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Drs. Rosato and Appleby
Dr. David Appleby and Dr. Drew Rosato

 

Two members of the 黑料不打烊, California, teaching faculty have recently helped organize academic conferences both in Europe. In August, Dr. Drew Rosato facilitated a conference centered around medieval Franciscan thought at Oxford. Three months later, Dr. David Appleby worked with a fellow scholar to arrange the 鈥淛ews in the Frankish Orbit鈥 conference in Rome. 

Unlike professors at most colleges, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 tutors are not required to fulfill research requirements outside of the classroom, as their primary duty is to their students. Some, however, choose to pursue additional scholarly studies alongside their tutorials, contributing to seminars, conferences, and publications world over. 

 

Oxford courtesy of Dr. Drew Rosato
Oxford courtesy of Dr. Drew Rosato

 

Joining Dr. Lydia Schumacher, professor of Historical and Philosophical Theology at King鈥檚 College in London, Dr. Rosato organized a conference centered around a book he and Dr. Schumacher are editing, The Oxford Handbook of Medieval Franciscan Thought.  

鈥淭he book, which will have 40 chapters, covers how medieval Franciscans understood a variety of philosophical and theological topics,鈥 Dr. Rosato says. 鈥淚t also contains a section about the historical and institutional context of medieval Franciscan thought, as well as a section on the legacy of Franciscan thought after the Middle Ages.鈥 

Set at the idyllic , the conference gathered many of the book鈥檚 contributing authors, 14 of whom presented drafts of their chapters to their colleagues. For his paper, Dr. Rosato examined how medieval Franciscans understood the redemptive work of Christ, drawing on texts by Alexander of Hales, St. Bonaventure, and Duns Scotus. 鈥淭he conference was a great opportunity to meet some of the contributors in person for the first time and to have a chance to share our work with each other,鈥 Dr. Rosato remarks.  

Dr. David Appleby
Dr. David Appleby Photo credit: Fabio Grassi Orsini University of Arkansas Rome Center

For Dr. Appleby, the Jews in the Frankish Orbit conference was the outgrowth of a casual conversation among friends, sparking an interest in the topic. 鈥淲hile at a different conference two years ago, a friend raised the idea of doing a conference where we gather a group of scholars to say something up to date about Jews in Western Europe, specifically in the Frankish realms in the early Middle Ages, and things soon got out of control,鈥 he laughs. 

After two years spent finding speakers and arranging accommodations with the help of Dr. Lynda Coon, dean of the Honors College at the University of Arkansas, Dr. Appleby gathered with fellow medieval experts and enthusiasts in Rome. In his paper, Appleby considered the label 鈥淛udaic superstition,鈥 which appeared in two Adversus Judaeos pamphlets written by bishops of Lyon in the ninth century. In particular, he argued that the label of superstition helped the bishops develop a powerful and useful image of present time in relation to the course of salvation history. His and other presentations helped the attendees gain a better view of how the Jews of the Middle Ages lived and were perceived by others. 

鈥淚鈥檓 delighted to report that the conference went very well,鈥 Dr. Appleby says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to share the scholarly work I have done, as well as to promote the College and its mission, with a greater collection of scholars from the U.S., Europe, and Israel. For me, it was a very good and enriching experience in addition to my main work as a tutor.鈥