Early Modern Circle
Papers for 2006
20 February
Rayne Allinson
'To be a king and wear a crown': Conversations on Kingship in the Letters
of Elizabeth I and James VI.
20 March
Forum: Memory
Please bring along your thoughts to contribute to the discussion from
your own work and reading. Possibilities might include: philosophical
understandings of memory; neo-Platonism; changes to collective memory
wrought by reformation and renaissance; the art of memory; monuments
and memorials; commemorations.
19 April
Hugh Hudson
Accommodating an Englishman in Early Renaissance Florence:
The Evolution of the Hawkwood Monument in the Duomo.
15 May
Liam Connell (PhD candidate, History, Melbourne)
Dynamics of witchcraft accusation in seventeenth-century New
England
Elizabeth Kent (University of New England)
The Case of
Caleb Powell
21 June
Forum: Words and Images
This meeting will be
a round-table discussion on 'Words and Images'. How do words and images
communicate meaning differently? How do their messages reinforce or contradict
each other? What synergies exist in the use of words and images in early
modern Europe? Charlotte Smith and Peter Sherlock will each speak briefly
to early modern documents or objects that integrate words and images.
You are encouraged to come along with your own examples of sources that
make use of both words and images for discussion.
17 July
Katrina Grant
Garden Theatres in Baroque Italy
This paper looks at theatrical structures in the Baroque Gardens of Italy. It
will trace the sources and emergence of these theatres in the late sixteenth
century and look at the different ways in which theatre entered the baroque garden
during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The types of structures that
fit into this discussion range from amphitheatres such as that at the Boboli
gardens in Florence to the uniquely Italian topiary theatres that first appeared
in Lucca in the 1650s.
18 September
Forum: Charisma
This will be round-table discussion on the theme 'Charisma' in the style of our earlier discussions on 'Memory' and 'Word and Image'. How should early modern historians think about the impact of individuals on history, especially the political, artistic, and military leaders who still dominate popular conceptions of the past? How can we assess the attributes of individual men and women, or identify the 'x-factor' which enabled them to exercise disproportionate influence and power in their society? Come along with an example of a figure from the early modern period and explain how he or she interacted with the world around them.
16 October
Jenny Spinks
Demonic Monstrous Births
in Sixteenth-century German Print Culture
In this talk I'll examine print representations of a number of monstrous
births that could be described as demonic. These range from the 1512
monster of Ravenna to a seven-headed child born in 1573. I'll be considering
why some monstrous births are able to be characterised as demonic while others
are not, and how this might connect to a rising interest in the devil in sixteenth
century German culture.
20 November
Lisa Mansfield
Unequal Lovers: A Satirical Double-Portrait of a Valois King and a Habsburg Queen, c.1530-35
I will discuss a painting from Henry VIII's art collection that was described as 'oone table with the pictures of the Frenche king, the Quene his wiff and the foole standing behind him'. This referred to a double-portrait of Francis I of France (reign 1515-47) and his second wife, Eleanor of Austria (1498-1558), which is currently held in storage at Hampton Court. In particular, I will explore the contextual history from the possible authorship and mysterious iconography to the socio-political function of this fascinating, yet rarely examined image.