Liminal Spaces and the Jewish Imagination II: The Venice Ghetto at 500 and the Future of Memory

 


Tuesday, February 23, 2016 | 12:15-6:30 PM | Free & Open to the Public
210 Humanities Building 1, UC Santa Cruz
Directions and Parking Information


Liminal Spaces II Conference PosterThis conference addresses the complexity of the Ghetto of Venice at 500, both as a concrete space and as a global metaphor – tracing its refraction across space and time. We bring together representations of the ghetto in art, literature, and photography while embracing the possibilities of digital methodologies. By conceiving of the ghetto as a “memory space that travels” rather than as a static museal site we open up the constellation of representations in which the Ghetto of Venice is situated in the 21st century.
 

Program

12:15-1:00 PM – Opening Remarks by Dean Tyler Stovall and Professor Murray Baumgarten
“The Venice Ghetto at 500: Situating the Conversation”

1:00-1:30 PM – Skype conversation with Marjorie Agosín
“Discussing Cartographies: The Venice Ghetto as a Memory Space that Travels”

  • Katie Trostel, Ph.D. Candidate in Literature, University of California Santa Cruz

1:30-1:45 PM – Coffee Break

1:45-3:15 PM – Panel #1: The Ghetto as Theater

  • Dr. Ariane Helou, University of California, Santa Cruz
    “Voice and Theatricality in Leone de’ Sommi’s Dialoghi
  • Dr. Samuel Arkin, Lecturer in Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz
    “Hath not a Jew a home? Shylock in Venice, Venice in Shylock?”
  • Respondent: Professor Emeritus Harry Berger, Jr., Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz

3:15-3:30 PM – Coffee Break

3:30-5:00 PM – Panel #2: Mapping Liminal Jewish Space

  • Amanda Sharick, Ph.D. candidate in Literature, University of California, Riverside
    “’Beating Vainly at Closed Doors’: Tracing and Transposing the Recurring Ghetto in the Works of Lady Katie Magnus, Amy Levy and Israel Zangwill.”
  • Professor Alma Heckman, Professor of History and Jewish Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
    “Porosity and Transgression: Modern Understandings of the Moroccan Mellah and Jews Apart.”
  • Respondent: Francesco Spagnolo, Curator of The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life and Lecturer in the Department of Music at the University of California, Berkeley

5:00-5:15 PM – Break

5:15-6:30 PM – “The Venice Ghetto at 500”: Round table discussion moderated by Professor Murray Baumgarten

  • Dr. Rachel Dubliner, CLIR Post Doctoral Fellow and Digital Humanities Specialist, University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Professor Bruce Thompson, Jewish Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Professor Emeritus Peter Kenez, History, University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Professor Nathaniel Deutsch, History, University of California, Santa Cruz

6:30 PM – Reception to follow
 

Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Studies, the Literature Department, and the Siegfried B. and Elisabeth Mignon Puknat Literary Studies Endowment

 
Questions, or for disability related accommodations, please contact ihr@ucsc.edu or 831-459-5655.

Posted in Events, Liminal Spaces.