Best Conference Ever
Medieval History

Best Conference Ever


Pieter Breughel the Elder The Tower of Babel (1563)
What's great about attending an academic conference is that you forget, for just a bit, that you are quite the freak for doing what you do for a living.  This conference was all about celebrating the freaky, seeing it as the only home for humanity, actually, and celebrating what we freak about.  Literary critics loved language, art historians loved art - more specifically, art historians (the few, the proud, the convinced) loved the materiality of art: the stuff, the solidity, the touch of it.  I reconnected with my dear, wonderful, strong, funny, generous friend Nancy (meals out, breakfasts shared, notes on art and life exchanged) - and she introduced me to a slew of super-hip kindred spirits. It's interesting: they're all about sabbatical cycle younger than me (PhDs in the 2005 area), and awesome - Young Turks ready for the revolution (who knew there really was a Young Turks Revolution?). The Revolution will be material, and a return to the lyrical. If that makes no sense, just know that it seeks immediacy, and cutting through all of the things that make art make the world a better place (freedom, interpretation, meaning).

The more I look at Brueghel's Tower of Babel, the more beautiful it appears: its layers of architecture, its ports, its workers in the foreground; and that wonderful light that shines upon it. Does Brueghel making it beautiful favor it? Express some sympathy for it?  There's much to sympathize with. One wonders about Tolkein seeing an image of this before constructing his own towers in writing... It appears as though the Tower is simultaneously being built and being destroyed. And where is God? Is he that ominous dark funnel cloud?  Still can't get over his squelching of human ambition.  Pretty bold to call the whole conference BABEL, isn't it?  There was such revelry and goodwill there (makes me think of Genesis, Chapter 10 again - what was the city of Babel like before its divinely ordained destruction?) - and PLAY: with words, with language, with what things might mean.  Which is what critical theory lets you do: is experiment and try out an idea and see to whom it speaks.  I know that I can translate all of this back to the students (maybe without the critical theory per se) and get them to see see see even more.

And so now I'm back, having graded a set of midterms finally (only one more set to go) and facing a hectic week before taking off for Denver for the National Women's Studies Association conference. Wonder how the two will compare (let's just say that at the BABEL conference, there was a tattoo contest!).  I'm taking more Jerusalem books and plan on writing in here a bit - you have to see Iris's election day coverage in any case.

Last thought: it is amazing to me to think of myself now in our 3rd floor studio office with Mac, deciding to find out what is going on in the world of blogging when it comes to medieval, finding "In the Middle," feeling like I'd come home in my head, and then now, meeting the people who making it all come alive.  It's really quite remarkable, the technology thing.  Tomorrow, I start "cyberfeminism" - will let you know what that is, and if there's a medieval connection.




- Things Left Unsaid
Bruegel's Tower of Babel, alwaysI am used to things left undone: hovering, waiting impatiently, pressing, pleading, finally getting done, maybe - or left unfinished like the Tower of Babel. But I am not so used to things left unsaid. A lot of things...

- The View From In The Out Here
This is the view from the upper reaches of the Tower of Babel.*The horizon stretches far and you are not alone. This year's BABEL Critical/Liberal/Arts gathering showed me again. The workers - the haulers of bricks, the carvers of stone, the facilitators...

- Ex-voto
Ex-VotosIt's amazing what happens when intellectually generous people get together.  I always held that medieval mattered - thus, well, my entire life, but here, there's a pertinent place for that insistent sometimes even urgent belief. ...

- Savories
Here are things I'd rather not let slip away; things to savor. Inspired by the mid-term elections, Iris ran an election at our house between myself and Mac.  Mac won 2-1, with the girls as a voting block (gotta get a better campaign ad) - and...

- Pilgrim's Progress
St. Aemilion. 1060, ivory. The Met.I've struggled with this before and will again: was there an operative concept of social progress in the Middle Ages?  with its necessary preconditions that there are grave injustices that need to be righted?...



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