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Assistant Director, Center for Renaissance Studies, Newberry Library

Assistant Director, Center for Renaissance Studies, Newberry Library

Publié le par Jean-Louis Jeannelle (Source : Jane Wickersham)

 

2005 NEH Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers: "Travel Writing, Skepticism, and Religious Belief in Renaissance France
July 11-August 5, 2005
Supported by a major grant from The National Endowment for the Humanities.

Project Co-Directors
George Hoffman, University of Michigan, Romance Languages and Literatures
Carla Zecher, Newberry Library Center for Renaissance Studies

Drawing upon the Newberry Library's world-renowned collections of colonial and early modern manuscript and print materials, this seminar will focus on Renaissance travel writing (Verrazano, Cartier, Thevet, Léry, Lescarbot), read in tandem with contemporaneous literature evoking fictive travel (Rabelais, Montaigne, Shakespeare), in order to explore the changing dynamics of belief and unbelief in early modern Europe. Exploration and colonization during the Renaissance, and the burgeoning travel literature they triggered, not only prompted a shift in the European consciousness from a Mediterranean world to an Atlantic one and from a feudal to an imperial model of politics. The New World also initiated a significant religious challenge to Christian accounts of the Flood and the subsequent re-population of the three previously known continents. The peoples of the Americas seemed to have fallen so far from grace, could they really be descended from Adam and Eve? This shock of cultures, amplified by the way religious controversialists compared one another to inhabitants of the New World, shook Europeans' faith in themselves -- both as devout Christians and as civilized exemplars of humanity. Perhaps more fundamentally, the idea of considering one's native culture as foreign provided a fulcrum for the foundational modern conviction that human beings can detach themselves from their contexts. These writings sought to make Europeans feel like foreigners at home, and in so doing, they paved the way toward the oddest belief of all: the modern individual's all-too-frequent sense, with respect to country, culture, and creed, of being a stranger in a strange land.


Applications must be postmarked no later than March 1, 2005.

For application instructions and more information please contact:

Center for Renaissance Studies
The Newberry Library
60 W. Walton St.
Chicago IL 60610-7324
(312) 255-3514
renaissance@newberry.org
www.newberry.org/renaissance/L3rrenaissance.html.