss the difference between the theatrical and the historical.


7:30 PM
FETZER 1005
Film Screening: The Last Legion (Wikipedia entry)


7:30-9:00 PM

SESSION 167: VALLEY II 205
Medieval Sources in Pope Benedict XVI
Sponsor: St. Mary’s School of Theology, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston
Organizer: Paul E. Lockey, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston
Presider: Paul E. Lockey
Benedict XVI’s Retrieval of the Concept of Revelatio as Found in Saint Bonaventure’s Collationes in Hexaemeron
James B. Anderson, St. Mary’s School of Theology, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston
Unlocking Benedict XVI’s Inner Bonaventure
Justin D. Aquila, Institute of Faith and Culture, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston
The End of Times: The Impact of Medieval Sources on Benedict XVI’s Eschatology
Mary DeBroeck, Univ. of St. Thomas, Houston


SESSION 168: VALLEY II 207
How to Get Published: Advice from Editors and Insiders (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor: La corónica: A Journal of Medieval Hispanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
Organizer: Sol Miguel-Prendes, Wake Forest Univ.
Presider: Sol Miguel-Prendes
Demystifying the Book Publication Process
Ellie Ferguson, Boydell & Brewer
Three Reasons (at Least) to Take Heart: Publishing in Medieval Hispanic Studies
Jerome E. Singerman, Univ. of Pennsylvania Press
“No amount of revision could make this publishable”: Putting Unconstructive Criticism to Use
Emily C. Francomano, Georgetown Univ.


SESSION 169: VALLEY I 100
Readers’ Theater Performance of the Brome The Sacrifice of Isaac and the York Abraham and Isaac
Sponsor: Chaucer Studio
Organizer: Warren Edminster, Murray State Univ.
Presider: Warren Edminster
A readers’ theater performance with Thomas J. Farrell, Stetson Univ.; Alan Baragona, Virginia Military Institute; J. Justin Brent, Presbyterian College; D. Thomas Hanks, Jr., Baylor Univ.; Gloria J. Betcher, Iowa State Univ.; and Dana-Linn Whiteside, Roanoke College.


SESSION 180 BERNHARD 157
Archaeo-ecologies of the Medieval: Collaborations in Place
Organizer: Gillian R. Overing, Wake Forest Univ.
Presider: Kelley Wickham-Crowley, Georgetown Univ.
PAPER 3 OF 4: Archaeo-ecologies of Elfdom: From Mirkwood to Du Weldenvarden
Marijane Osborn, Univ. of California–Davis


SESSION 181: BERNHARD 159
Oral Tradition and the Teaching of Medieval Texts (A Panel Discussion)
Sponsor: Oral Tradition
Organizer: Lori Ann Garner, Rhodes College, and Heather Maring, Arizona State Univ.
Presider: Lori Ann Garner
A panel discussion with Evelyn Birge Vitz, New York Univ.; Joyce Coleman, Univ. of Oklahoma; William Layher, Washington Univ. in St. Louis; Paul B. Creamer, East Stroudsburg Univ.; and Leslie K. Arnovick, Univ. of British Columbia.


SESSION 184: BERNHARD 210
Laurie Finke and Martin Shichtman’s King Arthur and the Myth of History (A Roundtable)
Sponsor: Arthuriana
Organizer: Dorsey Armstrong, Purdue Univ.
Presider: Dorsey Armstrong
A roundtable discussion with Eileen A. Joy, Southern Illinois Univ.–Edwardsville; David W. Marshall, California State Univ.–San Bernardino; Myra J. Seaman, College of Charleston; Christine M. Neufeld, Eastern Michigan Univ.; and Anna Klosowska, Miami Univ. of Ohio.


SESSION 186: BERNHARD 212
Voices of the Medieval in Children’s and Young Adult Literature: Others and Othering
Organizer: Kate Koppy, Andrews Univ.
Presider: Meredith Jones Gray, Andrews Univ.
The Orphan Motif in Harry Potter
Wendy Gouine, Eastern Michigan Univ.
Explorations of Class in Medievalesque Literature for Children and Young Adults
Kate Koppy
Catherine, Crispin, and the Midwife’s Apprentice: Names and Identity in Children’s Literature
Erin Banks, Ball State Univ.


SESSION 187: BERNHARD 213
Teaching with Second Life: A Virtual Reality
Sponsor: TEAMS (The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages)
Organizer: Anita Obermeier, Univ. of New Mexico
Presider: Daniel T. Kline, Univ. of Alaska–Anchorage
Virtually Medieval
Tamara F. O’Callaghan, Northern Kentucky Univ.
Modeling the Medieval Theater: Teaching and Performance in a Virtual Space
Sharon Collingwood, Ohio State Univ.
The Virtual Pardoner: Creating a Second Life Supplement to Chaucer’s Troubling Text
Sarah L. Higley, Univ. of Rochester
Respondent: Martha W. Driver, Pace Univ.

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