Exploring the Renaissance 2002:
An International Conference
Saint Louis University April 4-6, 2002
Program Chair: Donald Stump
Local Arrangements Chair: David T. Murphy
Sponsored by the South-Central Renaissance Conference, The Queen Elizabeth I Society, The Andrew Marvell Society, and The Saint Louis University Center for Medieval & Renaissance Studies
Thursday, April 4
12:40, 1:00, 1:20, 1:40 p.m.
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Busch Memorial Center
12:30 – 4:15 p.m.
Registration (Busch Center, third-floor lobby)
12:00 noon – 2:00 p.m.
Coffee (Busch Center, third-floor lobby)
Thursday, 2:00 - 3:30 p.m.
Session 1 (Busch Center, Room 201): Renaissance Music: Puzzles about Texts and Music
Chair: Albert Rotola, Saint Louis University
Jacquelyn Hale, University of North Texas "Text Music Relationships in Philippe de Monte's First Book of Five-Voice Motets (1572)"
Tamara R. Rotz, University of North Texas "Performing from Verona 757: Instrumental Consort Possibilities in a Fifteenth-Century Textless Manuscript"
Julia Chou (University of Akron) "Poetic Choice and Musical Response: Giovan Domenico Montella and Neapolitan Madrigals in the Late Renaissance."
Session 2 (Busch Center, Room 205): Stuart Drama I: Novel Forms, Dead Princes, and Petty Treason
Chair: David Hart, University of Arkansas
Carrie Shipers, University of Missouri "`Oh murder, most inhumane, to spill my husband's blood' : Alice Arden and the Threat of Petty Treason"
David Reinheimer, Southeast Missouri State University "Enacting the Novel's Rhetoric: Bakhtinian Dialogue on the Stuart Stage"
Jean MacIntyre, University of Alberta "Dead Princes: Comment for Popular Audiences on Jacobean Policy"
Session 3 (Busch Center, Room 309): Metaphysical Poetry I: Lost Names and Fragmented Worlds
Chair: Raymond Frontain, University of Central Arkansas
Bruce Danner, Xavier University of Louisiana "Inexpressibility and Expression in Donne's `Second Anniversary"'
William Hooton, Duquesne University "Montaigne, Barthes, and the `Self' in Donne's Songs and Sonets"
Donald Dickson, Texas A&M University "The Mount of Olives and Vaughan's Anglican Resistance"
Session 4 (Busch Center, Argentum Room): Non-Western Responses to Elizabeth I and the English Renaissance
Chair: Antony J. Hasler, Saint Louis University
Marcela Kostihova, University of Minnesota "Katharine `Humanized': Abusing the `Shrew' on Prague Stages"
Galin Yermolenko, Marquette University "Edmund Spenser in Russia"
Nabil Matar, Florida Institute of Technology "Queen Elizabeth through Moroccan Eyes."
Session 5 (Busch Center, Room 307/308): English Women Writers: The Power of Rhetoric—and Cosmetics
Chair: Victoria Gaydosik, Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Emily Leverett, Ohio State University "A Change in Approach: The Shift in Rhetorical Style in The Examinations of Anne Askew"
Katherine Crooks, Creighton University "'A Soveraign Power': Female and Literary Legitimization in Margaret Cavendish's Blazing World"
Kimberly Ann Woosley, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign "`You are to her a sun-burnt blackamoor': Women, Race and Religious Difference in Elizabeth Cary's The Tragedy of Mariam"
2:40, 3:00, 3:20 p.m.
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Busch Memorial Center 3:30-3:45 Coffee (Busch Center, third-floor lobby)
3:45
Participants walk from Busch Center to DuBourg Hall
Thursday, 4:00 — 5:30 p.m.
Plenary Lecture in Church History (DuBourg Hall, Pere Marquette Gallery) I:
"Queen Elizabeth and the Cathedrals"
Stanford Lehmberg,
University of Minnesota (Emeritus)
Professor Lehmberg is the author of The Reformation of Cathedrals: Cathedrals in English Society, 1485-1603; Cathedrals under Siege: Cathedrals in English Society, 1600-1700; The Later Parliaments of Henry VIII, 1536-1547, and other books.
Sponsors: South-Central Renaissance Conference, The Queen Elizabeth I Society, and the Departments of History and Theological Studies at Saint Louis University
Opening and closing remarks: Donald Stump, Program Chair
and President of the Queen Elizabeth I Society
Welcome to Saint Louis University: Sandra R Johnson, Provost
Introduction to Professor Lehmberg: Charles H. Parker, Saint Louis University
5:30 - 7:00
Evening Reception (Cupples House)
6:00 – 7:15
Shuttle vans depart every 15 minutes from Cook Hall to lodgings
7:30 – 9:00
Dinner: conference participants are on their own. Suggestions near the Best Western: Balaban's, Italia, Dressel's, Duff's, Kopperman's, Llywelyn's, Silk Road, Zoe Bar
7:30 -10:30
SCRC Executive Committee Meeting (Carriage Room, Best Western Hotel)
Friday, April 5
7:05, 7:20, 7:35
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Cook Hall
7:15 – 4:15
Registration (Cook Hall atrium, lower level)
7:15 – 8:00
Coffee and Continental breakfast (Cook Hall atrium, lower level)
Friday, 8:00 — 9:30 a.m.
Session 6 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room A): Italian Art I: Coffins, Tombs, and Monuments
Chair: Katherine McIver, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Margaret Flansburg, University of Central Oklahoma "The Reliquary Arca of Giovanna da Signa"
Jill Carrington, Stephen F. Austin State University "The Gattamelata Tombs in the Santo, Padua"
Ellen Longsworth, Merrimack College "Tomb or Altar? The Ringling `Adoration'"
Zbynek Smetana, Murray State University "Titian vs. Alessandro Vittoria in the Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari"
Session 7 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room B): Marian Devotions I: Music in Marian Meditation
Chair: Jeral Blaine Becker, Saint Louis University
Lester D. Brothers, University of North Texas "The Scale as Sounding Symbol in Marian Devotion ca. 1500"
Christine Suzanne Getz, University of Iowa "`Pray for us': A Cultural Context for the Ave Maria in Sixteenth-Century Milan"
Katherine Powers, California State University, Fullerton "Fra Serafino Razzi and Musical Support of Rosary Devotions in Cinquecento Florence"
Session 8 (Cook Hall, Room 234): Economic Paradoxes: Entrepreneurial Housewives and Youngest Sons Who Inherit
Chair: Philip Gavitt, Saint Louis University
Cathy Bodin, Western Maryland College "`Menagier' or `Menagiere' de Paris?"
Shawndra Holderby, Black Hills State University "Manors and Fairy Tales: The Role of the Ultimogeniture in Early Modern England"
Session 9 (Cook Hall, Auditorium): Shakespeare I: Troubling Doubling
Chair: Christopher Baker, Armstrong Atlantic State University
Kristi N. Embry, Southeast Missouri State University "The Restoration of the King's Two Bodies: Lear and Gloucester in King Lear"
Lloyd Edward Kermode, California State University, Long Beach "The Alien as Hermetic in The Merchant of Venice"
John R. Ford, Delta State University "'To anger him, we'll have the bear again': Staging Orsino's Recognition Scene in Twelfth Night"
9:15 – 9:45
Coffee and Continental breakfast (Cook Hall atrium, lower level)
Friday, 9:45 -11:15 a.m.
Session 10 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room A): Italian Art II: Thoughts on Vasari
Chair: Liana De Girolami Cheney, University of Massachusetts, Lowell
Katherine McIver, University of Alabama, Birmingham "Women Artists in Vasari's Lives"
Joan Stack, University of Missouri, Columbia "One Woman amongst One Hundred and Forty-Three Mew Giorgio Vasari's Portrait of Properzia de'Rossi in the Second Edition of the Vite"
Karen Hope Goodchild, Watford College "Lumi Fantastichi: The Landscape Ornament of Giorgio Vasari"
Liana Cheney, University of Massachusetts, Lowell "Vasari's Patience: The Measure of Time"
Session 11 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room B): Marian Devotions II: The Counter-Reformation
Chair: Christine Suzanne Getz, University of Iowa
Avery Gosfield, Ensemble Lucidarium, Basel Switzerland "Marie a Bethlehem alla: One Song's Voyage through the Sixteenth Century"
Andrew H. Weaver, Yale University "Maria Patron Austriae: Musical Representations of the Immaculate Conception at the Habsburg Court of Ferdinand III (1637-1657)"
Michael Maher, Saint Louis University "Dove Maria? The Absence of Marian Devotion in the Jesuit Congregations during the Last Half of the Sixteenth Century"
Session 12 (Cook Hall, Room 234): Subject and Object in Seventeenth-Century Poetry and Drama
Chair: Joseph Tate, University of Washington
Respondent: Gary Ettari, University of Washington
Graham Hammill, University of Notre Dame "Going Objective: Herbert and Economy"
James Wells, Bowling Green State University "Nor th'exterior nor the inward man': Hamlet and the Problem of Dramatic Subjectivity"
Susannah Mintz, St. John's University "Strange Bodies: Disability and the Early Modem Subject"
Session 13 (Cook Hall, Auditorium): Shakespeare II: Depravity, Charity, and Divine Providence
Chair: Susan Krantz, University of New Orleans
Keith Jones, Wheaton College "’His daughters seek his death': Female Violence and the Abdication of Patriarchy in King Lear"
Brian Jackson, Saint Louis University " ‘To thine own self be true': Hal's Honorable Reformation"
Phoebe S. Spinrad, Ohio State University "The Fall of the Sparrow and the Map of Hamlet's Mind"
11:15 — 1:00
Lunch: conference participants are on their own. Suggestions: Humphrey's or Laclede Street Bar and Grill (just west of the corner of Spring and Laclede), the Food Court in Fusz Hall (just a few paces west of the Clock Tower, on the left), and the Market Place Cafeteria in Busch Center
11:20
Shuttle van for SCRC Executive Committee departs from Cook Hall to lodgings
11:30 — 12:40
SCRC Executive Committee Meeting (Carriage Room, Best Western Hotel) 12:40 Shuttle van departs from lodgings to Cook Hall
Friday, 1:00 - 2:30 p.m.
Session 14 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room A): Italian Art III: Botticelli, Titian, Gentileschi
Chair: Yael Even, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Lisa Frady-Koruga, University of Arizona, Tucson "The Modest Speak: Botticelli's Portrait of a Lady (Smeralda Brandin) and the Construction of Social Identity in Renaissance Florence"
Stephanie R. Miller, Indiana University "Titian's Ranuccio Farnese: A Portrait of a Child?"
Lilian H. Zirpolo, Rutgers University . "Artemisia Gentileschi's Spada Madonna and the Trauma of Loss"
Session 15 (Cook Hall, Room 330): Stuart Drama II: Women in Middleton's City Comedies
Chair: Tita French Baumlin, Southwest Missouri State University
Emily Isaacson, University of Missouri, Columbia "Drunken Puritans Gossiping: The Birth Chamber as a Site of Male Anxiety and Middleton's A Chaste Maid in Cheapside"
Nancy Bunker, University of Tulsa "Middleton Interrogates Inheritance: Courtesan and Widow Rewarded"
Melinda Spencer Kingsbury, University of Kentucky "Unediting Moll: Critically Evaluating Editorial Presentations of The Roaring Girl"
Session 16 (Cook Hall, Room 230): Representations of Queen Elizabeth I
Sponsor: Queen Elizabeth I Society
Chair: Donald Stump, Saint Louis University
Richardine Woodall, York University "Elizabeth I and the Politics of Reclaiming Cleopatra"
Carole Levin, University of Nebraska "The Young Elizabeth in Peril: From the Sixteenth Century to Our Own"
Matthew Hansen, University of Nebraska "Not [just] of an age, but for all time': The Enduring Legacy of Queen Elizabeth I in Popular Culture"
Session 17 (Cook Hall, Auditorium): Shakespeare III: The "Knotted Garden" of the State
Chair: Annie Papreck, Saint Louis University
Mark Jones, College of the Ozarks "Love's Labour's Lost and the Garden of State"
Anthony Santirojprapai, Saint Louis University 'Is this the noble Moor?' Race and the Venetian State in Shakespeare's Othello"
Thomas Moisan, Saint Louis University "Deforming Sources, or Turning Seville Oranges Civil: Literary Antecedents and Their Traces in Much Ado About Nothing"
Session 18 (Davis-Shaugnessy Hall, Room 271): Metaphysical Poetry II: John Donne: Text and Theory
Chair: Sean Benson, Malone College
Scott Vander Ploeg, Madisonville Community College "'Tis got by chance, 'tis kept by art': Reflexive Lyrics and Donne's Spiritual Aesthetics"
Alexander Macleod, Wright State University "The Materialist Dilemma in Donne's Devotions upon Emergent Occasions"
Larry A. Van Meter, Texas A&M University "Tribadism and Individual Talent: Donne's Sappho to Philaenis"
2:30 — 2:45
Coffee (Cook Hall atrium, lower level)
Friday, 2:45 — 3:45 p.m.
Session 19 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room A): Italian Art IV: Artists as Heroes and Exemplars
Chair: Sherry C.M. Lindquist, Saint Louis University
Sharon Gregory, University of the South "The Unsympathetic Exemplar in Vasari's Life of Pontormo"
Norman Land, University of Missouri, Columbia "The Renaissance Artist as Hero"
Session 20 (Cupples House, McNamee Gallery, Room B): Queen Elizabeth: Not like Other Women
Sponsor Queen Elizabeth I Society
Chair: Paulette Marty, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Janet Garrard-Willis, Saint Louis University "Covenanting the Royal Body: Elizabeth I's Coronation Pageant and Rebellion Theory in Early Modern England"
David Grant Moss, Virginia Tech "Queen or Goddess? Elizabeth I and the Use of Divine Imagery"
Session 21 (Davis-Shaugnessy Hall, Room 271): Shakespeare IV Playing to Puritans and Protestants
Chair: Louis Charles Stagg, University of Memphis
Stephanie Chamberlain, Southeast Missouri State University "Sacrificing Virgins: Measure for Measure and Protestant Reform in Early Modem England"
Mark Derdzinski, Morton College "Richard II: Shakespeare's Referents and the Problem of Deposition"
Session 22 (Cook Hall, Room 230): Problems with Authority: Ethics and the Psychology of Power
Chair: Laura Blankenship, Villanova University
Joshua B. Fisher, University of Washington "Anti-Theatricality and the Limits of Exemplary Authority in Early Modem Drama"
Joel B. Davis, Oklahoma State University "`Envies beames': Fulke Greville on the Subject of Tyranny"
Session 23 (Cook Hall, Room 330): Milton: Dialogue and Divorce
Chair: Jennifer B. Lewin, University of Kentucky
W. Scott Howard, University of Denver "Milton's `Hence': Dialogue and the Shape of History in 'L 'Allegro' and `II Penseroso'"
Sara van den Berg, Saint Louis University "Milton in the London Consistory Court: The Case of Smyth against Smyth (1827)"
Session 24 (Cook Hall, Auditorium): Women Captives and Renegades: Crossing Over to Islam
Chair: Gerald Maclean, Wayne State University
Eric Dursteler, Brigham Young University "Le Rinegate: Gender and Boundaries in the Early Modem Mediterranean"
Nabil Matar, Florida Institute of Technology "British Women in the Barbary Coast: From Captives to Sultanesses"
Response: Gerald Maclean
3:45 – 4:00
Coffee (Cook Hall atrium, lower level)
Plenary Lecture in Literature
Friday, 4:00 - 5:30 p.m. Cook Hall Auditorium
"Elizabeth I and the Dead Mother Plot"
Mary Beth Rose,
University of Illinois at Chicago
Professor Rose is author of Gender and Heroism in Early Modern Literature and The Expense of Spirit : Love and Sexuality in English Renaissance Drama. She is co-editor of Elizabeth I : Collected Works.
Sponsors: South-Central Renaissance Conference, the Departments of English and of Modern & Classical Languages, and the Women's Studies Program of Saint Louis University
Opening and closing remarks: David Murphy, Local Arrangements Chair and Director of the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Saint Louis University
Introduction to Professor Rose: Donald Stump, Program Chair
5:30, 5:45, 6:00
Shuttle vans depart from Cook Hall to lodgings
Friday, 7:00-9:15 p.m.
Reception and Banquet (Cook Hal and Law School)
6:40, 6:55, 7:10
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Cook Hall
6:45 – 7:45
Reception (Cook Hall Atrium and Payer Plaza, just outside)
7:45 – 9:30
Musical Banquet (Law School Atrium): performance by University Mastersingers
9:30, 9:45
Shuttle vans depart from Law School to lodgings
Saturday April 6
7:00, 7:20, 7:40 a.m.
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Busch Memorial Center
7:15 – 12:00
Registration (Busch Center, second-floor lobby)
7:15 — 8:00
Coffee and Continental breakfast (Busch Center, second-floor lobby)
Saturday, 8:00 — 9:15 a.m.
Business and Planning Meetings
Session 25a (8:00 — 8:30, Busch Center, Argentum Room): South-Central Renaissance Conference Business meeting. Everyone attending Exploring the Renaissance 2002 is invited to attend.
Session 25b (8:35 — 9:15, Busch Center, Argentum Room): South-Central Renaissance Conference Roundtable discussion of the recent past and the long-term future of the organization.
Session 26 (8:35 — 9:15, Busch Center, Room 307/308) Queen Elizabeth I Society.
Discussion of the formal organization of the society and plans to commemorate the four-hundredth anniversary of the Queen's death at the 2003 Exploring the Renaissance conference in New Orleans.
Session 27 (8:35 — 9:15, Busch Center, Room 309) Andrew Marvell Society. Business meeting.
8:40, 9:00
Shuttle vans depart from lodgings to Busch Center
8:45 — 9:30
Coffee and Continental breakfast (Busch Center, second-floor lobby)
Saturday, 9:30 -10:30 a.m.
Session 28 (Busch Center, Room 201): German Art: Portraits and Patronage
Chair:. John Mercer, Northeastern State University
Cecilia Pick, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale "Birken-Stockfleth: The Corporate Image of Two Nuremberg Language Society Members"
Herbert C. Turrentine, Southern Methodist University "The Cultural Life of Sixteenth-Century Nuremberg as Reflected by the Lives and Activities of Two Artistic Families"
Session 29 (Busch Center, Room 204): Love Triangles: Homosocial Friendship and the Odd Woman Out
Chair: George Evans Light, Mississippi State University
George Klawitter, St Edward's University "Raphael, Adam, and Eve: Erotic Triangle in Paradise"
E. Joe Johnson, Georgia Southwestern State University "Erotic Triangles and Tests of Friendship: `La Desgraciada Amistad' (1624) of Perez de Montalban"
Session 30 (Busch Center, Argentum Room): Spenser and Queen Elizabeth
Sponsor: Queen Elizabeth I Society
Chair: Paul Marquis, St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, Nova Scotia
John Wieland, Spalding University "The Fashioning of Courtesy in The Faerie Queene"
William A. Gram, Smith College "Addressing the Queen"
Session 31 (Busch Center, Room 205): Royal Post Mortems and Contemporary Politics
Chair: Irving A. Kelter, University of St. Thomas
Alan Shepard, Texas Christian University "The Corpse of James I as a Literary Object"
Gerald Morton, Auburn University, Montgomery "The Drama of Accusation and Defense: The Case of Charles I and Oliver Cromwell"
Session 32 (Busch Center, Room 307/308): Ideal Heroes: He Said . . . She Said . . .
Chair: Catherine E. Campbell, Cottey College
Noel Fallows, University of Georgia "Chivalry in Renaissance Spain: Notes on the Perfect Captain"
Megan Conway, Louisiana State University, Shreveport "How Helisenne de Crenne Fashions a Hero"
Session 33 (Busch Center, Room 309): Marvell and Bunyan
Sponsor: Andrew Marvell Society
Chair: Martha Oberle, Independent Scholar
Matthew Harkins, Washington University "`Forward Youth' and Marvell's An Horatian Ode"
Elizabeth Skerpan-Wheeler, Southwest Texas State University "Charles Stuart and the Slough of Despond"
10:30 – 10:45
Coffee and Continental breakfast (Busch Center, second-floor lobby)
Saturday, 10:45 a.m. -12:15 p.m.
Session 34 (Busch Center, Room 201): Women Revising Shakespeare
Chair: Marguerite A. Tassi, University of Nebraska, Kearney
Helaine Razovsky, Northwestern State University of Louisiana "`Two artificial gods': Courtship Difficulties in Shakespeare and Jane Austen"
Georgia Rushing, Clark University "All's Well That Ends Well?: Experiments with Genre in Jane Austen's Mansfield Park"
Susan Allen Ford, Delta State University "`But now her price is fallen': Mansfield Park and the Revision of King Lear"
Session 35 (Busch Center, Room 309): Andrew Marvell: Sybelline Oracles, the Self and the Unstable English Republic
Sponsor: Andrew Marvell Society
Chair: Mark Heumann, Independent Scholar
Andrew Fleck, San Jose State University "Origins and Displacement: Marvell's Character of Holland and the Infant Commonwealth"
Ayn Becze, University of Calgary "Shades of Identity: Locating the Self in the Pastoral of Marvell's Upon Appleton House"
Clinton Brand, University of St. Thomas "Reading These Scatter'd Sibyl's Leaves: Marvell, History, and Poetic Equivocacy"
Session 36 (Busch Center, Argent-tun Room): Elizabeth I and Education
Sponsor: Queen Elizabeth I Society
Chair: Nancy Hays, St. Ambrose University
Linda Shenk, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities "Elizabeth I as a Learned Prince and Sir Philip Sidney's The Lady of May"
Christine Couvillon, University of Nebraska "Margaret More and Elizabeth Tudor: Female Education in Early Tudor England"
Michele Osherow, University of Maryland "`A poor shepherde and his sling' : A Biblical Model for a Renaissance Queen"
Session 37 (Busch Center, Room 3071308): Sidney and Spenser
Chair: Mary Ellen Lamb. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Jill S. Clingan, Kansas State University "Romantic and Virtuous Female Friendship in Sir Philip Sidney's New Arcadia and Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene"
Julia Meyers, Duquesne University "Sidney as Deconstructionist: Relational Semantics in An Apology for Poetry"
Jerome Dees, Kansas State University "`[Love] had forced him to live in his head': Thought and Thinking in Petrarch, Sidney, Spenser, and Lady Mary Wroth"
Session 38 (Busch Center, Room 204): Shakespeare V: Serpents, Ghosts, and Witches
Chair: Paul A. Parrish, Texas A&M University
Alan Rosiene, Florida Institute of Technology "Poison, Venom, and the Cup and Sword Dialectic in Hamlet."
Deborah Scaggs, Saint Louis University "Shakespeare's Alien Voice: The Marginalized Ghost in Hamlet"
James S. Baumlin, Southwest Missouri State University "'Tis now the very witching time of night': The Sorcery of Rhetoric and Revenge in Hamlet"
Session 39 (Busch Center, Room 205): Afterthoughts: Renaissance Influences on Later Writers
Chair: Clarence Miller, Saint Louis University
Maria Teresa Micaela Prendergast, College of Wooster "`Swisser-Swatter, Swisser-Swatter': Sex, Gossip, and John Aubrey's Elizabethans"
Andrew Smyth, Plymouth State College "Revisiting Spenser's Ireland in Maria Edgeworth's Irish Writings"
John H. Haddox, University of Texas, El Paso "Chesterton and Shakespeare: The Insights of an Amateur"
Robert G. Collmer, Baylor University "The Pseudepigraphical Thomas Kyd: Alfred B. Harbage as Novelist"
Luncheon Banquet and William B. Hunter Lecture
Saturday, 12:30 p.m. Busch Center, Saint Louis Room
"Performing the Renaissance: Theater as Metaphor in Art and Society"
James M. Saslow,
Queens College and the Graduate Center,
City University of New York
Professor Saslow is author of The Medici Wedding of 1589: Florentine Festival as Theatrum Mundi, Ganymede in the Renaissance: Homosexuality in Art and Society, and Pictures and Passions: A History of Homosexuality in the Visual Arts.
Sponsors: South-Central Renaissance Conference and the Department of Fine and Performing Arts at Saint Louis University
Opening and closing remarks: Katherine Powers, President of the South-Central Renaissance Conference
Introduction to Professor Saslow: Cynthia J. Stollhans, Saint Louis University
2:30, 2:50
Shuttle vans depart from Busch Center to lodgings and to afternoon outings at the Gateway Arch and Museum of Western Expansion, the St. Louis Art Museum, and the Missouri Botanical Garden
4:45
Shuttle vans return from outings to lodgings
5:00 — 7:00
Dinner: conference participants are on their own
7:00
Shuttle vans to Powell Concert Hall for the Symphony and to the Repertory Theater for Noel Coward's Private Lives
10:30 (approx.)
Shuttle vans from Powell Hall and the Repertory Theater to lodgings