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Subj: [BYZANS-L] [Fwd: Conference Call for Paper: Underpinnings: The  
Evolution of Underwear from the Middle Ages through Early Modernity]




-------- Original Message --------
Subject:  Conference Call for Paper: Underpinnings: The Evolution of  
Underwear from the Middle Ages through Early Modernity
Date:    Mon, 5 Oct 2009 14:17:30 -0400
From:     Knighton, Barbara  <bkni...@binghamton.edu>
To:      <jm_wagst...@yahoo.co.uk>, <wwall...@artsci.wustl.edu>,  
<walto...@global.co.za>, <ca...@columbia.edu>,  
<jeremy.war...@wallacecollection.org>,  <e-wea...@uchicago.edu>, 
<weddi...@gmx.ch>,  <janwi...@xs4all.nl>, <l...@gwu.edu>,  
<e.j.when...@bham.ac.uk>, <maest...@earthlink.net>,  
<wilding_n...@hotmail.com>, <cwilso...@hotmail.com>,  
<peter.wind...@uce.ac.uk>, <wi...@ub.uni-duesseldorf.de>,  
<wobri.wolt...@gmx.de>, <j...@humnet.ucla.edu>,  
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<gi...@alumni.princeton.edu>, <tmz2...@columbia.edu>,  <mam...@unive.it>



/This is a call for papers for an  Undergraduate Conference concerning 
the evolution of undergarments from  500-1750. Please circulate this call 
for papers on your student listservs  as well as those reserved for 
faculty and graduate students//. We  apologize for any duplicate requests./

/ /

/ /

/  /

Undergraduate Conference Saturday, April 24,  2010

*Underpinnings: *

*The Evolution of Underwear from the  Middle Ages through Early Modernity*

/ /

/A conference organized  by the undergraduate students of the Center for 
Medieval and Renaissance  Studies at Binghamton University (Binghamton, 
NY) in conjunction with  Troubadours and Trebuchets, The Medieval Studies 
Club/

>From the  trailing sleeves and towering headdresses of the High Middle 
Ages to the  ornate, jewel-encrusted ensembles of Elizabethan England and 
the elaborate  turbans of the Mamluk and Ottoman empires, clothing and 
headgear have  captured the imagination of historians for decades. Few, 
however, have  given thought to what lies beneath, which, even while 
having a functional  role, comprises a system of sartorial signs that 
tell much with respect to  social mores and shifting views of the body. 
This conference aims to  explore the evolution of undergarments from the 
Middle Ages through the  early modern era in a variety of contexts, from 
the material forms of the  garments themselves to their symbolic 
associations and latent meaning.  Geographic and temporal reach: global, 
500-1750.

Possible topics of  discussion include:

- Differences and similarities in men’s and women’s  undergarments 
according to class, social status, age, and distinctions  between the 
laity and religious

- Changing notions of modesty,  comfort, and hygiene and their effects on 
the under-covering of  bodies

- The materiality of undergarments

- The decorative range  of undergarments, from the utilitarian to the 
elaborate, including the use  of lace and embroidery

- Underwear as outerwear (the exposure of  undergarments through sleeves, 
necklines, and cutaway skirts; the display  of underwear in private 
spaces; the role of underwear in the public  stripping of the body)

- Shaping the body: the use of undergarments to  achieve desired silhouettes

- The effects of sumptuary laws on  undergarments

- The rise of certain industries related to the  production of 
undergarments, including the whaling trade in relation to  the rise of 
the whalebone corset

- The erotics of  underwear

- The myths and realities of the chastity belt

- The  representation of underwear in painting, poetry, and song

Proposals for  individual papers (20 minutes maximum) should be no more 
than 500 words in  length and may be sent by email, with a current CV if 
graduate level and a  resume if undergraduate, to hall...@binghamton.edu  
<mailto:hall...@binghamton.edu> (Re: Undergarment Conference). Those  
wishing to submit hard copies of the proposal and CV should forward them  
to: CEMERS (ATTN: Undergarment Conference), Binghamton University, P.O.  
Box 6000, Binghamton, NY 13902-6000. We also welcome proposals for  
integrated panels. Panel organizers should describe the theme of the  
panel and send abstracts with names and affiliations of all participants  
along with current CVs. A panel should consist of no more than three  
papers, each twenty minutes in length. Deadline for submissions is  
December 5^th , 2009.

//Barbara Dahulich  Knighton//

//Secretary, Center for//

//Medieval &  Renaissance Studies//

//Binghamton////  University//

//LN1129//

//phone 607-777-2730//

//fax  607-777-3110//


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