Lucy Pick's Her Father's Daughter: Gender, Power, and Religion in the Early Spanish Kingdoms (A Roundtable)
Sponsoring Organization(s)
Medieval Prosopography
Organizer Name
Amy Livingstone
Organizer Affiliation
Ball State Univ.
Presider Name
Jeffrey A. Bowman
Presider Affiliation
Kenyon College
Paper Title 1
Discussant
Presenter 1 Name
Simon Doubleday
Presenter 1 Affiliation
Hofstra Univ.
Paper Title 2
Discussant
Presenter 2 Name
Laura L. Gathagan
Presenter 2 Affiliation
SUNY-Cortland
Paper Title 3
Discussant
Presenter 3 Name
Alexandra Locking
Presenter 3 Affiliation
Univ. of Chicago
Paper Title 4
Discussant
Presenter 4 Name
Valerie L. Garver
Presenter 4 Affiliation
Northern Illinois Univ.
Paper Title 5
Discussant
Presenter 5 Name
Miriam Shadis
Presenter 5 Affiliation
Ohio Univ.
Paper Title 6
Response
Presenter 6 Name
Lucy K. Pick
Presenter 6 Affiliation
Univ. of Chicago
Start Date
11-5-2019 3:30 PM
Session Location
Schneider 1220
Description
Lucy Pick's recent book, Her Father's Daughter: Gender, Power and Religion in the Early Spanish Kingdoms, utilizes network studies and prosopography to examine the intersections among gender, politics and religion. This roundtable includes scholars with a range of expertise, who are working across the medieval world from different times and different places. The participants will comment upon what they see as Pick's contribution to the dialogue on networks of power and their relationship to gender, religion and kinship. Amy Livingstone
Lucy Pick's Her Father's Daughter: Gender, Power, and Religion in the Early Spanish Kingdoms (A Roundtable)
Schneider 1220
Lucy Pick's recent book, Her Father's Daughter: Gender, Power and Religion in the Early Spanish Kingdoms, utilizes network studies and prosopography to examine the intersections among gender, politics and religion. This roundtable includes scholars with a range of expertise, who are working across the medieval world from different times and different places. The participants will comment upon what they see as Pick's contribution to the dialogue on networks of power and their relationship to gender, religion and kinship. Amy Livingstone