Rituals of Gender Staging and Performance in the Middle Ages
University of Bamberg, 03-04 May 2023
Please register here.
The Network for Medieval Arts & Rituals (NetMAR), an international, interdisciplinary network investigating the intersections between medieval arts and rituals, is organizing an International Conference on “Rituals of Gender Staging and Performance in the Middle Ages” that address the role of rituals in the staging and performance of medieval gender roles. The conference, which will include scholars of different career stages, will be held at the premises of the University of Bamberg between the 3rd and 4th of May 2023.
The Middle Ages are generally regarded as an era in which symbolic communication played an important and extensive role in almost all areas of life. Medieval rituals are, as Gerhard Althoff has defined them, “longer sequences of actions whose processes are committed to patterns and create a performative impact; they cause what they show” (Rules and Rituals in Medieval Power Games, 2020: 9). Rituals serve the medieval need for producing religious, legal, power-consolidating, and magical acts in symbolic ways. They can be understood, according to Hannah Vollrath, as forms of multi-sensory communication that addresses the senses and feelings of participants. In short, rituals become perceptible through the senses that render them meaningful and powerful.
Medieval ritual research has so far focused on the role of rituals in the contexts of religion and power relations. It is obvious, however, that in the patriarchally organised and male dominated societies of the Middle Ages, rituals also played a significant role in the staging and performance of gender roles. Sharon T. Strocchia comes to the same conclusion when she observes “that ritual and gender offer valuable new ways to study power and systems of social relations,” while at the same time noting that the interactions of gender and ritual have so far remained “largely unexplored” (Funerals and the Politics of Gender, 1991: 155). Taking this into account, a closer examination of ritual as a possible form of solidification and confirmation of gender roles seems worthwhile.
The Speakers of all medievalist disciplines are using various textual and/or visual sources to explore the complicated intersections of sex, body and gender through the lens of medieval ritual. The topics of interest are the following:
- gender-specific initiation rituals
- ritualistic consolidations of male and female family roles
- rituals of male- and female-dominated professions
- male and female power relations
- gender-specific burial practices
- the role of women in religious and magical rituals
- female agency and ritual art
- ritual and gender transgression in iconography and beyond
- rituals and pregnancy.
The language of the conference is English. NetMAR is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 951875. Learn more about the network at https://www.ucy.ac.cy/netmar/
PROGRAMME
Wednesday, 03 May 2023
Location: An der Universität 5 (r. 02/22)
09:00-09:30 | Welcome Speech by Christine Gerhardt (Vice President for Diversity and International Affairs, Bamberg)
Introduction by Ingrid Bennewitz (Head of ZeMas, Bamberg) and Michaela Pölzl (Scientific Project Manager, NetMAR) |
09:30-11:00 | Rosa Rodriguez Porto (Santiago di Compostella): Staging Queenship in the Libro de la Coronación (Escorial, &.III.3)
Clara Humrich (Konstanz): Women’s Devotional Fashion in Books of Hours Diana Lucía Gómez-Chacón (Madrid): Fashion, Gender, and Performance in the Fifteenth Century: The Castilian Queens’ Wardrobe as a Case of Study |
11:00-11:30 | Coffee break |
11:30-13:00 | Gustav Zamore (Cambridge): Dancing, Defecating, and Disrupting: Women in High and Late Medieval Sacred Spaces
Katrina Rosie (Kingston): The “Loom of Life” and the “Baited Snare”: The Paradox of Women’s Bodies in Ritual Contexts Davide Tramarin (Padua): Nuns’ Bodily and Sensory Experiences. The Rituals of the Holy Week in Lichtenthal, Between Shared Performance and Individual Meditative Practices |
13:00-14:30 | Lunch break |
14:30-16:00 | Lars Boje Mortensen (Odense): Two Sets of Masculine Values in the 12th century: William of Tyre and Saxo Grammaticus
Janina Dillig (Bamberg): Rituals of Gender Bending in German Medieval Literature Gerlinde Gangl (Bamberg): Squabbling, Gossiping Women in the Middle Ages. Carrying Stones as Penalties and Symbolic Ways of Communication |
16:00-16:30 | Coffee break |
16:30-17:30 | Kouadio Kouamé (Bamberg): ‘Blurred Gender’ and Liturgy of Power in the Middle Ages: Eunuchs and Staging of Political Power in Byzantium and in the West African Songhay Empire
Lora Webb (Istanbul): See from where you assume your rank. The Invisible Power of Eunuchs in Byzantine Ceremony |
17:30-18:00 | Coffee break |
18:00-19:00 | Keynote address by Anne Derbes (Frederick, MD): Birth and Rebirth in Late Medieval Italy: Ritual and Gender in the Baptistery of Padua |
19:30 | Dinner |
Thursday, 04 May 2023
Location: An der Universität 5 (r. 02/22)
09:00-10:30 | Stavroula Constantinou (Cyprus): Rituals of Motherhood in Byzantine Hagiography
Andria Andreou (Cyprus): Gender Staging in Byzantine Passions of Spouses Andrea-Bianka Znorovszky (Salamanca): Visual Ritual: The Entrance and Exit of Saint Marina the Monk in Manuscript Illuminations |
10:30-11:00 | Coffee break |
11:00-12:30 | Bill Rebiger (Halle): Discussions of Women’s Issues by Men in Medieval Jewish Magic
Lilian R. G. Diniz (Berlin): Female Magic and Religious Subversion in Caesarius of Arles Fedor Nekhaenko (Potsdam): Witchery Rites Constructed by XIII Century Dominicans |
12:30-14:00 | Lunch break |
14:00-15:30 | Lauren Van Nest (Virginia): Regina et Regnum: The Coronation of Queen Kunigunde in the Pericopes of Henry II (Clm 4452, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Munich)
Sabina Rosenbergová (Rom): The Berta Evangeliary (10th Century, Rome) and its Gender-Specific Ritual Function Eirini Afentoulidou (Vienna): Churching the Child in Byzantine Prayerbooks (Euchologia): Questions of Gender Staging and Ritual Expertise |
15:30-16:00 | Coffee break |
16:00-17:30 | Korinna Gonschorek (Munich): Differing Sexual Encounters and their Implications on Gender Roles in the Versions of Partonopeus de Blois
Marion Darilek (Tübingen): Rituals of Female (Dis-)Empowerment: Baptism in the Context of Conversion in Medieval German Literature Ingrid Bennewitz (Bamberg): Gone to the Dogs. Gender Constructions in the Context of Human-Animal Relations in Medieval and Early Modern Literature |
17:30-18:00 | Round Table Discussion |
19:00 | Dinner |
Please register here.
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