Daily Archives: 30 September 2015

Professor Jonas Liliequist, UWA PMRG/CMEMS Public Lecture

“‘To be unable to dissimulate is to be unable to live’: The ‘Body Politic’ and Gender Trouble of a Swedish Queen”, by Professor Jonas Liliequist (CHE/Umeå University)

Date: Wednesday, 7 October, 2015
Time: 6.30pm
Venue: Arts Lecture Room 5 (G.61, Ground Floor, Arts Building), UWA.
RSVP: All Welcome! No need to RSVP – just come along.

‘In her day, Queen Christina (1626-89) was regarded as exceptional and scandalous by turns, from her unfeminine demeanor and libertine ideals to her refusal to marry, abdication of the throne and conversion to Catholicism in 1654. At the same time, Christina was also very much a child of her time. Starting with learned discussions and doctrines about female rulers, this presentation takes a closer look at Christina in the broader light of central themes in popular and scholarly culture, including crossdressing and role-playing, dissimulation and imposture, hermaphroditism and female masculinity.’


Professor Liliequist is an International Partner Investigator with the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. His research focuses on love, sexuality, honour and shame in early modern Europe; and includes the dynamics of family emotions in 17th-18th century Sweden. For more info, see: http://www.umu.se/sok/english/staff-directory/?uid=joli0002&guise=anst2

Professor Yasmin Haskell, UWA Institute of Advanced Studies Free Public Lecture

“The Spice of Faith: Jesuits and the Arts and Emotions of ‘Accommodation'”, Professor Yasmin Haskell (Cassamarca Foundation Chair of Latin Humanism at The University of Western Australia; Chief Investigator in the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions: 1100-1800)

Date: Thursday 12 November 2015
Time:
6:15pm – 7:15pm
Venue: Art Gallery of Western Australia Theatrette, Perth WA
Cost: Event is free but RSVP required

The Society of Jesus, a Catholic Reformation order founded in the 16th century by Ignatius of Loyola, earned a formidable and paradoxical reputation in the early modern period. The Pope’s ‘crack troops’ were deployed from Paris to Paraguay to Peking, converting souls, educating the élites of Catholic Europe and her overseas colonies, conducting diplomatic business and scientific research, producing music and drama, poems and pyrotechnics, art and architecture. Jesuits were active in mission fields through Asia, Africa and the Americas from the 16th -18th centuries and wrote extensively about their experiences. These were mined, in turn, by their brothers in Europe for poems, dramas, and other literature for education and edification. Jesuits were famous for their efforts to cross language barriers (writing dictionaries, translating, acting as diplomats and brokers) and for their chameleon-like ability to adapt to local circumstances. Some, like the Italian Matteo Ricci in China, seem to have enjoyed close friendships with new Christians from cultures radically different from their own.To what extent did early modern Jesuits evince what we might call ‘transcultural empathy’ for the non- European peoples they encountered in the overseas missions?

Was there anything in the Jesuits’ training and ‘way of proceeding’ that rendered them especially receptive to different cultures, or that encouraged them to see through others’ eyes? And what emotional work did ‘exotic’ arts, crafts, and other cultural products – some beautiful examples are on display in the ‘Treasure Ships’ exhibition – perform as tools for conversion and in fortifying Jesuits’ sense of their global, corporate identity?


Professor Yasmin Haskell, FAHA, is Cassamarca Foundation Chair of Latin Humanism at The University of Western Australia and a Chief Investigator in the Australian Research Council’s (ARC) Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions: 1100-1800, where she leads team projects on ‘Jesuit Emotions’ and ‘Passions for Learning’. Her research interests span poetry and science, history of the Jesuits, and history of emotions and psychiatry.

Before coming to Perth, Yasmin was a research fellow at Newnham College, Cambridge (1995-2002). She has also been a visiting fellow at Christ Church and All Souls Colleges, Oxford, and a visiting fellow commoner at Trinity College, Cambridge.