Session #592 Isidore of Seville and the Persistence of Classical Antiquity in Iberia and the British Isles during the Middle Ages “An Axis of Monstrosity: Isidore of Seville and the Transition of the Limits of Knowledge” Eli Cohen, Swarthmore College
Session #447 “The Origins of a Theory of Race…” by David Wacks
Session #447 New Currents in Medieval Iberian Studies “The Origins of a Theory of Race in Jewish, Muslim, and Christian Retellings of the Noah Story“ David Wacks, University of Oregon Read: “The Curse of Ham in Medieval Iberia and the
Session #79 “An Online, Open-Access Teaching Anthology…” by David Wacks
Session #79 Digital Medieval Iberia “An Online, Open-Access Teaching Anthology of Premodern Iberian and Latin American Texts“ David Wacks, University of Oregon Access: Open Iberia/América: Online, Open Access Teaching Anthology of Premodern Iberian and Latin American Texts
Session #169 “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity…” by Lauren Beck
Session #169 Race and Its Historiography in Medieval Iberian Studies “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity in the Modern Age through the De-Occidentalization of the Cid” Lauren Beck, Mount Allison University Recording of “Visualizing Medieval Masculinity in the Modern Age through the De-Occidentalization
Session #592 “Medieval Iberian Grammar…” by Marlena Petra Cravens
Session #592 Isidore of Seville and the Persistence of Classical Antiquity in Iberia and the British Isles during the Middle Ages “‘Partes Orationis Quot Sunt?’: Medieval Iberian Grammar in the Wake of Isidore of Seville, 600-1481” Marlena Petra Cravens, University
Session #169 “Locating Ibero-Medievalists…” by Christi Ivers
Session #169 Race and Its Historiography in Medieval Iberian Studies Locating Ibero-Medievalists in Current Research and Teaching: La corónica Commons’s “Bibliography of Race and Visibility in Medieval Iberia” Christi Ivers, University of Dallas In this presentation, I will offer a