Passport to the World
Cloistered Women's Voices Symposium and Concert
Symposium
Cloistered Women’s Voices: Sound, Song and Lyric in Early Modern Convents
March 30-April 1, 2016
University of Kentucky, Lexington KY
In recent years, sound, lyric and song in early modern women’s religious communities has received increased attention from musicologists, historians and literary and cultural studies specialists. Despite renewed scholarly interest, disciplinary and geographic boundaries tend to limit prior approaches. For example, few extant works address the intersection of music and literary cultures in early modern women’s religious communities and none consider convent music-making from a global perspective. As a result, it becomes difficult to draw conclusions about cloistered women’s lyrical and vocal production as a broad cultural practice. The Cloistered Women’s Voices Symposium thus responds to these lacunae by examining song and lyric in convents throughout Europe and the Americas. This comparative and cross-disciplinary scope puts diverse convent music cultures into dialogue and draws out paradigms of voice among cloistered women.
SCHEDULE
Thursday, March 31
6:00 pm—concert; St. Augustine's Chapel, Rose Street
Friday, April 1
Niles Gallery
9:00 am—First session: Voice and Lyric
1. “Reading Lyrics: Miguel de Toledano’s Minerva sacra.” Colleen Baade, Creighton University
2. “The nun’s smooth tongue has sucked her in”: Cloistered Language in Marvell’s Upon Appleton House.” Tessie Prakas, Kenyon College
3. “Songs in the Prison Cell, Songs at the Scaffold: Carmelite Convent Song extramuros, and the case of the Sixteen Carmelites of Compiègne.” Daniel Hanna, Lake Forest University
10:30—Coffee break
11:00—Second session: Sound and Contemplation
4. “Spiritual Soundscapes: La Musique spirituelle (1718) and La Dissection spirituelle of Marie-André Duplessis de Sainte-Hélène of the Hôtel-Dieu of Quebec." Thomas Carr, Harold E. Spencer Emeritus Professor of French
5. “Contrapuntal Voices: Silence in New Spanish Convents.” Sarah Finley, Christopher Newport University
6. “Nuns’ Spiritual Exercises and Music in Early Modern Rome.” Kimberlyn Montford, Trinity University
12:45—Lunch break
2:00—Third session: Performance Practice
7. “A Most Useless Vanity: Venetian Novices Singing at their own Monacations.” Jonathan Glixon, University of Kentucky
8. “Women Singing Low: Bass and Tenor parts in Viennese Convents.” Janet Page, University of Memphis
3:00—Coffee break
3:45—Keynote: "Pænæ Catænæ sunt Præmium Amoris: Bodily Mortification and Mystical Death in Convent Choir Lofts." Craig Monson, Paul Tietjens Professor Emeritus of Music, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri
Organizers: Mónica Díaz, U of Kentucky; Sarah Finley, Christopher Newport University; Jonathan Glixon, U of Kentucky; Daniel Hanna, Lake Forest College
Gender, Immigration, Labor Markets, and the Welfare State in Contemporary Europe
Year of Europe Film Series: Dirty Pretty Things (England)
For more information on the film series "Europe Through the Lens: a Festival of Contemporary European Films" visit http://libguides.uky.edu/eurofilm.
A Global History of Ecology in Norway
Concert: Lassatil Abballari
Year of Europe Film Series: In This World (England/Italy/Pakistan)
For more information on the film series "Europe Through the Lens: a Festival of Contemporary European Films" visit http://libguides.uky.edu/eurofilm.
Roma Forestiera: Migrant Music in Rome / Screening and discussion of the film, Matewan
Bale Boone Symposium: Violence, Memory and the Sacred: The Armenian Genocide and the Holocaust
Jay M. Winter, the Charles J. Stille Professor of History at Yale University, is a specialist on World War I and its impact on the 20th century and one of the pioneers of the field of the history of memory. Winter is the author or co-author of a dozen books, including Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European Cultural History, 1914-1918: The Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century, and Remembering War: The Great War between History and Memory in the 20th Century. He is co-director of the project on Capital Cities at War: Paris, London, Berlin 1914-1919, was co-producer, co-writer and chief historian for the PBS series “The Great War and the Shaping of the 20th Century,” which won an Emmy Award, a Peabody Award and a Producers Guild of America Award for best television documentary in 1997.
This talk focuses on a contrast between the continuing presence today of the sacred language of martyrdom in some parts of Europe (and elsewhere), and the fading away or disappearance of the language of martyrdom in other parts of Europe by looking at the two contrasting cases of the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust. While martyrdom is at the heart of how Armenians today remember the catastrophe of 1915, there has emerged since the 1940s a very different linguistic register in Jewish responses to the Holocaust, one by and large free of the language of martyrology.The implications of this distinction are far-reaching. How we think about catastrophe matters in contemporary Europe. We must commemorate the victims of violence, but we must also seek a way out of the spiral of continuing conflict which the language of martyrdom perpetuates.
For more information visit http://www.uky.edu/academy/2016BBS.
Year of Europe Film Series: Biutiful (Spain/Mexico)
For more information on the film series "Europe Through the Lens: a Festival of Contemporary European Films" visit http://libguides.uky.edu/eurofilm.