2020 Summer Lecture Series, The Early Modern Atlantic World

When

11:30 a.m., Aug. 16, 2020

University of Arizona, College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
Division for Late Medieval and Reformation Studies
2020 Summer Lecture Series
The Early Modern Atlantic World

 

In cooperation with St. Philip’s in the Hills Episcopal Church

Between the fifteenth and the eighteenth centuries, economic, cultural, and social exchanges between continents resulted in sometimes radical, sometimes subtle, and often protracted transformations of the early modern Atlantic World. The 2020 summer lectures will explore the effects of “Atlanticization” on the territories of the Iberian Empires in the Americas and on social and cultural categories such as religion, race, ethnicity, and shared space.

Welcome and introduction of speakers: Professor Ute Lotz-Heumann, Director, DLMRS
Thematic introduction: Professor David Graizbord, Associate Director, Arizona Center for Judaic Studies

 

Free and open to the public

The 2020 summer lectures will be offered virtually on Zoom. Please register for each lecture separately by clicking on the links below. You will automatically receive the Zoom information for the lecture when you register.

Sunday, August 16, 11:30 am
Race, Religion, and Identity: Black Confraternities in the Iberian Atlantic World
Dean Messinger, master’s student

Register for this lecture here!

Contacts