Monday, March 6, 2023 7pm
About this Event
1300 Memorial Dr, Coral Gables, FL 33146
https://humanities.as.miami.edu/Nicholas Terpstra –
Professor of History, University of Toronto
President of the Renaissance Society of America
On the Move: Finding Young People in the Early Modern World
Where do we find youths in the early modern world? Where did they find themselves? Often it was on the road or on the seas, in motion from home to some other place or places, and seldom entirely by choice. As we become more curious about global history and to seeing how early modern Europeans (ie., roughly 16th to 18th centuries) encountered the world and were shaped by it, we’re drawn to the intersections of this mobility with gender and with race. Much of what was new in early modern experience came first to and through young people, often as the involuntary agents of broader social and economic forces. In this lecture, I’ll focus first on a few individuals or groups of young people from different parts of the world who demonstrate some of these realities. I’ll then pull back and ask some broader questions about why it’s hard to capture and understand the experience of young people at that time, and also why looking more closely at these youths might reshape our understanding of the early modern period more generally.
Nicholas Terpstra is a historian of Renaissance and early modern social history, exploring questions at the intersection of politics, religion, gender, and charity, above all those that deal with marginalized individuals and groups. He has written on the politics of poor relief (Cultures of Charity: Women, Politics, and the Reform of Poor Relief in Renaissance Italy [Harvard: 2013]), the exploitation of young women in Renaissance Florence and the efforts to cover it up (Lost Girls: Sex and Death in Renaissance Florence [Johns Hopkins: 2010]), early modern cross-cultural religious encounters and the experiences of religious refugees (Religious Refugees in the Early Modern World: An Alternative History of the Reformation [Cambridge: 2015]), and how religious reform, colonialism, and early capitalism intersected (Global Reformations: Transforming Early Modern Religions, Societies, and Cultures [Routledge: 2020/2021]
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