The Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World Program
at the
College of Charleston
Charleston, South Carolina


Back to Saints Conference, February 2004
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Contact us at: atlanticwd@cofc.edu



Saints and Pilgrimage Around the Atlantic
February 20-22, 2004

Convened by the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies and the
Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World Program
at the
College of Charleston


Program


All sessions will take place in Arnold Hall, on the ground floor of the Yaschik/Arnold Jewish Studies Center,
College of Charleston, 96 Wentworth Street


Friday, February 20th, 2004


Noon to 1:00 p.m.                             Registration


1:00 p.m.      
                       Introduction and welcome by Dr. Sam Hines, Dean of Humanities
                                                            and Social Sciences, College of Charleston


1:30-3:00 p.m.                    Panel One: Pilgrimage and Popular Culture (Chair: Kathy De Haan)


LeGrace Benson (Arts of Haiti Research Project)
“Holy Thursday Pilgrimage to the Citadel of King Henry Christophe:
A Study in the Complexities of Haitian Religious and Political Sensibilities”


Ryan Smith (Archivist, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia)
“The Fountain of Youth: History of an Errant Shrine”

Robert Westerfelhaus (Associate Professor of Communication, College of Charleston)
“Prayers in Plaster and Plastic: Catholic Kitsch as Ritual Communication”

3:30-5:00 p.m.                     Plenary Session: Wachovia Public Lecture introduced by Margaret Cormack,
                                                        Associate Professor of Religious Studies, College of Charleston


        John Corrigan
(Edwin Scott Gaustad Professor of Religion and Professor of History
Director, Center for the Study of Emotion, Florida State University)
 

"The Transplantation of European Culture to North America: French and Spanish Mission Strategies"

5:00-6:00 p.m.                      Reception--Lobby of Arnold Hall

    _____________________________________
 
Saturday, February 21st, 2004

9:00-10:30 a.m.                    Panel Two: Syncretism, Resistance, and Iconoclasm
                                              (Chair: Rosemary Brana-Shute)


Nicholas Beasley (Department of History, Vanderbilt University)
"English Iconoclasm in the Iberian Atlantic World, 1570-1660"


Alison McLetchie (Department of Anthropology, University of South Carolina)
"Incidents of Douglazation: The Worship of La Divina Pastora in Trinidad"


Kevin Roberts (Assistant Professor of History, New Mexico State University)
“Worshipping St. John at the Bayou: Afro-Catholicism and Voodoo in New Orleans, 1773-1873.”


11:00-12:30 p.m.                    Panel Three: Slaves, Race, and Sainthood (Chair: Massimo Maggiari)

Giovanna Fiume (Professor of Modern History, University of Palermo)
“Saint Benedict the Moor: From the Mediterranean to South America”
Associated Images

Lisa Randle (Director of Multicultural and Educational Programming,
Historic Columbia Foundation)
“St. Peter Claver: Slave of the Slaves Forever”

Rodger M. Payne
(Associate Professor and Assistant Chair for Religious Studies,

Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Louisiana State University)
“Image and Imagination in the Cult of Saint Amico”

2:00-3:30 p.m.                          Panel Four: Catholic Cults Old and New (Chair: Robert Westerfelhaus)

Michael Pasquier (Department of Religion, Florida State University)
“Our Lady of Prompt Succor: The Search for an American Marian Cult in New Orleans"


Patrick Hayes
(Department of Theology, Quincy University)
“Massachusetts Miracles:  In Search of the Holy in Catholic Boston”


Lisa Edwards  (Assistant Professor of History, Valparaiso University)
"Transatlantic Religious Practices: Latin American Pilgrimages to Europe”


 4:00-5:30 p.m.                         Panel Five: Virgin and Child in Hispanic America (Chair: Sarah Owens)

Juan Javier Pescador (Assistant Professor of History, Michigan State University)        
“After the Virgin and the Holy Child of Atocha:
A  Transatlantic/Borderlands Devotion, 14th-20th Centuries”


Susan Kerr
(Independent Scholar)
“New World Pilgrim:  The Holy Child of Atocha”

Katie MacLean (Assistant Professor of Romance Languages, Kalamazoo College)
“The Venerable Mary of Agreda: Folklore, Literature, and the Legacy of Spiritual Conquest”

 7:00-10:00 p.m.                               Banquet--details to be arranged
____________________________________

Sunday, February 22nd, 2004

9:00-10:15 a.m.                          Panel Six:Saints and Pilgrimage in Morocco (Chair: Mary Beth Heston)

Hassan Rahmouni (Professor of Public Law and Political Science,
and
Former Vice-President for Student Affairs and External Relations, Hassan II  University, Mohammedia)
" A Moroccan Islamic Sufi Saint: Sid Lahbib of the Atlas "
Associated images


Michelle Rein
(Ph.D. Candidate in Islamic Art and Architecture, University of Pennsylvania)
Reinventing a Blessed Past: Saints’ Shrines and The Shifting of Collective Memory” (Morocco)
Associated images


10:30-noon                                Panel Seven: Tradition and Change in Islands of the North Atlantic
                                                (Chair: Moore Quinn)

Tessa Garton (Associate Professor of Art History, College of Charleston)
“The Influence of Pilgrimage on Artistic Traditions in Medieval Ireland”

Robert Scully (Associate Professor of History, Le Moyne College)
"St. Winefride's Well: The Significance and Survival of a Welsh Catholic Shrine
from the Middle Ages to the Present Day"


Margaret Cormack (Associate Professor of Religious Studies, College of Charleston)
"Holy Wells and National Identity in Iceland"

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Last update: J. Finch, 2/18/04