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Blueprints - December 2003 Edition
Villanova University Augustinian Institute hosts conference on contemporary Augustinian scholarship
Maureen McKew

Beginning Thursday, Dec. 4, and continuing through Saturday, Dec. 6, more than a dozen scholars of the person, thought and history of St. Augustine of Hippo gathered at a special conference titled “Reconsiderations: A Conference on Contemporary Augustinian Scholarship.”
The conference began with the 2003 St. Augustine Lecture by Dr. Peter Brown, Rollins Professor of History, Princeton University, whose work Augustine of Hippo: A Biography (1967, 2000) sparked what has been described as a virtual renaissance in the study of the fifth century bishop of Hippo. The lecture was sponsored by Villanova University and the journal Augustinian Studies, in collaboration with the Patristic Institute Augustinianum in Rome, Italy.
Conference is first major endeavor of new Augustinian Institute

According the Rev. Thomas Martin, O.S.A., associate professor of theology and religious studies, and director of the recently established Augustinian Institute at Villanova, the influence of St. Augustine of Hippo extends even beyond the profound effect he has had on the identity of western Christianity.

“Given the enormous volume of his writings, one of the largest collections to have come down from the ancient world, as well as their powerfully personal and original approach to age old questions regarding the self, God, virtue, goodness and beauty, and the city, he continues to be read and discussed and argued from a wealth of different
perspectives,” Father Martin said.

“As an Augustinian university, Villanova has a special commitment to continue to engage this ancient yet still vibrant tradition,” Father Martin added. “A recent initiative by Villanova has been the establishment of the Augustinian Institute, which will have the task of fostering this engagement through conferences, lectures, and other scholarly projects. This conference will provide a platform for some of the world’s leading scholars of St. Augustine to come together and assess his continuing legacy.”

The conference was divided into four main areas of discussion: Augustine and the Practice of Theology; Augustine, Roman Africa, and the Construction of Christianity; Augustine on the Human Being and Christ; and Augustine on Conversion, Asceticism, and Authority.
Among the scholars who participated were Lewis Ayres, Emory University; Carol Harrison, University of Durham, England; Michael Cameron, University of Portland; Eugene TeSelle and J. Patout Burns, Vanderbilt University; E. Ann Matter, University of Pennsylvania; Eric Rebillard, CARE, Paris; Susanna Elm, University of California, Berkeley; Robert Dodaro, O.S.A. and George Lawless, O.S.A., Augustinianum; Mathijs Lamberigts, University of Leuven, Belgium; John Cavadini, University of Notre Dame; James Wetzel, Colgate University; Liz Clark, Duke University; Conrad Leyser, University of Manchester, England; and Robin Lane Fox, University of Oxford, England.

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