“Affect and Emotional Production in Early Drama”
International Medieval  Congress in Kalamazoo, Michigan
10-13 May 2012
In their Introduction to THE AFFECT THEORY READER (2010), Melissa Gregg and  Gregory J. Seigworth argue that “affect is found in those intensities that pass  body to body (human, nonhuman, part-body, and otherwise), in those resonances  that circulate about, between, and sometimes stick to bodies and worlds, and in  the very passage or variations between these intensities and resonances  themselves.” Affect, then, “is the name we give to those forces…that can serve  to drive us toward movement, toward thought.” Likewise, in her recent book  AFFECTIVE MEDITATION AND THE INVENTION OF MEDIEVAL COMPASSION (2010), Sarah  McNamer examines affectively oriented medieval texts and argues that these texts  supplied their users with “‘intimate scripts’…quite literally scripts for the  performance of feeling—scripts that often explicitly aspire to performative  efficacy.” Work like this has productively complicated our understanding of  affect and its relation to emotional production.
This panel invites work that critically examines the relationship between  affect and emotional production in medieval and Renaissance performance. How did  devices such as gesture, sound and silence, music, rhythm and choreography,  props and performing objects, staging and scenic choices, spatial arrangements,  or visual and textual elements generate the kinds of intensities and resonances  that Gregg and Seigworth describe? How were these forces specifically employed  to enhance or complicate emotional responses in spectators and/or performers?  What were the goals and stakes of such emotional production?
Given the slipperiness of these terms—and the many theories of affect and  emotion—the organizer is open to a range of interpretive possibilities,  approaches, and methodologies. The organizer also invites topics from across all  geographies and performance traditions in the Middle Ages and/or Renaissance.  Please submit one-page abstracts and a completed Participant Information form  (http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF)  to Jill Stevenson at jillstevenson@gmail.com no later than  September 15, 2011. Feel free to contact Jill with questions about the session.  For general information about the 2012 Medieval Congress, visit: http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/