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Cistercians at Kalamazoo 2015

St bernard de clairvaux church yard

1115 Clairvaux was founded in France. Commemorating the events 900 years later, the 2015 Cistercian Studies Conference will once more be held at Kalamazoo.

This year Kalamazoo is impregnated with Cistercian scholars, who are busy convening for this year’s Cistercian Studies Conference organised under the auspices of the “Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies” at the Western Michigan University. All-in-all twelve sessions have been planned on a variety of topics pertaining to the medieval history of the Cistercian order and organized by the Center’s  director, E. Rozanne Elder, and by Henrike Lähnemann from Oxford University. The center also hosts a couple of social arrangements (drinks etc.)

To this list should be added a separate session on Cistercian preaching and a handful of other papers.

However, the main event is the Cistercian Studies Conference.

Programme

Introducing the Cistercian conference is of course Professor Emeritus Brian Patrick MacGuire from Roskilde University in Denmark, who is (rumour has it) currently writing his magnum opus: a biography of Bernard of Clairvaux. With the intriguing title: “Living on his Nerves” participants will be introduced to his on-going search to fathom this “difficult saint” (to quote from the title of his first biography of the man from 1991.

After this follows a distinct bonanza of papers approaching the man and his world from all sorts of interdisciplinary angles:

Below is the full programme (numbers refer to the number of the session):

Clairvaux’s First Abbot (11)

Presider: E. Rozanne Elder, Western Michigan University

Lectio Divina and Its Echoes (58)

Presider: Cassian Russell, OCSO, Monastery of the Holy Spirit

Theologians and Hagiographers (108)

Presider: Elias Dietz, OCSO, Abbey of Gethsemani

Cistercian Influences (154)

Presider: Cornelia Oefelein, St.-Jakobus Gesellschaft Berlin-Brandenburg

Medingen Manuscripts in America (184)

Presider: Susan M. B. Steuer, Western Michigan Univ.

The Devotional Culture of Cistercian Nuns (238)

Presider: Henrike Lähnemann, Univ. of Oxford

Cistercians in a Changing World (293)

Presider: Philip F. O’Mara, Bridgewater College

Cistercian Exempla Tradition (348)

Presider: Brian Patrick McGuire, Roskilde Univ.

Cistercians as Landowners (406)

Presider: Thomas X. Davis, Abbey of New Clairvaux

Cistercian Property Management (465)

Presider: Kathryn E. Salzer, Pennsylvania State Univ.

Cistercian Textual Studies I (520)

Presider: Charles Cummings, OCSO, Holy Trinity Monastery

Cistercian Textual Studies II (547)

Presider: John R. Sommerfeldt, Univ. of Dallas

More Cistercian Stuff

As if this is not enough, at least four other sessions include presentations of Cistercian matters:

The International Anchoritic Society (111)  includes a presentation on
The International Medieval Sermon Studies Society has organized a whole session on Cistercian Preaching (session 177) with the following presentations:
Post-Conquest Religiosity (258) includes a presentation on
Religious Persecution and Heretical Identities in Medieval Europe (425)

Violence and the Construction of the Heretical Identity in the Cistercian Anti-Heretical Discourse
Stamatia Noutsou, Masarykova Univ.

CENTER FOR CISTERCIAN AND MONASTIC STUDIES

The Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies encourages and facilitates research on all aspects of the Cistercian tradition and in the broader field of religious traditions. It was established in 2010 as a research center under the aegis of the Medieval Institute as the successor to the Institute of Cistercian Studies, which had been founded in 1973 as a cooperative venture between Western Michigan University and Cistercian Publications, Inc.

The Center offers a Graduate Certificate in the History of Monastic Movements, which is open to students enrolled in a graduate degree program at WMU.

FEATURED PHOTO:

St. Bernard de Clairvaux Church is a medieval Spanish monastery cloister which was built in the town of Sacramenia in Segovia, Spain, in the 12th century but dismantled in the 20th century and shipped to New York in the United States. It was eventually reassembled in North Miami Beach, Florida, where it is now an Episcopal church and tourist attraction. It is one of the oldest buildings in the Western Hemisphere. Source: Wikipedia. Rolf Müller (CC BY-SA 3.0)

READ MORE:

Professor Brian patrick McGuires fond memories of the Cistercian Studies Conference and Kalamazoo

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