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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20180413T100000
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SUMMARY:Mobility and Early Modernity: Religion\, Science\, and Commerce in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Day 1)
DESCRIPTION:Click Here to RSVP for Day 1\nAfter booking Day 1 below please remember to also book your spot for Day 2.\n\nDate/Time\nFriday\, April 13\, 2018\n10:00 am – 4:45 pm \nLocation\nWilliam Andrews Clark Memorial Library\n2520 Cimarron Street \nGoogle Calendar iCal Export\n\n\n—a conference organized by Sebouh D. Aslanian\, University of California\, Los Angeles; Matthew Kadane\, Hobart and William Smith Colleges; and Naomi Taback\, Temple University \n  \nIn Honor of Margaret Jacob \nco-sponsored by UCLA Department of History\n\nMobility and all that it entailed does not figure as an analytical category in the prodigious body of scholarship created by Margaret Jacob\, though it is certainly implied in much of her work from her earliest explorations of the unexpected connections between Newtonianism and Protestant theology\, to her pioneering work in the transnational history of science\, radical Enlightenment\, freemasonry\, and industry\, much of it based on British\, French\, Belgian and Dutch sources\, and finally in her more recent study of cosmopolitanism\, Strangers Nowhere in the World.  \nThe conference brings together scholars working on novel forms of knowledge and identity forged during the early modern age at the confluence of increasing mobility both in Europe and the larger world beyond. The speakers have worked with some of these insights presaged in Jacob’s scholarship but developed them in their own distinctive fashion to help shape religious\, cultural\, commercial\, and transnational history in the twenty-first century. Rather than looking to celebrate past accomplishments\, the conference aims to take stock of present trends in scholarship and suggest new paths for the future. \n  \nJob Adriaensz. Berckheijde\nThe Old Exchange of Amsterdam\nHaarlem\, circa 1670\nWikimedia.org \nSpeakers\nSebouh D. Aslanian\, University of California\, Los Angeles\nGuillaume Calafat\, Institute for Advanced Study\nVincenzo Ferrone\, University of Turin\nMargaret Jacob\, University of California\, Los Angeles\nMatthew Kadane\, Hobart and William Smith Colleges\nJesse Sadler\, Independent Scholar\nCatherine Secretan\, Centre national de la recherche scientifique\nJacob Soll\, University of Southern California\nNaomi Taback\, Temple University\nFrancesca Trivellato\, Yale University \n9:30 a.m.\nMorning Coffee and Registration \n10:00 a.m.\nHelen Deutsch\, University of California\, Los Angeles\nWelcome \nMatthew Kadane\, Hobart and William Smith Colleges\nOpening Remarks  \n10:30 a.m.\nMobilities and Across Water and Land\nModerator: Deborah Elizabeth Harkness\, University of Southern California  \nSebouh D. Aslanian\, University of California\, Los Angeles\n“Reverendissimi in Christo Patris: Letters of Recommendation\, Networks\, and Mobility in the Life of Thomas Vanandets‘i\, an Armenian Printer in Amsterdam\, 1677–1707″ \n11:15 a.m.\nMatthew Kadane\, Hobart and William Smith Colleges\n“Mobility and the Path to the Enlightenment”            \n12:00 p.m.\nCoffee Break  \n12:15 p.m.\nGuillaume Calafat\, Institute for Advanced Study\n“A Mediterranean Radical Experience? Henry Robinson (1604–1664) and Early Modern Mediterranean Toleration” \n1:00 p.m.\nLunch \n2:15 p.m.\nCosmopolitans and Urban Spaces\nModerator: David Brafman\, Getty Research Institute  \nFrancesca Trivellato\, Yale University\n“‘The Cosmopolitan as a Lived Category’: Reading Margaret Jacob as an Economic Historian” \n3:00 p.m.\nJesse Sadler\, Independent Scholar\n“The Economics and Emotions of Mobility among Early Modern Netherlandish Merchants” \n3:45 p.m.\nCoffee Break \n4:00 p.m.\nCatherine Secretan\, Centre national de la recherche scientifique\n“Utrecht as a 17th-Century European Intellectual Carrefour: Back and Forth Exchanges between Arminianism and Puritanism” \n4:45 p.m.\nReception \nAfter booking Day 1 below please remember to also book your spot for Day 2.
URL:https://history.ucla.edu/event/mobility-and-early-modernity-religion-science-and-commerce-in-the-seventeenth-and-eighteenth-centuries-day-1/
LOCATION:William Andrews Clark Memorial Library\, 2520 Cimarron Street
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