The Medieval Brain
Interdisciplinary Conference
9th, 10th, and 11thMarch
The Treehouse, Humanities Research Centre
(Berrick Saul Building),
University of York
Thursday 9thMarch
9.00–9.30: Registration and Coffee
9.30:Welcome: Deborah Thorpe, University of York
9.45–11.15:Session1: Language, Sound, Reconstruction
Chair: Victoria Blud
Hannah Bower(University of Oxford): ‘“Similes We Live (or Die) By”: The Use of Similes in Late Medieval English Remedy Collections’
Anja Weingart (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen) and Emiliano Gio vannetti (Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale –CNR): ‘From canabo to Cannabis sativa L.: Modelling Diachronic Termino-ontological Resources in the Context of DiTMAO’
Bonnie Millar (NIHR Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Unit, University of Nottingham):‘Listening differently: Harmonies and cacophonies of sound, medieval and modern’
11.15–11.45:Refreshments
11.45–13.15:Session 2: Grey Matters: Structuring the Brain
Chair: Sunny Harrison
Fernando Salmón (University of Cantabria): ‘A complexional brain: Medical approaches to brain
structure and functioning in the 13 th and 14th centuries’
Shahrzad Irannejad (Johannes Gutenberg University): ‘The Brain in Avicenna'sCanon of Medicine’
Cher Casey (University of York): ‘Making Matter of the Mind: reconstructing the medieval
cranial anatomy of Cologne’s 11,000 Holy Virgin skull relics’
13.15–14.00:Lunch
14.00–15.00:Keynote, Corinne Saunders (Durham University): ‘Writing the Inner Life: Voices and Visions in Medieval Literary Texts’
15.00–15.30:Refreshments
15.30–17.00:Session 3: Emotions
Chair: Juliana Dresvina
Jamie McKinstry (Durham University): ‘“Heavy Matters!”: Medieval Cognition and the Expression of Sadness’
Philippe Depairon (Université de Montréal):‘Laughing with Thomas: A Short History of Laughter in the 13th Century’
Alice Jorgensen (Trinity College Dublin): ‘Emotion and thought, emotion and behaviour in the
Old English Boethius’
INFORMAL DRINKS, 8.30PM BREW YORK, WALMGATE.
(Unit 6, Enterprise Complex Walmgate, York YO1 9TT)
Friday 10th March
9.30–11.00:Session 4:Order and Disorder: Physical and Psychological
Chair: Jamie McKinstry
Rachel Gillibrand (University of Leeds): ‘Extension or Lack?: The Relationship Between Prosthetic Technologies and the Body in the Late Middle Ages’
Christina Hildebrandt (Saint Louis University): ‘Reading William Dunbar’s “My heid did ȝak ȝester nicht”as a Narrative of Impairment’
Mark Ronan (University College Dublin) : ‘Behavioral Addictions in Henryson's Fables’
Sunny Harrison (University of Leeds): ‘Behavioural disorder, control, and occupational health in later medieval horse medicine’
11.00 – 11.30: Refreshments
11.30 – 12.30 : Keynote talk by Carole Rawcliffe (University of East Anglia): ‘Mental Illness and Mental Health in the Late Medieval Monastery’
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