
|
 |

Baylor > Welcome > Activities > Conferences > Pruit Memorial Symposium > 2001 Pruit Memorial Symposium

2001 Pruit Memorial Symposium
Celebrating Augustine's Confessions: Reading Augustine for the New Millenium
Thursday, October 4 - Saturday, October 6, 2001
Program Description
Augustine's Confessions is an autobiographical account of his journey from a modest childhood in North Africa, through his conversion in a garden in Milan, to a lengthy and distinguished career as the Bishop of Hippo. Using enormous literary and rhetorical skill, Augustine chronicles a story of education and miseducation and narrates a spiritual quest from the wasteland of sin to the liberation of salvation. The freedom that emerges permits him to move from faith to understanding and to understand the ultimate underpinnings of the relationship between God and the soul. The impact of the Confessions on subsequent Christian theology, literature, history, and philosophy, in both the Catholic and Protestant traditions, is unparalleled.
1600 years later, the 2001 Pruit Memorial Symposium will commemorate this monumental text and celebrate its profound influence. We are pleased to announce that Scott MacDonald (Cornell University), John Smith (Yale University), Colin Starnes (University of King's College-Halifax), Carl Vaught (Baylor University), Anne-Marie Bowery (Baylor University), and David Lyle Jeffrey (Baylor University) will give plenary papers on the Confessions.
Schedule
Thursday, October 4, 2001
12:30 to 1:30 p.m.
Registration
1:30 to 2:00 p.m.
Introduction
2:00 to 3:20 p.m.
Plenary Session I
Anne-Marie Bowrey, Baylor University: You Are What You Read:
Reading the Books in Augustine's Confessions
3:40 to 5:00 p.m.
Concurrent Sessions I
Augustine and Emotions
Jay Morris, University of Virginia: Love for God and Neighbor:
Some Ethical Problems
John Thorburn, Baylor University: The Conversion of the Senses
in Augustine's Confessions
Robert Wood, University of Dallas: The Heart in/of Augustine's
Confessions
The Hermeneutics of Ascent
Robert Clewis, Boston College: The Hermeneutic Principles
of the Confessions
Timothy Herrman, Ave Maria University: "Te adsumpsisti me
": Ascent or Assumption in Augustine's Confessions?
Keynote Address, John E. Smith, Yale University:
God, Truth, and the Divided Self
Friday, October 5, 2001
9:00 to 10:20 a.m.
Invited Panel: Augustine and the Classics, Alden
Smith, Baylor University, Presiding
Frank P. Riga, Canisius College: Regenerative Reading: Augustine
and Lewis Reading the Classics
Joseph Pucci, Brown University: Desire, Reading, and Language
in Confessions 1
Preston Edwards, Brown University: Sortes Augustinianae
: Confessions 8.12.29 and Petrarch's Ad Familiares 1
11:00 to 12:20 p.m.
Plenary Session II
Scott MacDonald, Cornell University: Divided Will and Moral
Identity: Augustine's Thinking about Moral Conflict
12:20 to 2:00 p.m.
Lunch
2:00 to 3:20 p.m.
Plenary Session III
David Lyle Jeffrey, Baylor University: Self-examination and
the Examination of Texts
3:40 to 5:00 p.m.
Concurrent Sessions II
Placing Augustine in a Philosophical and
Theological Context
Dennis Sansom, Samford University: The Wisdom of Love Versus
the Wisdom of Apathy: The Contrast of St. Augustine and the Stoics
Barry David, Notre Dame College: The Philosophical Unity of the
Confessions: It is Christ, the Incarnate Word
Dwelling in Augustine's Space
Lenore Wright, Baylor University: At Home with Augustine:
Architectural Motifs in the Confessions
Heidi Marx-Wolf, Santa Barbara City College, Westmount College:
Books XII and XIII and the Allegory of Genesis I
Marianne Djuth, Canisius College: The Spiritual Geography of
the Inner Self and Augustine's Confessions
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.
Plenary Session IV
Colin John Starnes, Dalhousie University: The Last Three Books
of the Confessions
Saturday, October 6, 2001
9:00 to 10:20 a.m.
Invited Panel: Theological Perspectives on Augustine
Brad Green, Union University: Augustine and Contemporary
Theology: Friends or Foes?
Randall Colton, St. Louis University: Augustine's
Confessions and Kierkegaard's Ethics: A Narrative Debt
2:00 to 3:20
Concurrent Sessions III
Comparative Approaches to Augustine
Joseph Harder, University of Virginia: Political Theology and
the Politics of Autobiography: Augustine and Frederick Douglass
Scott Rasnic, Baylor University: The Influence and Relevance
of Augustine's Confessions for the Philosophical
Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer
Augustine on Time and Free Will
Henry Piper, Fordham University, Lincoln Center: Four Moments:
The Enactment of Time in Augustine's Confessions
Mark Sadler: The Development of Augustine's Understanding of
Time in the Confessions, Book XI
William Frank, University of Dallas: Truth and Personal
Freedom in Augustine's Confessions
|