PROGRAM in Word Format

Association for the Study of Eastern Christian History and Culture, Inc. (ASEC) Fourth Biennial Conference

October 7-8, 2011, Pfahl Conference Center, Blackwell Hotel, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

Sponsored by ASEC, Inc. and The Ohio State University’s Center for Slavic and East European Studies, Resource Center for Medieval Slavic Studies, the Hilandar Research Library, and the Eastern Kentucky University Department of History.

FRIDAY OCTOBER 7
8:00 to 10:00 Session 1: Teaching and Role Modeling Sanctity: The Creation of Saints
  • Chair/Discussant: Jennifer Spock (Eastern Kentucky University)
  • Donald Ostrowski (Harvard University): “The Making of a Princely Saint: Alexander Nevsky in the Sixteenth Century”
  • David Goldfrank (Georgetown University): “The Rhetoric of Eldership in Nil Sorskii and Iosif Volotskii”
  • Mario Rodriquez Polo (University Complutense, Madrid): “Towards a Systemic Understanding of Yurodstvo as a Socio-Culture Cognitive Construct”
10:15 to 12:15 Session 2: National Churches and Ecumenism: Regional Engagement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
  • Chair/Discussant: Heather Bailey (University of Illinois, Springfield)
  • Lucien Frary (Rider University): “The Russian Foreign Ministry and the Ecumenical Patriarch in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century”
  • Matthew Miller (Northwestern College): “Sustaining the Orthodox Commonwealth: The American YMCA in the Balkans, 1892–1940”
  • Jerry Pankhurst (Wittenberg University): “Russian Orthodoxy’s Growing European Engagement and Russia’s National Identity”
Lunch 12:15 to 1:30
1:30-3:00 Session 3: Developing Christian Communities: Architecture and Argument in the Middle Eastern and North African Christian Experience.
  • Discussant: Lucien Frary (Rider University)
  • Darlene Brooks Hedstrom (Wittenberg University): “Environmental and Religious Objectives in Egyptian Monastic Construction”
  • David Bertaina (University of Illinois, Springfield): “Arguing with the Orthodox in Arabic: Elias of Nisibis’ Invitation to a Melkite Brother”
3:15-5:15 Session 4: Christian Identity in the Late Antique East
  • Discussant: David Bertaina (University of Illinois, Springfield)
  • Rod Stearn (University of Kentucky): “Regional Christian Identities in Late Antique Palestine”
  • Joshua Powell (University of Kentucky): “Ecclesiastical Politics and the Formation of Identity in the 530s”
  • Edward Mason (University of Kentucky): “Virtue and Roman Identity in Origen”
5:30-6:30 Keynote Address: 140 Pfahl Hall

Reverend Doctor John Chryssavgis

“Divine Craving: Insights on Food and Gluttony from Sixth-Century Palestine”

6:30-7:30: Reception
SATURDAY OCTOBER 8
8:00-10:30 Session 5: Theological Debates of the Early Twentieth Century: Russia
  • Discussant/Chair: Valeria Nollan (Rhodes College)
  • Betsy Perabo (Western Illinois University): “Mission, War, and Theological Ethics: Orthodox Debates on the Russo-Japanese War”
  • Scott Kenworthy (Miami University): “The Russian Holy Synod’s Condemnation of the Name Glorifiers, 1913”
  • Christopher Stroop (Stanford University): “The First World War as a Neglected Moment in the Development of Orthodox-Protestant Relations”
  • Paul Gavrilyuk (University of St. Thomas): “From Youthful Veneration to Bitter Condemnation: Florovsky’s Re-Reading of Solovyov”
10:45-12:15 Session 6: Confronting North America: Adaptation and Apocalypticism
  • Chair/Discussant: Barbara Skinner (Indiana State University)
  • John-Paul Himka (University of Alberta): “Iconography in Ukrainian Churches in the Canadian Prairies”
  • Amy Slagle (University of Southern Mississippi): “The Apocalypticism of Fr. Seraphim Rose”
12:15-2:00 Lunch
2:00-4:00 Session 7: The French Connection: Orthodox-Catholic Interaction in Modern France
  • Chair/Discussant: Matthew Miller (Northwestern College)
  • Heather Bailey (University of Illinois, Springfield): “Russian Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism in Civilization Narratives in Nineteenth-Century France”
  • Nicolas Prevelakis (Harvard University): “French Influences on 1970s Greek Orthodox Theology”
  • Erich Lippman (Bethany College): “The Problem of Action in Personalist Manifestos: French and Russian”
4:14-5:45 Session 8: Viewing Orthodoxy as the “Other”
  • Chair/Discussant: Page Herrlinger (Bowdoin College)
  • J. Eugene Clay (Arizona State University): “Spiritual Christianity in the Lower Volga River, 1760s-1917”
  • Charles Arndt (Union College): “Nikolai Leskov’s Re-Working of Orthodox Forms in his Series Tales of the Three Righteous Men”