Renaissances Conference: Between Experience and Experiment
location: Building 460, Room 426
Too often, topics in early modern studies are understood only as the starting point of a conception, notion, or institution which will take its fullest development in later centuries. Be it the emergence of modernity, of nation-states, or notions of selfhood and interiority, the Renaissance is viewed as the provisional origin of a development which surpasses and cancels it. Without denying the pivotal role of the early modern period in long-term evolutions, the Renaissance is more than a mere transition between the medieval and the modern. It is also a place for experiments, essais, and idiosyncratic developments.
Early modern scientists and artists frequently experimented with forms, thoughts, and activities which were altogether new and might have no future. Grammatical reforms, inventions of arcane spelling systems, soon-to-be outdated literary forms, scientific ‘discoveries’ later proved false, doomed superstitions, and illegitimate interpretations were tried out, abandoned or transformed. What did they—and what do we—learn from their failed experiments, abandoned utopias, and other short-lived innovations? What are the forces of resistance to experimentation, and conversely, what ideological fault lines are outlined by the debates which surrounded certain experiments?
This topic, which has implications for literature, history, the history of science and medicine, musicology, cultural studies, economics, and art history, will bring into dialogue the different disciplines of early modern studies. We will also encourage “experimental” approaches: methods or ideas which take risks or represent work in progress.
Schedule:
Transmitting Experience
11:00am-1:00pmChivalric Epistemologies and the Scientific Revolution
Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra (University of Texas at Austin)Rethinking the Scientific Renaissance: An Untapped Form of Cultural Transmission
George Saliba (Columbia University)Race and Drug Testing in the Atlantic World
Londa Schiebinger (Stanford University)Lunch Break
1:00pm-2:00pmFaith, Fiction, Artifice
2:00pm-4:00pmArtificial Men: Alchemy, Transusbstantiation and the Homunculus
Mary Baine Campbell (Brandeis University)In the Name of Atheism
George Hoffman (University of Michigan)Renaissance Prose and the Tragicomedy of Humanism
Rayna Kalas (Cornell University)Essaying Montaigne: An Interdisciplinary Discussion of Montaigne's 'On Experience'
4:15pm-6:15pmTimothy Hampton (University of California, Berkeley), French and Comparative Literature
Krista Lawlor (Stanford University), Philosophy
Anthony A. Long (University of California, Berkeley), ClassicsFor a PDF copy of 'On Experience,' please email Jenna Lay.
Wine and Cheese Reception
6:15pm-7:00pmCo-sponsored by the Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages, the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies at Stanford, the Stanford Humanities Center, the Patrick Suppes Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Science and Technology, the French Culture Workshop, the Religious Studies Department, and the Philosophy and Literature program.