Plenary Speaker: Patricia Clare Ingham, Associate Professor of English at Indiana University, Bloomington, "Old Worlds and New: the Edges of Novelty and the Limits of Enchantment."
Session 1
Elizabeth Williamsen, Indiana University – Bloomington, "The Boundaries of Betrayal in The Sowdone of Babylone."
Julianne Bruneau, University of Notre Dame - South Bend, "Chrétien's Perceval and the Borders of Britain."
Session 2
Stephen Sweat, University of Arizona, "Faith and Illusion: Boethian Cosmology and Magic in the Franklin's Tale."
Frank Tobienne, Purdue University, "La Historia de La Scientia Toletana en el Siglo XIII, or the Valuation of Magic in Spanish Medieval Literature."
Session 3
A. Arwen Taylor, Indiana University – Bloomington, "The Passion of Piers: Piers Plowman as Embodied Liminality."
Florin Beschea, Indiana University - Bloomington, "Heart and Body: The Relationship Between Moral and Physical Qualities in Three Miracles by Gautier de Coincy."
Session 4
Matthew Brown, University of Notre Dame - South Bend, "Insanity and Bureaucracy: Documentary Practice in Hoccleve's Series and Formulary."
Becky Winn, Indiana University - Bloomington, "'By word formyd in my understonding': Language and Its Reworking in The Shewings of Julian of Norwich."
Susanna Childress, Florida State University, "Dancing Through a Different Minefield: The Public Discourse of Margery Kempe as Subversive Liminality."
Session 5
Allison Scott, Purdue University, "The Royal Couple in Chaucer's Legend of Good Women."
Alex Vance, Purdue University, "The Parallels of Inferno and The Legend of Good Women."
Jesie Martinez, Purdue University, "Reflections of Richard in The Legend of Good Women."
Session 6
Deborah Searcy, University of Miami, "Piers Plowman and the Agency of Salvation."
Molly Martin, Purdue University, "Fleeing the Borders of Romance: Reclaiming Masculinity in Malory's 'Tale of Sir Gareth'."
Lesley Jacobs, Indiana University - Bloomington, "On the Edge of Incest: Power and Violence in the Second and Fourth Branches of the Mabinogi."