#  EMEWORK Program 2017/2018 

 



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 **Fall Semester 2017**

 **Wed Sept 6, 4–5:30pm | Robinson Hall Lower library**   
Welcome Aperitivo  
**Leah Whittington** (English)  
**James Hankins** (History)  
**Cemal Kafadar** (History)  
**Hannah Marcus** (History of Science)  
Join us for an evening of discussions with Harvard faculty, followed by a wine and cheese reception.

 **Tues Sept 19, 12–1:30pm | Robinson Hall Lower library**   
**Joan-Pau Rubiés** (Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona) 'Comparing cultures in the early modern world: hierarchies, genealogies and the idea of modernity.'  
Pizza and salad will be served but please RSVP if possible to maryam\_patton (at) g.harvard.edu

 **Tues Oct 24, 4–6pm | Science Center 469**   
**Edna Bonhomme** (Max Planck Institute for History of Science, Berlin) 'Ports, Risk, and Death: Mapping the Rise and Fall of Epidemics in Tunisia, 1705-1820.'  
Co-sponsored with the Early Sciences Working Group.

 **Thurs Oct 26 5–7pm – Fri Oct 27 9–6pm | Barker 110**   
Invention of Byzantine Studies in Early Modern Europe  
Conference Registration, program, and additional information at <https://inventionofbyzantium.com/>

 **Thurs Nov 9, 4pm | Barker 133**   
**Elisheva Carlebach** (Columbia University) 'Archive Envy: An Early Modern Jewish Community and its Records.'  
The formation of archives has become the object of critical historical inquiry. This lecture explores dimensions of Jewish communal archives from the early modern period with particular emphasis on the rich archive of the Hamburg-Altona community and its fate.  
Co-sponsored by the Center for Jewish Studies, the Jewish Cultures and Societies Seminar, Mahindra Humanities Center and the Early Modern History Workshop

 **Mon Nov 20, 4–6 pm | Robinson Hall Basement Conference Room**   
'New Approaches to Early Modern Political Economy,' featuring **Sophus Reinert** (Harvard Business School) 'Political Economy and the Medici,' and **Doohwan Ahn** (Seoul National University) 'Bringing International Relations Back In: Anglo-French Relations and the Financial Revolution in Eighteenth-Century Britain.'

 **Spring Semester 2018**

 **Tues Jan 30, 6pm | Barker 133, 12 Quincy St, Harvard**  
Sponsored by the Mahindra Humanities Center Seminar in Book History  
**Earle Havens** (Curator of Rare Books, John Hopkins University), “Note to Self: How Gabriel Harvey Read His Renaissance Library.”

 **Feb 9-10 | Robinson Hall, Lower Library, Harvard**  
Harvard-Princeton conference, starting Friday, Feb 9, at 1:30pm  
Program and abstracts:[ https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/conferences](https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/conferences)  
or download here: [Program](https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/files/early_modern_studies_group/files/hupu_2018_program_updated.docx) [Abstracts](https://earlymod.fas.harvard.edu/files/early_modern_studies_group/files/hupu_abstracts_feb_2018.docx)

 **Thurs Feb 22, 5-6:30pm | Boylston Hall 237, Harvard**  
Co-sponsored by the Early Modern History Workshop and the GSAS workshop “Post-Classicisms: Literary Secondariness in Antiquity and Beyond"  
**Jan Bloemendal** (Huyghens Institute, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Princeton University), “Multi-lingualism in Early modern Europe: Readings of the Praise of Folly.“

 **Tues April 10, 4-6pm | Goldman Room, Center for European Studies, 27 Kirkland St, Cambridge**  
**Silvia Sebastiani** (EHESS, Paris) "Apes, Slaves, and Global Markets: Boundaries of Humanity in Enlightenment Debates.”

 **Cancelled: Monday May 7:** A workshop on “Religion and the printed image in the 16th century” Featuring prof **Olivier Christin** (Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris and Université de Neuchâtel). details TBA.



 



 

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