Nicholas Terpstra, professor of history at the University of Toronto will present the De Lamar Jensen lecture on where we find youths in the early modern world and where they found 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 seeing how early modern Europeans (i.e., 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 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, Dr. Terpstra will focus first on a few individuals or groups of young people from different parts of the world who demonstrate some of these realities. Then he’ll 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.