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DESERT HARVEST—Fall 2006
Vol. 14, No. 2
• ... and a Happy New Year to us all!,
Professor Susan C. Karant-Nunn
• Bazy Tankersley's Affair for the Chair
• Emerita receives award: Professor Helen Nader,
Julie Kang
• At the feet of visiting scholars
Professor Scott Hendrix,
Professor Susan C. Karant-Nunn
Professor David Nirenberg,
Lizzy Ellis-Marino
• New adjunct faculty: Dr. Diane Korngiebel,
Mary Kovel
• Discovering Munich, Sean Clark
... and a Happy
New Year to us all!
by Professor Susan C. Karant-Nunn, Director
Positions dedicated to the teaching
of specific subjects have been endowed for a very long time. The Roman
Emperor Vespasian (AD 69-79) is said to have established and financed
chairs in Greek and Latin rhetoric. His successor, Marcus Aurelius (AD
161-180), founded chairs in rhetoric and philosophy. During the European
Middle Ages, pious individuals gave money to create priestly positions
for the reading or singing of masses, which they thought would assist
theirs or their loved ones’ souls into heaven. The faculties of medieval
universities were often closely related to the Catholic Church, and thus
the endowment of professorial chairs seemed but a slight difference from
the funding of these more plentiful benefices. When Erasmus was at the
University of Louvain, the Trilingual College had just been founded
there and chairs in Latin, Greek, and Hebrew established.
President Robert Shelton has arrived and taken charge. One of the
first opinions he voiced was that The University of Arizona should seek
200 additional endowed chairs. These would bring further distinguished
scholars to a faculty that is already star-studded.
As a physicist, President Shelton may or may not be aware of the
history of endowments. Given our area of specialization, we in the
Division for Late Medieval and Reformation Studies are. We are ahead of
this praiseworthy presidential objective. Five years ago we were
propelled into action by the last will and testament of Heiko A. Oberman—whose
birthday at this writing has just passed. As a historian, Heiko knew how
transitory modes, even intellectual modes, were. Because the early
modern era in Europe was decisive in the shaping of Western culture, he
asserted the ongoing desirability of teaching that subject at an
advanced level at this university. For this reason, and not out of
vanity, he provided that his personal research collection would come to
the University upon the permanent endowment of a chair in late medieval
and Reformation history.
On December 31, 2006, the $300,000 matching challenge offered by an
anonymous donor expires. As I write, we have not done badly! You have
given approximately $228,000. Your generosity has been astounding.
Before the end of the year, we need the remaining $72,000 in order to
acquire every dollar of the match. Achieving this goal will bring us
significantly closer to our ultimate $2 million target. We are, of
course, still gloating a bit over our (and your) success in gathering
$1.1 million overall to date.
Let us make the Heiko A. Oberman Chair in Late Medieval and
Reformation History one of the first of President Shelton’s Two Hundred!
Let us bring Heiko’s fabulous book collection decisively into the
University Libraries.
Bazy Tankersley's Affair for the Chair
photos
At the invitation of Bazy
Tankersley, guests gathered at Al-Marah Arabians for an autumn lunch
under the shade of the cottonwoods. The event benefitted the endowment
of the Heiko A. Oberman Chair in Late Medieval and Reformation History
and the acquisition for the UA Libraries of the peerless Oberman
research collection.
John Schaefer, 15th president of the UA, talked about the essential
nature of fine libraries in determining the academic stature of a
university. He, himself, is remembered for the expansion of the UA
Libraries that he undertook as president. The Center for Creative
Photography is named for him. The new UA Foundation president James
Moore, Jr., added his willingness to meet with and accommodate
interested donors.
Associated
faculty achieves emerita status
Professor Helen Nader wins Bodo Nischan award
by Julie Kang, doctoral student
We in the Division were delighted but not surpised to hear
that our own Professor Helen Nader, lately emerita of the History
Department and a Division affiliate, was to be honored as the winner of
the 2006 biannual Bodo Nischan Award for Scholarship, Civility, and
Service from the Society for Reformation Research.
During our seminar last fall semester (2005), the students of the
Division learned firsthand how much Professor Nader enjoys working with
graduate students. In her formal dining room, we discussed all aspects
of the Habsburgs. So when asked to describe the highlights of her 35
years in academia, it was not surprising that Professor Nader began to
speak about her doctoral students and the interesting work produced by
them. She beamed with pride as she described the successes that her
former students have achieved over the years. Professor Nader’s
enthusiasm for her graduate students is well known. During our
conversation about this article, however, I learned what many people may
not know: how she came to be such an expert in the Spanish archives. Her
appreciation of primary source documents she attributes to a 1971 dock
strike in Hawaii. Since the University of Hawaii library held little in
the way of Renaissance and Spanish sources (fewer than two dozen books!)
and interlibrary loans could not physically reach her, Professor Nader
decided she needed to go to Spain. In the archives, she had the chance
to engage sources about the Mendoza family in a way that historians thus
far had not. Through this experience, Professor Nader learned that
historians have to “read everything and question everything.” In
addition to employing good methodology, she advises keeping moral and
ethical components in mind when writing history: “We have a great
responsibility to people who lived centuries ago. We have to really
listen to what they said.”
With these thoughtful and simple philosophies in mind, Professor
Nader has produced a curriculum vitae that swells with her
accomplishments. After the publication of her first book, “The Mendoza
Family in the Spanish Renaissance, 1350-1550” (1979), she produced her
second book, “Liberty in Absolutist Spain: The Habsburg Sale of Towns
1516-1700” (1990), which won the American Historical Association’s 1991
Leo Gershoy Award. Between books, Professor Nader joined the history
faculty at the University of Indiana (1976-1996). She developed a course
on the Black Death and attracted students interested in her scholarship.
In the 1990s, she began to assume the role of expert on documents
relating to Christopher Columbus and the exploration of the New World.
Professor Nader edited “Power and Gender in Renaissance Spain: Eight
Women of the Mendoza Family, 1450-1650” (2003), containing articles
written by some of her former students. In 1994, Professor Nader
returned to her alma mater the University of Arizona as head of the
Department of History. She had received her B.A. here in 1958, after
which she completed her M.A. in 1959 at Smith College. Finally she took
her Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in 1972. Professor
Nader’s return to the UA and the state in which she grew up testifies to
her devotion to her family: her sisters Leila and Marsha both resided in
Tucson when she moved here. Even now, she enjoys participating in the
community orchestra as a clarinet player at Coronado K-8 School, where
her niece is a special education teacher and two of her grandnieces
attend school.
In looking back at her own career, Professor Nader has been true to
form in downplaying her successes and attributing her accomplishments to
external circumstances. However, her colleagues and students know
better: Professor Nader’s dedication to the historians’ craft and her
enthusiasm for the study of the past emanates from an honest and loving
personality. Although she officially retired this summer, Professor
Nader continues to be a part of the support system for graduate
students, and her face does not fail to beam when listening to the
developments in their recent projects.
At the
feet of visiting scholars
Professor Scott Hendrix, Princeton Theological Seminary
by Susan C. Karant-Nunn, Professor of History
Scott Hendrix, James Hastings Nichols Professor of
Reformation History and Doctrine at Princeton Theological Seminary,
graced the last meeting of our seminar in late April. He started out his
career by acquiring the doctorate under Heiko Oberman’s direction at the
University of Tübingen in Germany. In the winter semester of 1968-1969,
he was a member of a doctoral seminar on the Leipzig Disputation (1518),
which Oberman and Joseph Ratzinger (now Pope Benedict XVI) co-taught.
Hendrix recalls, “The contrast of personalities was striking, with
Ratzinger and his quiet demeanor and black suit over against Heiko. Both
were amazingly young, as I think back on it.”
Always a very productive writer and speaker on the Reformation,
Hendrix experienced a turning point in his scholarship when, for several
years, he worked as a family therapist. He brought the perspectives of
that field into his historical analysis, which he had never abandoned.
He and I are coediting a volume of essays on masculinity in Reformation
Europe.
Hendrix asked the seminar members to read two items in preparation
for his visit: his most recent book, “Recultivating the Vineyard: The
Reformation Agendas of Christianization” (Louisville 2004); and an essay
that is just now appearing in the Archive for Reformation History,
“Post-Confessional Research and Confessional Commitment.” Both take up
matters under discussion among Reformation historians today. Hendrix
stated his position, based on experience, that although some teaching
affiliations doubtless do still require denominational loyalty in the
classroom, his post at a major theological seminary affords him, as a
Luther scholar with theo-logical interests, the liberty to explore the
Reformation as a whole. His training in contextual family therapy
influenced him to see the differences among reformers as rooted in
piety, culture, politics, and human relationships. Confessional
commitments are no more damaging to historical scholarship than other
personal and academic agendas. I am sure that he is right.
This eminent colleague has always been a steadfast friend of the
Division. He met with all the graduate students individually and reacted
constructively and helpfully to the research plans they laid before him.
He and Emilee Hendrix called on Toetie Oberman and Hester Oberman, whom
they had known well in Tübingen.
At the
feet of visiting scholars
Professor David Nirenberg, Johns Hopkins University
by Lizzy Ellis-Marino, master's student
On November 1, the Division seminar
hosted David Nirenberg, Charlotte Bloomberg Professor of the Humanities
at Johns Hopkins University and author of “Communities of Violence,” a
study of Christian, Jewish and Muslim relations in fourteenth-century
Aragon. Addressing the Division’s traditional question for visiting
scholars, “What makes you tick as a historian?” Professor Nirenberg
alluded to the difficulties and limitations of language, problems that
he would address directly in his public lecture the next day,
“Shakespeare’s Jewish Problem: ‘The Merchant of Venice.’”
Held in the UA Art Museum in a room filled with medieval and early
modern works of art, Nirenberg’s talk placed “The Merchant of Venice”
squarely in the cultural and political context of seventeenth-century
England. As the English began to engage more and more in the growing
capitalist economy, and Englishmen, including Shakespeare and some of
his relatives, began to engage in activities like money lending, that
were traditionally considered Jewish, the question of relations between
Christians and Jews became ever more pertinent, although there were few
Jews in Britain. The play, set in Venice, where Jews and Christians
lived in much closer proximity than in England, is greatly concerned
with the transformation of Jews into Christians and Christians into
Jews, a matter with which the Englishmen of Shakespeare’s day were
especially occupied.
With such a towering figure as Shakespeare, it is quite easy for
students of history to fall into the trap of viewing his works as
somehow beyond history, outside time and place. Professor Nirenberg’s
contextualization of such an oft-discussed and problematic play as “The
Merchant of Venice” reminds us students not only of the intellectual and
artistic heights that our period’s great minds reached, but also of the
absolute relevance of the more prosaic concerns of this period on its
great minds.
New adjunct faculty in the History Department
Dr. Diane Korngiebel
by Mary Kovel, doctoral student
The Division welcomes Dr. Diane Korngiebel, a medieval
scholar who joins the UA community as a one-year adjunct professor. She
comes to us from Wabash College, Indiana, where she also held an adjunct
position. Dr. Korngiebel completed her undergraduate career at the
University of Washington. She then spent the next eight years in the
United Kingdom, where she earned master’s degrees in medieval history
from both the University of Wales and the University of Durham. She took
a doctorate in modern history in 2005 at the University of Oxford. While
she completed her studies, she presented papers at several conferences
in the U.S. and Great Britain, and in 2003 she was awarded the Denis
Bethell Prize and the Proxime accessit award for her essays.
During her post-doctoral career, besides teaching, she has served
as an assistant editor for “The Haskins Society Journal” since 2004. Her
publications revolve around her area of expertise: English colonization.
Her most recent article will appear in the December 2006 “Welsh History
Review.” Perhaps most impressive is her forthcoming book from Boydell &
Brewer Press, a revision of her dissertation on English colonization
strategies in medieval Wales and Ireland. Despite her demanding teaching
and writing schedule, she plans to present a paper at the 2007
Anglo-American Conference in London.
This semester, Dr. Korngiebel is teaching several undergraduate
courses at the UA that are not only educational, but her quick wit has
ensured a high attendance. Her teaching schedule for next semester not
only includes undergraduate courses but a graduate colloquium on
historiographical approaches to medieval Europe, to the delight of
Division students.
Discovering Munich
by Sean Clark, master's student
To be perfectly honest, Germany has always held something
of a negative place in my mind. This is how I have traditionally done
the math: add its history of fascism and genocide to its proclivity for
leather clothing, coo-coo clocks, and oompa music, and that equals a
country I would probably rather avoid. As, however, over the last two
years I have found myself in the lucky position of being the student of
a brilliant historian of sixteenth-century Germany, I decided it would
be best to put aside my prejudices by spending a month improving my
German skills at the Goethe Institute in Munich.
My first hours in Munich got off to an inauspicious start. Getting
on the train from the airport, I sat down next to a window on which
someone had scrawled a particularly disturbing racial epithet in black
marker. Then, at the first stop, a gentleman sat down across from me
with what I determined to be a can of Jack Daniels and Coke. It was 8:30
in the morning. I was worried.
From there, however, things did begin to look up. I cannot say
enough good things about the staff of the Goethe Institute. From the
moment I walked through the door, tired, disheveled, bleary-eyed, and
speaking only monosyllabic English, much less German, I was immediately
made to feel welcome and at home. The famous Germanic efficiency was
everywhere in evidence. Along with my fellow new students I was guided
through paperwork and placement exams, before finally being pointed
toward the nearest u-bahn station with directions to my accommodation.
Even though I had literally not slept in two days, neither could I
sleep with a new city just waiting to be discovered. So, after dropping
off my luggage, I returned to the city center and wandered around until
I could barely stand. Munich is a beautiful city that draws you in more
and more around every corner. Unlike some other German cities that were
also largely destroyed during World War II, Munich chose to recreate its
former glory rather than modernize. We are all lucky that she did. I
spent that first evening walking from Karlsplatz, through Marienplatz
via the Marienkirche, to the Viktualienmarkt, and then back over to the
Residenz and the Englischer Garten.
My class was a microcosm of the new European cosmopolitanism: four
Americans, one Russian, two Ukrainians, a Finn, two Italians, one fellow
from Italophone Switzerland, a young Korean woman, and a Bulgarian.
Several of the non-Americans spoke some English, but for the most part,
German was our lingua franca. Discussions were always wide-ranging and
often very funny, especially when they turned to comparisons of the many
cultures represented in the room. I went to Munich to learn German but
ended up learning almost as much about Korean architecture and the
Italian national soccer team.
Speaking of which, I cannot relate a description of my time in
Germany without mentioning the epitome of global sport, the World Cup.
Soccer fans from all over the world crowded the city. Cars sped through
the streets with rabid fans, bodies painted, hanging out the windows,
national flags in hand. At game time every bar, beer garden, and
restaurant brought in televisions, attracting huge crowds gathered in
rapt attention. I went from bar to bar, caught up in observing this
strange spectacle or joined some classmates at the Olympic Center or one
of the beer gardens in the Englischer Garten. The level of excitement
was well beyond even the most raucous Super Bowl I have ever attended.
The night France lost the championship to Italy, I saw grown men and
women bawling their eyes out, beating their chests, pulling their hair,
rending their garments as if their closest friend had just died.
Those first weeks were full of surprises. Germans were much
friendlier, and Munich itself was much more cultured and just plain more
fun than I had expected. Then I went to Dachau. Just an hour’s train
ride from Munich and I was at Germany’s first concentration camp. It is
well beyond my capacity to convey the depths to which I was moved by
that place, so I will not even try. If you have been there, you know; if
you have not, there is little I can do other than encourage you to go.
In the end, I have come to feel that my ambivalence toward Germany,
my love/hate relationship with the country, is not such a bad thing
academically. I hope that it will provide me with a degree of distance
and objectivity that will serve me well in my studies. Also, I find that
those things that both attract and repel end up being more interesting
for that very fact—certainly an important characteristic for any course
one intends to pursue indefinitely.
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