Seventh Annual UC Colloquium on Early Modern Central Europe

 

March 1-2, 2003

 

At the UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library

 

Organized by

Peter H. Reill, UCLA

Thomas A. Brady, UC Berkeley

Ehrhard Bahr, UCLA

David Sabean, UCLA

Elaine Tennant, UC Berkeley

 

 

Saturday, March 1

 

9:30 a.m.         Morning Coffee

 

10:00 a.m.       Session 1

 

Jeanne Grant, UC Berkeley

Czech Law at the Beginning of the Fifteenth Century

 

Julie Tanaka, UC Berkeley

Beyond Jerusalemıs Christian Walls: The Influence of Learning on the Pious Pilgrimıs Perception and Account of the Holy City in Felix Fabriıs Evagatorium

 

Jennifer Turner, UC Berkeley

Between Father and Son: The Educations of Thomas and Felix Platter

 

                        Susannah Martin, UC Davis

Heinrich Bullingerıs Dramatic Diversion

 

1:00 p.m.         Lunch

 

2:00 p.m.         Session 2

 

Luke Clossey, UC Berkeley

³Seelen, Seelen muβ ich haben²: Central Europe and the Jesuitsı Global Sacred Economy

 

Warren Dym, UC Davis

Treasure Hunting and Earth Science in Saxony, 1650-1765

 

                        Vic Fusilero, UCLA

Hausvaeterliteratur and Economic Theory

 

Kimberly Garmoe, UCLA

Loosing something in Translation: Race, Sensibility and the German Colonial Imagination

           

Ben Marschke, UCLA

A Court Society without a Court: The Channels of Power and Communication surrounding Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm I

 

5:30 p.m.         Reception

 

7:00 p.m.         Dinner

 

 

Sunday, March 2

 

9:30 a.m.         Morning Coffee

 

10:00 a.m.       Session 3 ­ Faculty Workshop            

 

                        Randy Head, UC Riverside

Varieties of Archival Experience

 

12:00 noon      Lunch

 

1:00 p.m.         Session 4

 

Kris Pangburn, UCLA

Lavater and Swedenborg: Physiognomy as Spiritual Psychology

 

Hubertus Bueschel, UCLA Exchange Fellow, International Max Planck Research School

Beloved Objects ­ Monarchical Relics of Bourgeois German Subjects around 1800

 

Charlton Torres, UCLA

From the Theater of Identity to the Arcane Production of Nationality: Goetheıs Wilhelm Meister

 

Peter Park, UCLA

The Kantian School and the Consolidation of Modern Historiography of Philosophy