Category Archives: Conference

CFP: Stepfamilies in the Early Modern World, 1400-1800

Paper proposals are invited for the conference Stepfamilies in the Early Modern World, 1400-1800, to be held in Budapest, Hungary, 30-31 May 2019.

This is a comparative conference to understand the stepfamily in its various forms across Asia, Europe and its colonies, and across world faiths. Themes include historical demography, stepfamilies through widowhood and in cultures with divorce, inheritance and the position of children from 1st, 2nd or 3rd marriage beds, half-siblings, stepsiblings, extramarital children, domestic arrangements, laws, emotions, folk tales, visual sources.

For more information on themes and updates see our conference blog website:  http://stepfamilies1400to1800.blogspot.com/

Potential contributors are welcome to contact us prior to submission to discuss possible topics, themes, and regions.  Some papers may be further developed and eventually published in the speciai issue of a journal subject to blind peer review.

We invite abstracts by 30 September 2018 including contact information, title, up to 500 words, and short author profile.

Contact Info: 
  • Gabriella Erdélyi, Hungarian Academy of Sciences – Momentum  “Intregating Families” Research Group
  • Lyndan Warner, Saint Mary’s University, Halifax, Canada
Contact Email: 

CFP: IONA seminar on (Re)constructing history through landscape and practice

Proposals are invited for the seminar “(Re)constructing history through landscape and practice”, to be held as part of IONA: Early Medieval Studies on the Islands of the North Atlantic – Transformative networks, skills, theories, and methods for the future of the field (Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC, Canada, April 11-13, 2019).

Seminar organisers: Dr Pamela O’Neill and Associate Professor Jay Johnston (University of Sydney)

This seminar will draw together academics and practitioners to investigate how we experience, represent and ultimately construct history. It will consider the creative processes that are triggered when the subject is physically immersed in the landscape: archaeologists who seek to authentically reproduce artefacts and sites, historians and toponymists who travel hypothesised early routeways, folklorists who seek to replicate encounters with the otherworld, artists who create through physical immersion in landscape, religious practitioners who (re)enact pilgrimage, heritage bodies who curate historic sites, writers who publish or blog their travel experiences. This seminar aims to explore multiple questions regarding the relationship between discursive academic and creative modes of enquiry including:

  • In what ways do we create historical, artistic and other narratives in response to immersion in landscape?
  • In what ways do such narratives differ from those created in a disengaged, physically separate context traditionally espoused by scholarship?
  • Of what value are such narratives to historians and other scholars working in the traditional mode?
  • What does a close physical experience of landscape add to scholarly understanding?
  • What could be the ultimate effect of a physically immersive model of scholarship being integrated into the academic endeavour?
  • How do these modalities of research and exploration relate to Critical Practice (practice-based methodology)?
  • What could such scholarship contribute to the understandings and experiences of the general public?

We invite expressions of interest from all who are keen to take part. Please include:

  • a very short biographical statement (100 words),
  • a brief explanation of your interest in the seminar
  • and a suggestion for a presentation you could contribute (200 words).

Please send expressions of interest to:

pamaladh@gmail.com AND jay.johnston@sydney.edu.au by 31 July 2018.

Sewanee Medieval Colloquium: Lives and Afterlives – Call For Papers and Panels

‘Lives and Afterlives’
The Sewanee Medieval Colloquium
University of the South in Sewanee, TN
April 12-13, 2019

Conference Website

The Sewanee Medieval Colloquium invites proposals for panel themes engaging with the lives and afterlives of medieval cultures for its 2019 meeting. These sub-themes address a particular aspect of our general theme, and could be the basis for either one or two panels. As a rule of thumb, panel themes should be broad enough to encourage numerous applicants, and interdisciplinary proposals are particularly encouraged. Possibilities might include the theologies of heaven, medieval ecologies, everyday life in the Middle Ages, the production of reliquaries, ordering of public space, and popular medievalism. If a panel theme is accepted, organizers will be responsible for selecting participants (from abstracts submitted through the website by October 26, 2018) and choosing a commenter (a well-established expert in the field) to respond to the papers at the panel session.

Panel theme proposals should include a description/rationale of the panel theme, a list of possible commenters (organizers may serve as commenters), and the CVs of the organizers, all submitted via e-mail to medievalcolloquium@sewanee.edu. Panel proposals are due July 27, 2018. Commenters are generally established figures in the field with a significant record of publication; participants in the Colloquium are generally limited to holders of a Ph.D. and those currently in a Ph.D. program.


The Sewanee Medieval Colloquium also invites proposals for individual papers engaging with any aspect of our 2019 theme, ‘Lives and Afterlives.’ Possibilities might include the theologies of heaven, medieval ecologies, everyday life in the Middle Ages, the production of reliquaries, ordering of public space, and popular medievalism. Papers should be twenty minutes in length, and commentary is traditionally provided for each paper presented. We invite papers from all disciplines, and encourage contributions from medievalists working on any geographic area. A seminar will also seek contributions; please look for its separate CFP soon. Participants in the Colloquium are generally limited to holders of a Ph.D. and those currently in a Ph.D. program.

Please submit an abstract (approx. 250 words) and brief c.v., via our website (http://medievalcolloquium.sewanee.edu), no later than 26 October 2018. If you wish to propose a session, please submit abstracts and vitae for all participants in the session. Completed papers, including notes, will be due to commenters no later than 12 March 2019.

You may also propose a complete panel of either two or three papers; please submit all abstracts together, and attach all relevant CVs. Complete panel proposals will be due at the same time as our general call, October 26, 2018.

Baths and Spa Waters in the Culture and Literature of Early Modern England – Call For Papers

Baths and Spa Waters in the Culture and Literature of Early Modern England
Université Clermont Auvergne (UCA), France
11-13 October, 2019

Organizers: Pr. Sophie Chiari and Dr. Samuel Cuisinier-Delorme

Under the aegis of the French Shakespeare Society

Keynotes:

  • Dr. Richard Kerridge (Bath Spa University)
  • Dr. Amanda Herbert (Folger Institute and Amherst College)
  • Pr. Tiffany Stern (Shakespeare Institute, University of Birmingham)
  • Dr. Tiffany J. Werth (UC Davis, University of California)

Water has been used for recreational or therapeutic purposes, shaping landscapes, cleansing bodies and spirits alike throughout the centuries. Cities such as Bath in England, Spa in Belgium, and Vichy in France, have prospered because of their spa activities. While balneology has frequently been studied in connection with classical Antiquity or with more recent times (in particular the nineteenth century, often seen as the Golden Age of spa activities), much work remains to be done regarding its significance in the early modern period. This conference will highlight the various uses of water in sixteenth-, seventeenth-, and eighteenth-century England, while exploring the tensions between those people who praised the curative virtues of waters and those who rejected them for their supposedly harmful effects.

During the Middle Ages, steam baths, whose purpose was more recreational than regenerative, flourished in many Christian cities. Yet the bad reputation of stews (dry or moist heated baths) was early established: over time they were increasingly regarded as places that facilitated prostitution and promiscuity. No wonder that, in Shakespeare’s Measure for Measure, Vincentio describes how corruption will ‘boil and bubble / Till it o’er-run the stew’. After his ascension to the throne, Henry VIII came to regard public baths as places of debauchery in which infections and contaminations easily spread. When he developed syphilis, he ordered that the baths be closed down. As a result, in the Tudor era, they became synonymous with forbidden practices. Turkish baths, famed for their exoticism, were seen as privileged places for female eroticism, as is suggested in Thomas Washington’s translation of The Navigations, Peregrinations, and Travels Made in Turkey (1585). In the seventeenth century, many people feared that hot water could infuse their bodies with dangerous humours; they turned, domestically, to waterless grooming achieved by rubbing or wiping the skin. The habit of bathing became general relatively late, when public baths reopened in London at the end of the century, and only in the mid-1750s did bathing come back into fashion as a medical resource. Cold water was favoured since it was thought to be invigorating and to regulate blood circulation.

The early modern period marked a parallel shift in spa activities. What healing waters were thought to be differed according to faith: Catholics understood them ritualistically and superstitiously, Protestants pragmatically. The medical treatises of the period, meanwhile, no longer systematically described water as a sacred or sacramental element, examining instead its curative properties. Dr William Turner, a pioneer of spa medicine in England, drafted the first English-language treatise on hot springs called A Book of the Natures and Properties of the Baths in England and other baths in Germany and Italy. Published in 1562, the volume recorded the healing properties of spa waters for nearly a hundred diseases, compared Bath with spa towns on the continent, and pleaded for improvements to be undertaken in the English city. A few decades later, in 1626, Elizabeth Farrow discovered a spring in Scarborough. The publication in 1660 of Scarborough Spaw or A description of the Nature and Virtues of the Spaw at Scarbrough in Yorkshire by Dr Robert Wittie made Scarborough one of the most important spa resorts of the time. Wittie’s observations were extended in the second edition of the book (1667) in which he provides a description of the benefits of water on nerves and lungs as well as on mental health. According to him, water could even cure ‘hypochondriack melancholly and windiness’. While Bath, Bristol, and Harrogate were recognized as established spa towns, Scarborough’s reputation soared when spa treatments developed there and when sea water baths were introduced in addition to spring water ones.

Beyond their medical dimension, the social and cultural life of spa towns, frequently described in the literary productions of the early modern period, need examination. For example, at the beginning of the eighteenth century, Bath became a fashionable holiday destination for the English aristocracy and the upper middle classes. Queen Anne’s visit in 1702 and the arrival there of Richard ‘Beau’ Nash in 1704 turned Bath into the most elegant resort in Georgian England. Not only did people go to Bath for spa treatments, but also for entertainment: concerts, dances, card games and gambling thrived in this ‘curative’ city. The international ‘Baths and Spa Waters’ conference will be held in Vichy which, along with Bath and nine other European spa towns, has submitted a joint nomination for inclusion in a UNESCO World Heritage List of ‘Great Spas of Europe’. The symposium will take stock of current research on the connections between literature, culture, baths, and hydrotherapy in early modern England. We welcome a diversity of approaches and a wide variety of sources, such as pamphlets, poems and plays extolling, condemning or deriding baths, travel narratives that depict baths, and scientific treatises that either praise or criticize the curative use of water. Contributors are also invited to examine sources of information such as travel guides and conduct manuals that became popular in the eighteenth century, as well as newspapers and gazettes describing the activities and daily life in spa towns.

Please send your 500-word abstract along with a short biographical note to Sophie Chiari (sophie.chiari_lasserre@uca.fr) and Samuel Cuisinier-Delorme (samuel.cuisinier-elorme@uca.fr) by September 15th, 2018.

Participants will be notified in November 2018.

CFP: History of Science, Technology and Medicine (HSTM) Network Ireland, annual conference 2018

For its upcoming conference, the HSTM Network invites proposals on all topics in the history of science, technology and medicine, no Irish connection required.

26-27 October 2018

Keynote: Professor Nick Hopwood (University of Cambridge) on a visual history of embryos, tentatively titled ‘Why you expect embryos when you’re expecting.’
Hosted at: The School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen’s University Belfast.

Call for Papers/Panels:
Paper submissions should include a 250-word abstract including five key words, and mention the name and affiliation (unless independent) of the speaker. Individual presentations should be 20 minutes, with 10 minutes afterwards for questions. Panel submissions should include three papers (each with a 250-word abstract including five key words) , a chair if possible, and a 100-word panel abstract. In both cases, please have ‘Submission 2018 conference’ as your email subject to help speed things along for us. We aim to confirm acceptance of papers within a month of the call for papers closing date.

Call closing date: 21 June 2018
Address for paper submissions/queries: hstmnetworkireland@gmail.com
Website for registration: https://knock.qub.ac.uk/ecommerce/hstm/index.php
Registration fees: £20 for unwaged/students – £40 for waged.
 

Histories, Theories, and Uses of Waste Paper in Early Modern England – Call For Papers

Histories, Theories, and Uses of Waste Paper in Early Modern England
Balliol College, University of Oxford
15 June, 2019

This one-day multidisciplinary conference will explore the manifold afterlives of waste paper in early modern England. Manuscript and printed sheets were frequently reused to wrap later volumes, to stiffen spines and cover the inside of bindings, to line boxes, to serve as notepaper, or (in the words of the poet Henry Fitzgeffrey) ‘to wrap Drugg’s’, ‘dry Tobacco in’, and package ‘Pippin-pyes.’ While this cycle of use has long been understood as destructive, it also speaks to a distinctly pre-modern sense of how texts might endure beyond their initial form and function. The archive of waste can help us think about the shifting fate of books across time and within distinct institutional settings, exposing a partially hidden record of the past. How should literary and textual histories incorporate these materials that were cast aside in their own moment?

We seek 15-minute papers that consider the origins, functions, and legacies of waste paper, as well as related practices of textual use, destruction, and care. Multidisciplinary approaches are particularly welcome, as are both archival and theoretical presentations.

Possible topics might include:

  • the archival discovery of waste paper;
  • the thick and multitemporal histories of waste objects;
  • the juxtaposition of waste and host texts;
  • ways in which waste unsettles linear narratives of periodization and national boundaries;
  • best practices for cataloguing and conserving fragmentary texts;
  • waste paper and the literary imagination.

With plenary papers from Kate Bennett (University of Oxford) and Whitney Trettien (University of Pennsylvania).

This conference is being organized by Megan Heffernan (DePaul University), Anna Reynolds (University of York), and Adam Smyth (University of Oxford).

Please send an abstract (with title) of approximately 200 words and a brief CV to megan.heffernan@depaul.edu, by 1 October 2018. Papers will be 15 minutes.

CFP: AEMA panels at ANZAMEMS 2019

The Australian Early Medieval Association (AEMA) is calling for paper proposals on Cultural Identity in the Anglo-Scandinavian World, to be presented as part of a panel convened at ANZAMEMS 2019

Scandinavian migration and settlement in the British Isles and Ireland in the early Viking Age effected significant cultural and social change among communities as cultures interacted, assimilated and, at times, rejected one-another. For scholars, categorising the resultant cultural groups has proved contentious, with a proliferation of overlapping terms such as ‘Anglo-Dane,’ ‘Anglo-Scandinavian,’ ‘Hiberno-Norse,’ ‘viking,’ ‘Norse,’ and ‘Dane,’ used interchangeably as ethnic identifiers. Contemporary sources, in contrast, do not clearly ascribe identity to ethnicity, but rather by cultural origin or religion. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, for example, primarily refers to those of a Scandinavian cultural identity simply as Dene [Dane] or, at times when interactions were hostile, as hæðene [heathen]. Which gives rise to the question: how was cultural identity perceived in the Early Medieval Anglo-Scandinavian world and to what degree was self-identity associated with ethnicity, religion, or language?

Proposals are invited for 20 minute papers on any aspect of Anglo-Scandinavian cultural identity including, but not limited to:

  • Migration and the inter-cultural exchange of ideas
  • Religious identity and Christianisation
  • Linguistic identity and cross-cultural communication
  • Characterisations of the foreign in saga literature
  • The utility of modern categories of cultural identification

Please note that depending on the number of papers received and breadth of topics there may be the opportunity for a second panel: Religious Identity in the Anglo-Scandinavian World.

Please email your completed proposal to Matthew Firth (firt0021@flinders.edu.au) by 3 August 2018. Please include the following information:

  • Name
  • Affiliation (independent scholars welcome)
  • Email
  • Day or days of the conference on which you will NOT be able to give your paper?
  • Audio-visual requirements
  • Abstract (up to 300 words)

This panel will convene at the ANZAMEMS conference on 5-8 February 2019 at the University of Sydney, Australia. Please visit https://anzamemsconference2019.wordpress.com/ for further conference information, and for the ANZAMEMS Equity and Diversity guidelines.

49th Australian Academy of the Humanities Symposium: ECR Poster Program – Call For Papers

Early Career Researcher Poster Program
“Clash of Civilisations? Where are we now?”
49th Australian Academy of the Humanities Symposium
State Library of NSW, Sydney
15-16 November, 2018

More info: Conference Website

The Academy invites early career researchers (ECRs) to present a poster relating to their research at the 49th Symposium to be held at State Library of NSW on 15-16 November, Sydney.

The Symposium theme is Clash of Civilisations? Where are we now? and will explore modern and ancient cross-cultural encounters and their contemporary implications in the spheres of history, politics, and religion, as well as their cultural expressions in literature, film, and the arts.

We are seeking proposals for poster presentations that engage with one or more of the Symposium’s themes:

  • The rhetoric of the ‘clash of civilisations’ and its deployment
  • The role, history, and effect of the ‘culture wars’
  • Identity politics and the ‘clash of civilisations’
  • The literary and artistic response to inter-cultural conflict

Places are limited. All proposals will be assessed on the grounds of relevance to the Symposium, the quality of the proposed poster, and the academic track record of the candidate.

Eligibility

This opportunity is available to all early career researchers currently associated with an Australian university.

Applicants must be in the early stages of their careers, which will be determined, inter alia, by how recently a PhD was conferred. In normal circumstances it should have been conferred no earlier than 11 June 2013.

Successful applicants

Successful applicants must be willing to assist in the installation of their poster and be available to attend the Symposium to answer questions from delegates during the scheduled breaks in the program. Applicants will be offered complimentary registration to attend the Symposium and may be invited to submit an article for a special issue humanities journal based on their poster topic. Applicants are expected to cover all other expenses (including poster production, printing and travel).

How to apply

Applications are to made via our online application system and close AEST 5:00pm Monday 11 June 2018.

Individuals and groups are welcome to apply.

Applications must include:

    1. A statement outlining the proposed title and abstract of the poster (maximum 400 words)
    2. An explanation of how the poster relates to the themes of the Clash of Civilisations? Where are we now? (maximum 250 words)
    3. Details of any special requirements for the poster, as they should be no larger than A0 size (width: 841 mm, height 1189mm) and must be easily fixable to a standard horizontal display panel.
    4. A short CV (no more than 2 x A4 pages)

Religion and Emotion in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, c.1100–1800 – Call For Papers

Religion and Emotion in Medieval and Early Modern Europe, c.1100–1800
The University of Adelaide
23 November, 2018

Symposium Website

Keynote: Professor Thomas A. Fudge (University of New England)

In the medieval and early modern world, religious belief and practices were expressed with passionate commitment out of an emotional attachment to the divine. Institutional religion cultivated and prescribed certain emotions and emotional styles, through media such as literature, sermons, rituals and art. At the same time, the individual’s own relationship with both God and the Church was underpinned by emotion, in ways that could either, in the words of John Corrigan, ‘confirm or challenge the authority of [this] religious emotionology’. This one-day symposium seeks to explore the emotional dimensions of both institutional and individual religious belief, experience and practice, as well as the relationships between them. It aims to bring together scholars already working on emotions, and those interested in exploring how a focus on emotion may enhance their research on medieval and early modern religion, broadly conceived.

We invite proposals for 20-minute papers from any discipline dealing with religion and emotion within a European context between 1100 and 1800. We particularly encourage proposals from postgraduates and ECRs. Papers may wish to explore, but are not limited to:

  • Rituals, practices and performance
  • The language of religious emotions
  • How religious imagery, objects and music conveyed or embodied emotional messages
  • Comparisons between different institutions or denominations
  • Links between religion, emotion and morality
  • The emotional dynamics of religious vocations and communities
  • The emotional dynamics of lay religion
  • The role of gender

Abstracts of no more than 250 words, and a short biography, should be emailed to both Stephanie Thomson (stephanie.thomson@adelaide.edu.au) and Jessica McCandless (jessica.mccandless@adelaide.edu.au). Questions or queries can also be addressed to the above.

Deadline for proposals: 31 July 2018
Notification of acceptance: 15 August 2018
Registration deadline: 2 November 2018
Opening public lecture: 22 November 2018
Symposium and dinner (dinner at own expense): 23 November 2018

Skin In Medieval And Early Modern Worlds – Call For Papers

‘Skin In Medieval And Early Modern Worlds’
Perth Medieval and Renaissance Group/UWA Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies Annual Conference
13 October, 2018
The University of Western Australia

Conference Website

Keynote Speaker: Dr Lisa Beaven (La Trobe University), ‘Skin and Stone: Metamorphosis and the Villa Culture of Seventeenth-Century Rome’.

Skin as a material served a vital role in premodern economies. It was an essential ingredient in clothing and tools, and it formed the primary material for the manuscripts on which knowledge and ideas were recorded and preserved. Beyond the many uses for the skins of animals, the idea of skin interested artists, scholars, and theologians. As a boundary or surface, skin presented a range of symbolic possibilities. Images of skin, such as its piercing, often acted as metaphors for the uncovering of secrets or the interpretation of allegory. Premodern observers, likewise, often believed that the appearance and colour of an individual’s skin indicated truths about their inner nature. Diseases of the skin, such as leprosy, attracted legislation and intellectual speculation, drawing together the immaterial world of ideas regarding skin and the treatment of actual human skins.

We are interested in papers that address the many premodern uses of skin, as well representations of and ideas about skin. This conference is multidisciplinary and wide-ranging; we welcome papers from the fields of book culture and manuscript studies, history, material culture, medicine, disability studies, race studies, crime and punishment, art, literature, and theology.

The conference organisers invite proposals for 20-minute papers.

Please send a paper title, 250-word abstract, and a short (no more than 100-word) biography to pmrg.cmems.conference@gmail.com by 31 May 2018.

Bursary

One $500 travel bursary is available on a competitive basis for an ECR (no more than 5 years from the award of their PhD) who does not have substantive academic employment and whose conference paper is accepted. The bursary will be awarded on the basis of merit and the paper’s relevance to the symposium topic. Should you wish to apply for the travel bursary, please send a short CV (no more than 1 page), along with your paper title, abstract, and biography by 31 May 2018.