2020 Conference Program - Arizona State University

Transcription

URDN FUENEFROEMED OMACMRS 2020 ConferenceFebruary 7 – 8, 2020 ASU Tempe CampusUNFREEDOM

U NF REED O M2020Dea r Col leagues,RS’s 26th an nualWelcome to ACMnfinterd isciplinar y coerence.ll consider, and we hope you wiRSMACatetimgIt’s an excitinprog ra m m ingattend our ex tendedtonaizoArtoginRace sy mposia .returnr bian nual RaceB4oungdicluinaryeeth roughout thl for our 40thbm it a paper or pa nesullwiuyopehoinWe especia llyand a ha lf from nowce to be held a yearenernfcoryrsaPrt,veAn nill be “Pas esent,nference theme wicoeTh.UASatreFa ll 2021 heFutures.”g 2021.ll for papers in sprincaethdanilstadeeStay tuned for morAl l best,Ayan na ThompsonDirector, ACM RSrsityAr izona State UniveRoom 4428ie F. Coor HallSciences LattLiberal Arts and4402The College ofpe, AZ 85287Tem,402874: acmrs.asu.edu, PO Boxasu.edu web975 S Myrtle Aveemail: acmrs@f: 480-967-1681p: 480-965-5900DRAFT1

UNFREEDOM2020ACMRS StaffAyanna Thompson DirectorGeoffrey Way Manager of Publishing FuturesRoy Rukkila Managing EditorLeah Newsom Outreach CoordinatorTodd Halvorsen Manager of Design and ProductionSue Cox Business Operations SpecialistTerri Kessler Administrative AssistantAdvisory BoardFabian Alfie University of ArizonaRyan A. Kashanipour Northern Arizona UniversityHannah Barker Arizona State UniversityBradley Ryner Arizona State UniversityMeg Lota Brown University of ArizonaAnne Scott Northern Arizona UniversityMarkus Cruse Arizona State UniversityStefan Stantchev Arizona State UniversityCora Fox Arizona State UniversityConference Program and Selection CommitteeHannah Barker Arizona State UniversityJuliann Vitullo Arizona State UniversityBradley Ryner Arizona State UniversityGeoffrey Way Arizona State UniversityDRAFT2

U NF REED O M2020RegistrationEveryone attending the 2020 ACMRS Conference must register either through theACMRS website or in person on site. Late registrants may still register online for theadded late fee of 50. Registration payment by credit card or check will be accepted.The registration table will be open Friday, 8:00am–5:00pm and Saturday, 8:00am–2:00pm on the second floor of the University Club. Conference packets are availableonly at the registration table.LocationSessions will be held in the conference rooms of Old Main, 400 E Tyler Mall, and theUniversity Club, 425 E University Dr. Please visit asu.edu/maps for specific locations.From The Graduate Hotel, walk north on Forest Ave for 350 yards. Continue northon Forest Mall for 350 yards. Turn right onto Tyler Mall and proceed 250 yards toOld Main on your left. The total walk is half a mile and should take about 10 minutes.From the Fulton Center garage, walk south to University Drive. The University Cluband Old Main are across the lawn south of University Drive just east of College Ave.The walk is less than 5 minutes.ParkingConference attendees should park at the ASU Fulton Center garage located at 700S. College Ave. The maximum daily fee is 15. For additional information, please visitparking.asu.edu. Parking fees are the responsibility of the attendee and no validationis available. Parking in the Fulton Center garage is free on Saturday.TransportationThe ASU Tempe campus is served by a number of transportation options. Ride-shareservices provide a connection between Sky Harbor Airport and the campus for about 15. Guests staying at the conference hotel have access to a free airport shuttle.Phoenix operates the Valley Metro Rail which connects Sky Harbor Airport with thedowntown Tempe Transportation Center; the fare is 2 and the ride takes about 15minutes. It is a 10 minute walk from the Metro station to the conference location oncampus. For more information on mass transit options, please visit valleymetro.org.DRAFT3

UNF REED O M2020AcknowledgmentsACMRS would like to thank the following sponsors for their generous financial support of this conference:The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Division of HumanitiesCollege of Integrative Sciences and ArtsDepartment of EnglishSchool of International Letters and CulturesSchool of Social TransformationSchool for Historical, Philosophical, and Religious StudiesInstitute for Humanities ResearchFinally, our appreciation goes out to the staff at the University Club and Old Mainand the many ACMRS volunteers whose assistance is invaluable to the success ofthis conference.BreaksCoffee and an assortment of fruits and pastries will be provided during morning andafternoon breaks in the University Club.MealsAttendees are responsible for their own meals. Downtown Tempe features a widerange of dining options ranging from 5 to 15 minutes walking distance from the conference. For a detailed map and complete list of dining options, please visit downtowntempe.com/explore/dining.Closing ReceptionDesert Botanical Garden (1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phoenix, AZ 85008)Conference attendees have complimentary access to the Desert Botanical Gardenall day Saturday, February 8. The reception runs from 6:30pm to 8:30pm withcomplimentary shuttle service to and from the Garden from ASU.ConductAll of the spaces in which our professional meetings extend are expected to remainprofessional, and the values of respect, equity, and nondiscrimination are of paramount importance. We ask that attendees conduct themselves in the conferencerooms, over coffee, or over drinks in a professional manner. All attendees shouldaspire to treat each other as having an equally valuable contribution to make.DRAFT4

U NF REED O M2020Friday, February 7Session One9:00am–10:30am1a . Medical UnfreedomTooker Boardroom, Old MainCHAIR: Lisa Schnell, U niversity of Vermont“As a [healthy] woman should”: Enslaved Women, Medical Experts,and Proofs of Purgation in Late Medieval Slave MarketsDebra Blumenthal, University of California Santa BarbaraChastity Held Hostage: Amoret in the House of BusiraneMegan Jane Bowman, Boston UniversityOn the Case of H. Poche: Exhumation, Body Snatching, and theLegal Personhood of the DeadAnthony Perron, Loyola Marymount UniversityThe Female Body, Or Is It?Baylee Staufenbiel, Arizona State University1b. Animal UnfreedomBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: John Nassichuk, T he University of Western OntarioBound by Desire: Animals, Agency, and Ethics in Fernando deRojas’s CelestinaFaith S. Harden, University of Arizona“Fitter for a Wilderness than a City”: A Study of the Subjugation ofAnimals in Early Modern EnglandCaitlin Mahaffy, Indiana University“Go to the ant, thou sluggard:” Didactic Anthropomorphism as anAgent of Monarchical and Patriarchal Power StructuresMadeleine Ostwald, Arizona State UniversityDRAFT5

UN F REED O M20201c. Religious Unfreedom in the Works of Théodore Agrippad’Aubigné [panel]Heritage Room, University ClubPANEL CHAIR: Kathleen Perry Long, C ornell UniversityBound by God: Prometheus, Penitence, and Poetic Constraint inLes TragiquesTherese Banks, Harvard UniversityRepose in Constraint: Agrippa d’Aubigné’s Hécatombe à Diane andBaroque StyleRichard Gibbs, Cornell UniversityFree Your Mind: The Poetics of Unfreedom in Théodore Agrippad’Aubigné’s Epic, Les TragiquesKathleen Perry Long, Cornell University“Les Feux” of Unfreedom: Martyrs and Martyrdom in Agrippad’Aubigné’s Les TragiquesAshley M. Voeks, Oakland UniversityFriday, February 7Morning Break10:30am–10:45amDRAFT6

U NF REED O M2020Friday, February 7Plenary Lecture10:45am–12:15pmCarson Ballroom, Old MainReading Back ‘n Black Stories of Freedom in World History:Maroons from the Afro-Greco-Roman World to Right Here,Right NowOmar H. Ali, UNC GreensboroIn this talk, Professor Ali explores the activity of maroons, defined broadly,across the global African Diaspora from the ancient world through the modernera, looking at Amanirenas and Tacfarinas in North Africa, the Zanjis in southernIraq, and Benkos Biohó in New Granada, among other figures and areas of theworld.Friday, February 7Lunch Break12:15pm–2:00pmACMRS Press has a new website!Browse our publications at acmrspress.comDRAFT7

UN F REED O M2020Friday, February 7Session Two2:00pm–3:30pm2a . Subjections from Iberia to the Southeast and Southwest [panel]Tooker Boardroom, Old MainSPONSORED BY: Early Modern Image and Text SocietyPANEL CHAIR: Christopher Johnson, A rizona State UniversityThe Appalachian Origins of the Native American Slave Trade inNorth America and the Spanish Caribbean, 1528–1715Kimberly Borchard, Randolph Macon CollegeUnfreedom and Servitude in Arizona and Sonora Maps, 1540–1760Juan Pablo Gil-Osle, Arizona State UniversitySlum Tourism: Quixotic Subjections and PrivilegesDaniel Holcombe, Georgia College and State University2b. Queer UnfreedomBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: Matthew Brumit, University of MaryThe Refractions of Mary Aubrey Montagu and Anne Owen in thePoetry of Katherine PhilipsAlexandria Morgan, University of Miami“ in quest of a Gang of Sodomites”: Toward New Frameworksfor Understanding Sexuality and Identity in Early Modern CulturalImaginariesDavid Orvis, Appalachian State UniversityQueer Captivity in Samson Agonistes: Disability, Foreign Desires,and Political ActsAnita Raychawdhuri, University of California Santa BarbaraDRAFT8

U NF REED O M20202c. Medieval Unfreedom IHeritage Room, University ClubCHAIR: Hannah Johnson, University of PittsburghSex Work and Forced Labor in Three Old English RiddlesSarah M. Anderson, Princeton UniversityIn “Cold Irons Bound”: Piers Plowman and the Language ofImprisonmentAnthony Colaianne, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State UniversityThe Question of Piers Plowman’s ServitudeLarry Scanlon, R utgers University-New BrunswickFriday, February 7Afternoon Break3:30pm–3:45pmInvites submissions of articles on the topic of women and gender in the early modern period.The Journal offers an award of 1000 for the best article in each volume.Early Modern Women: An Interdisciplinary Journal is the only journal devoted solely to theinterdisciplinary and global study of women and gender spanning the late medieval throughearly modern periods. Each volume gathers essays on early modern women from everycountry and region, by scholars from a wide range of academic disciplines, including arthistory, cultural studies, music, history, languages and literatures, political science, religion,theatre, history of science, and history of philosophy.Bernadette Andrea,University of California,Santa BarbaraEDITORSJulie D. Campbell,Eastern IllinoisUniversityAllyson M. Poska,University ofMary WashingtonSUBSCRIBEacmrs.org/journalsSubscription inquiries: emwj@asu.eduSUBMISSIONSacmrs.org/journalsEditorial inquiries: emwj@umw.eduDRAFT9

UN F REED O M2020Friday, February 7Session Three3:45pm–5:15pm3a . Travel, Trade, and UnfreedomTooker Boardroom, Old MainCHAIR: Faith S. Harden, U niversity of ArizonaThe Materiality of the Viking-Age Slave TradeMatthew Delvaux, B oston College“China chains” and “silken bonds”: Trade and Traffic of Asia(ns)Mariam Galarrita, U niversity of California RiversideCattle, Warfare, and the Making of Subject Masculinity in the19th-Century Zulu KingdomRaevin Jimenez, University of MichiganLarge Noses and Sunken Eyes: Exploring Slave Labour in LateMedieval FlorenceAngela Zhang, York University3b. Unfreedom on the ContinentBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: Kimberly Borchard, R andolph Macon CollegeWomen in Early Germanic Laws: Changing Rights Through theChristian ConversionErek Lively, University of Nevada“You Shall Wrestle Against our Black-Man”: ComprehendingRacialized Identities in Kjalnesigna SagaBasil Arnould Price, A rizona State UniversityDebt and Bondage in Early RusAlexandra Vukovich, U niversity of OxfordDRAFT10

U NF REED O M20203c. Shakespearean Unfreedom IHeritage Room, University ClubCHAIR: David Orvis, Appalachian State University“Far more fair than black”: Othello and the Dialectics of UnfreedomEric Brinkman, The Ohio State UniversitySlavery, Race, and Republicanism in The Revenge of Amleth, TheHistory of Hamblet, and HamletKatherine Gillen, Texas A&M University-San AntonioEarly Modern Shakespearian Globe: Othello’s Black DeathCristi Whiskey, University of Maryland, College Park3d. Religious UnfreedomTraditions Room, University ClubCHAIR: Debra Blumenthal, U niversity of California Santa BarbaraThe Coercive Nature of Captivity and its Relation to MissionizingSpencer Hunt, University of Notre DameMedieval Theological UnfreedomsM. Lindsay Kaplan, Georgetown University“The Rest, We Live Law to Our Selves”: Antinomianism and God’sLaw Before and After the Fall in Paradise LostAlexander Johnson, University of ArizonaSlavery and the Divine in the Miracles of Saint SwithunCody Osguthorpe, A rizona State UniversityFriday, February 7Break5:15pm–6:00pmDRAFT11

Maple Ave1st St2020Friday, February 7Organ Performance6:00pm–7:00pmThe Organ Hall, ASU Herberger Institute, Music Hall West2nd StGargoyles and Galliards Organ Performance1Kimberly Marshall, Valerie Harris, Natalie Mealey, Paul Oftedahl, ReesRoberts, Karen Stephens Taylor, and Julia Tucker, Arizona State University3rd StDesertFinancialArenaWayCollege AveUniversity DrForest AveMyrtle Ave7th StMill AveFULTONCENTEROLD MAIN9th StUNIVERSITYCLUBHayden Mall10th StCady MallMUSIC HALL WEST11th StGammage PkwyPalm WalkTyler MallForest MallDRAFTTO GRADUATE HOTELOrange MaMU Service Dr1212th StLemon Ste2The organ performance is free and open to all conference attendees.Sun DevilFrank KushKimberly Marshall and the ASU Organ Studio invite you to experienceof theStadium someFieldearliest compositions for organ in this program of late-medieval and Renaissancemusic. The program features music by Tempeleading organists of the 15th and 16thTransportation Centercenturies,5th St including Arnolt Schlick, Conrad Paumann, and Antonio de Cabezón, all ofwhom were blind. In a time when disability was often viewed as divine punishment,these men were able Tempeto transcend the stigma of blindness using their heightenedCityaural skills. The programHall will be performed on the two fine instruments in ASU’sVe organOrgan Hall, the Fritts organ (German6th St baroque style, 1991) and the Traeriterans(Italian baroque, 1742).Maple AveAsh AveUN F REED O MLemon Mall

U NF REED O M2020Saturday, February 8Session Four9:00am–10:30am4a . Slavery and Unfreedom ITooker Boardroom, Old MainCHAIR: Raeven Jimenez, University of MichiganSlavery and Representation in Medieval IslamLamia Balafrej, University of California Los AngelesPrisoner in the East: Johann Schiltberger as a Prisoner of War andSlave in the Middle EastAlbrecht Classen, University of ArizonaSlavery in Pre-Conquest Aztec SocietyJennifer Rodriguez, Arizona State UniversityPatterns of Manumission and Monastic Exploitation in CentralMedieval BavariaSamuel S. Sutherland, Stephen F. Austin State University4b. Unfreedom Across MediaBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: Andrea Celli, University of ConnecticutThe Scriptorium as a Place of Personal Liberty in CinemaAndrew Clapham, Independent ScholarApproaching the Unapproachable in Medieval Public OutreachDayanna Knight, Independent ScholarMorality as an Impediment to Social Transformation: FramingContemporary Crime Shows with Tirso and ZayasBradley Nelson, Concordia UniversityDRAFT13

UN F REED O M20204c. Medieval and Early Modern Digital Humanities [panel]Heritage Room, University ClubSPONSORED BY: Iter: Gateway to the Middle Ages and RenaissancePANEL CHAIR: Elizabeth Grumbach, A rizona State UniversityTo Play, Perchance to Read: Using Digital Technologies(Augmented Reality and Video Games) to Teach Shakespeare’sHamletJohn Misak, New York Institute of TechnologyAstrophil as Outlier: Empirically Differentiating Sidney’s Astrophilfrom Other Early Modern Sonnet Sequence PersonaeSally Luken, University of Cincinnati“A Guy With a Long Red Tie Walks Into a Political Rally ”: SensoryActivation and Social Power — A Digital PlatformRichard Newhauser, Arizona State University4d. Shakespearean Unfreedom IITraditions Room, University ClubCHAIR: Katherine Gillen, T exas A&M University-San Antonio“If chance will have me king”: (Un)Freedom in MacbethAndrew Barnaby, University of Vermont“If Money Be the Feud of Love”: Capitalism, Unfreedom, and theQuestion of Queerness in The Merchant of Venice and TwelfthNightMark LaRubio, A rizona State University“hands cut off, tongue cut out, and ravished”: Staging Laviniaand Sexual AssaultLaura Schechter, University of AlbertaSaturday, February 8Morning Break10:30am–10:45amDRAFT14

U NF REED O M2020Saturday, February 8Plenary Lecture10:45am–12:15pmCarson Ballroom, Old MainMadwomen on the Slave Ship: Reproduction and Racial CapitalismJennifer L. Morgan, New York UniversityIn this talk, Professor Morgan explores the connections between the slave trade,the concept of kinlessness, and the origins of Atlantic capitalism. Drawing onthe ideological work of gender and reproduction in the early modern Atlantic,Morgan writes that notions of kinship and its absence were crucial in bothjustifying racial slavery and in the practices of accounting, demography, andvaluation that subtended the rise of capitalism as discourse and practice.Building on the critical work of Cedric Robinson, Morgan argues that theroots of racial capitalism are entwined with the harnessing of African women’sreproductive capacities to the economies of the trans-Atlantic slave trade.Saturday, February 8Lunch Break12:15pm–2:00pmSAVE THE DATEPoliticsA RaceB4Race symposiumSeptember 10–12, 2020Brandeis UniversityWaltham, MassachusettsDRAFT15

UN F REED O M2020Saturday, February 8Session Five2:00pm–3:30pm5a . Slavery and the Self in Early Modernity [panel]Tooker Boardroom, Old MainPANEL CHAIR: Travis Bruce, M cGill UniversityFrom Clever Slave to Crafty Knave: Labor and Value in Plautusand JonsonDavid Hawkes, Arizona State UniversitySpenser’s Captive SoulsKatherine Romack, U niversity of West FloridaSaving Unfree Souls: Slavery and Conversion in the Early ModernCaptivity NarrativeDaniel Vitkus, University of California San Diego5b. Early Modern UnfreedomBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: Sarah Whitten, H obart and William Smith CollegesFrom Miracles to Magic: The Medieval Hagiographic Tropes ofHrotsvitha’s “The Passion of St. Pelagius” in the Witchcraft Plays ofRenaissance EnglandMichael McVeigh Jr., Arizona State University“Challendge to your selves no Sov’raigntie”: Aemelia Lanyer andRepublican FreedomLisa Schnell, University of VermontDonne, Valladolid, and Jamestown: Fashioning Natives’ IntrinsicInnocence to Assert Adventurers’ Criminal InnocenceJosé Juan Villagrana, San José State UniversityDRAFT16

U NF REED O M20205c. Medieval Unfreedom IIHeritage Room, University ClubCHAIR: Albrecht Classen, U niversity of ArizonaThe Clamors and Lamentations of the Multitude: The Flagellantsand Liturgical Unfreedom in Medieval ItalyRichard Allington, Eastern New Mexico UniversityFreedom Found in Unfreedom: Reading and Writing MedievalPrison LiteratureMatthew Brumit, University of MaryThe Bifurcation of the Semantic Framework of Slavery in the LateMedieval WestJudith Mary Spicksley, U niversity of Hull5d. Unfreedom and PerformanceTraditions Room, University ClubCHAIR: Ashley M. Voeks, O akland UniversityWalking the Stasis: Movement as Unfreedom in Onna-monoguruiNoh PlaysDunja Jelesijevic, N orthern Arizona UniversitySpinoza, Freedom, and the Baroque MobChristopher Johnson, Arizona State UniversityThe Dancing Master’s Role in the Commodification of Women inRenaissance EuropeStephanie Rizvi-Stewart, Texas Tech UniversitySaturday, February 8Afternoon Break3:30pm–3:45pmDRAFT17

UN F REED O M2020Saturday, February 8Session Six3:45pm–5:15pm6a . Mediterranean UnfreedomTooker Boardroom, Old MainCHAIR: Matthew Delvaux, Boston CollegeTrade, Diplomacy, and Rulership: Unfreedoms in the Warp and Weftof the Eleventh-Century Western MediterraneanTravis Bruce, McGill UniversityDante’s Hellmouth: Drawings and Graffiti in the Prisons of theInquisition in PalermoAndrea Celli, University of ConnecticutThe Unfreedom of Women’s Work in Florence’s Piazza del DuomoJuliann Vitullo, Arizona State UniversityBridging the Mediterranean Sea: Slavery at Home and Abroad inNinth-Century Southern ItalySarah Whitten, Hobart and William Smith Colleges6b. Freedom and UnfreedomBasha Family Library, Old MainCHAIR: Albrecht Classen, U niversity of ArizonaSerious Proueces: Violence as Meaning in Aucassin et NicoletteDavid King, Stockton UniversityFreedom and Unfreedom of Speech in the works of the Pléiadepoets: Pierre de Ronsard’s poem “A Jean Du Thier, secrétaired’Estat”John Nassichuk, The University of Western Ontario“Marriage is no real excuse for not loving”: Arranged Marriage inGeoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury TalesHeather Nieto, Independent ScholarDRAFT18

U NF REED O M20206c. Slavery and Unfreedom IIHeritage Room, University ClubCHAIR: Juan Pablo Gil-Osle, A rizona State UniversityThe Sexuality of a EunuchNoel Lenski, Yale UniversityThe Rise of Islam and the Global History of Medieval SlaveryCraig Perry, Emory UniversityA Genealogy of Unfreedom for an Immigrant NationAna Schwartz, U niversity of Texas at AustinSaturday, February 8Break5:15pm–6:30pmSaturday, February 8Closing Reception6:30pm–8:30pmDesert Botanical Garden1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phoenix, AZ 85008Light refreshmentsCash bar – cards acceptedComplimentary shuttle service:ASU to DBG at 5:30pm and 6:00pmDBG to ASU at 8:45pmDRAFT19

UN F REED O M2020Index of ParticipantsAlfie, Fabian, 2Ali, Omar H., 7Allington, Richard, 17Anderson, Sarah M., 9Andrea, Bernadette, 2Balafrej, Lamia, 13Banks, Therese, 6Barker, Hannah, 2Barnaby, Andrew, 14Blumenthal, Debra, 5, 11Borchard, Kimberly, 8, 10Bowman, Megan Jane, 5Brinkman, Eric, 11Brown, Meg Lota, 2Bruce, Travis, 16, 18Brumit, Matthew, 8, 17Celli, Andrea, 13, 18Clapham, Andrew, 13Classen, Albrecht, 13, 17, 18Colaianne, Anthony, 9Cruse, Markus, 2Delvaux, Matthew, 10, 18Fox, Cora, 2Galarrita, Mariam, 10Gibbs, Richard, 6Gillen, Katherine, 11, 14Gil-Osle, Juan Pablo, 8, 19Grumbach, Elizabeth, 14Harden, Faith S., 5, 10Harris, Valerie, 12Hawkes, David, 16Holcombe, Daniel, 8Hunt, Spencer, 11Jelesijevic, Dunja, 17Jimenez, Raeven, 13Jimenez, Raevin, 10Johnson, Alexander, 11Johnson, Christopher, 8, 17Johnson, Hannah, 9Raychawdhuri, Anita, 8Rizvi-Stewart, Stephanie, 17Roberts, Rees, 12Rodriguez, Jennifer, 13Romack, Katherine, 16Ryner, Bradley, 2Kaplan, M. Lindsay, 11Kashanipour, Ryan, 2King, David, 18Knight, Dayanna, 13Scanlon, Larry, 9Schechter, Laura, 14Schnell, Lisa, 5, 16Schwartz, Ana, 19Scott, Anne, 2Spicksley, Judith Mary, 17Stantchev, Stefan, 2Staufenbiel, Baylee, 5Sutherland, Samuel S., 13LaRubio, Mark, 14Lenski, Noel, 19Lively, Erek, 10Long, Kathleen Perry, 6Luken, Sally, 14Mahaffy, Caitlin, 5Marshall, Kimberly, 12McVeigh Jr., Michael, 16Mealey, Natalie, 12Misak, John, 14Morgan, Alexandria, 8Morgan, Jennifer L., 15Nassichuk, John, 5, 18Nelson, Bradley, 13Newhauser, Richard, 14Nieto, Heather, 18Taylor, Karen Stephens, 12Thompson, Ayanna, 1, 2Tucker, Julia, 12Villagrana, José Juan, 16Vitkus, Daniel, 16Vitullo, Juliann, 2, 18Voeks, Ashley M., 6, 17Vukovich, Alexandra, 10Whiskey, Cristi, 11Whitten, Sarah, 16, 18Zhang, Angela, 10Oftedahl, Paul, 12Orvis, David, 8, 11Osguthorpe, Cody, 11Ostwald, Madeleine, 5Perron, Anthony, 5Perry, Craig, 19Price, Basil Arnould, 10DRAFT20

Desert Botanical Garden (1201 N Galvin Pkwy, Phoenix, AZ 85008) Conference attendees have complimentary access to the Desert Botanical Garden all day Saturday, February 8. The reception runs from 6:30pm to 8:30pm with . M. Lindsay Kaplan, Georgetown University "The Rest, We Live Law to Our Selves": Antinomianism and God's Law Before and .