A one-day seminar in teaching Chivalry and
the Arthurian Romance in the Secondary schools led by:
Dr. Dhira B. Mahoney
Associate Professor of English, Arizona State University
A prominent international scholar on Arthurian romance, Professor Mahoney teaches the range of medieval romance and is author of numerous articles on Le Morte Darthur and on the Arthurian legend and romance. Her most recent publication is an edited volume The Grail: A Casebook.
Dr. Jay Rubenstein
Assistant Professor of History, University of New Mexico
Holding graduate degrees in medieval history from Oxford and Berkeley, Professor Rubenstein has researched and published on the Norman Conquest and religious and intellectual life in Europe in the twelfth century in Speculum and Religion and the Arts. In summers, he works with high school students in Paris and Oxford.
Dr. Marilyn Stokstad
Judith Harris Murphy Distinguished Professor in Art History, University of Kansas
Recipient of the 1997 Governor's Arts Award for Kansas, Professor Stokstad is author of Art History, Renaissance Art Outside Italy, and Medieval Art. Professor Stokstad has served as the director of the Spencer Museum of Art and as president of the International Center of Medieval Art.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2000
ON THE MAIN CAMPUS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
STUDENT UNION BUILDING ROOM 231 A AND B
Schedule
08:00 - 08:30 Morning Coffee
08:30 - 09:30 Lecture: "Violence, Crusade, and Virtuous Warriors"
Professor Jay Rubenstein
09:30 - 09:45 Break
09:45 - 10:45 Lecture: "Chivalry: Romance and Reality"
Professor Dhira B. Mahoney
10:45 - 11:00 Break
11:00 - 12:00 Lecture: "The Quest for the Holy Grail"
Professor Dhira B. Mahoney
12:00 - 01:15 Hosted Lunch
01:15 - 02:00 Slide Lecture: "Lovely and Loathly Ladies: Guenevere and Morgan le Fay at Home"
Professor Marilyn Stokstad
02:15 - 02:30 Break
02:30 - 03:30 Workshop: "Ideas in Practice: Teaching Chivalry in the Secondary Schools
and Peer Mentoring"
03:30 - 04:30 Workshop: "Chivalry and Electronics"
Professor Leslie A. Donovan, Ken Hinkle
Sponsored in part by the New Mexico Endowment for the Humanities
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