Category Archives: Conference

CFP: Shakespeare FuturEd Conference

Shakespeare FuturEd is an international conference exploring the nexus of Shakespeare Studies and Education to be held at the University of Sydney on Friday 1 – Saturday 2 February 2019.

We are seeking proposals for papers, panels and workshops that interrogate and experiment with new directions in Shakespeare pedagogy in theory and practice. We welcome proposals from primary and secondary teachers, tertiary educators, researchers, theatre practitioners, and anyone with an interest in Shakespeare and education.

Please send 250 word proposals (and a short biography) to: claire.hansen3@jcu.edu.au. CFP closes 31 October 2018.

For more information and a list of confirmed keynotes, please visit the website: www.shakespearereloaded.edu.au/conference.

CFP: Artisans of the Surface in Early Modern Europe, 1450-1750

Artisans of the Surface in Early Modern Europe, 1450-1750
20-21 September 2018 King’s College London

The surfaces of natural things invite observation, manipulation, measurement, and reconfiguration, with the promise to unveil the knowledge of depths. In early modern Europe, artisans of all kind used their hands to work on, and with, the surfaces of human and non-human matter. They captured the attention of everyday and learned contemporary commentators, but traditionally, historians have failed to consider them when establishing the ways in which knowledge was produced in that period. But in recent decades, historians have placed new emphasis on artisanal knowledge procedures and on what has been termed ‘vernacular science’. Today, the Scientific Revolution is characterised by an exchange between humanist erudition and a passion for practice, or between ‘high’ and ‘low’ arts. Much work has been done to show how in the seventeenth century the so-called ‘mixed mathematics’ (military sciences, engineering, navigation sciences, etc.) contributed to the development of the fields of mathematics, astronomy, and geometry. Equally, alchemical procedures and metallurgy informed the theories of contemporary canonical heroes.

In the same spirit, this workshop focuses on the practices of artisans such as tailors, barbers, cooks, cheesemakers, gardeners, and agronomists, and on their relationships with the fields of meteorology, botany, natural history, medicine, earth sciences, and veterinary medicine. All these artisans and artisanal practices shared a set of skills on how to observe and manipulate human and non-human surfaces – from skin to bark, from rinds to animal flesh, from the surface of a landscape to dyes, or from cloth to hair. We are interested in exploring how, and if, practical knowledge about the surface of things and bodies (and their storage and preservation in relation to specific environmental conditions) led to the concept of nature and matter as composed of layers, and how such a framework contributed to the demise of traditional Galenic and Aristotelian views on nature.

This workshop also aims at moving beyond the dichotomies between quantitative and qualitative knowledge and between natural philosophy and the arts, and so we intend to broaden the focus to include a set of artisans who have traditionally remained invisible from accounts of this ‘age of the new’. We will explore the many different ways in which ‘modern science’ emerged, the relationships between social and cognitive practices, and the contribution that non-mathematical sciences gave to the mental habits of observing, collecting, experimenting with, and manipulating natural matter.

Confirmed speakers are Emanuele Lugli (York) on tailors, Elaine Leong (MPIWG, Berlin) on domestic health practices, Bradford Bouley (UC Santa Barbara) on butchers, Maria Conforti (La Sapienza) on the surface of the earth, and Carolin Schmiz (EUI) on barber-surgeons. Sandra Cavallo (Royal Holloway) will offer final remarks.

We welcome proposals that complement these topics, in particular those that address the relationships between gardening, natural history, and medicine; cooking and knowledge; work on animal skin; leatherwork; or veterinary medicine. Presentations will be followed by ample time for discussion and reflection, and so we are happy for works in progress.

Proposals (up to 250 words) for 20-minute papers should be sent to Paolo Savoia at renaissanceskin@kcl.ac.uk by 8 June 2018.

We may be able to provide speakers with reasonable accommodation and travel costs. Please indicate when you apply if you will require assistance with expenses.

The two-day workshop is organised as part of the Renaissance Skin project. For more information visit www.renaissanceskin.ac.uk or follow us on Twitter @RenSkinKCL and use #surfaceartisans

AEMA Conference Registration Open

The Committee of the Australian Early Medieval Association is pleased to announce that registrations are now open for the 13th AEMA Conference – Invasion, Migration, Communication and Trade.

The conference will be held over two consecutive days, 20-21 July, at the Bedford Park campus of Flinders University, Adelaide. See the PDF below for the list of keynote speakers and paper abstracts.

To register, go to http://groupspaces.com/AustralianEarlyMedieval/item/1154113

For more information on AEMA, see http://www.aema.net.au/index.html

A limited number of postgraduate/ECR travel bursaries available to conference delegates who meet the following criteria:

1. Be a current AEMA Member.
2. Be presenting at the conference.
3. Be a currently enrolled postgraduate, or an early-career researcher not more than two years out from the completion of their degree.
4. Be travelling from either interstate or overseas.

We encourage people who meet these conditions to apply for a bursary by emailing the conference committee here. The due date for bursary applications to be considered is 7 May 2018. Successful bursary recipients will remain anonymous, and be awarded their bursary at the conclusion of the conference.

[gview file=”https://anzamems.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/AEMA-2018-Conference-Abstracts.pdf”]

CFP: Mid-America Medieval Association

Mid-America Medieval Association
42nd Annual Conference
University of Kansas, Lawrence
September 22, 2018

Theme: Skins
Plenary: Dr. Andrew Beresford, University of Durham: “Dermal Identities in the Legend of St Bartholomew”

We construe the notion of skin, or skins, as having multiple meanings, contexts, and sites of enquiry; it could pertain to humans or animals; as a covering or a disguise, revealing or concealing identity, a marker of difference and similarity, race, class, and gender; the mutilated witness to heroic and saintly deeds, or the epitome of idealized beauty; it can be sacred or profane; it may also evoke science, medicine, and the body; skin as writing surface and manuscript; as palimpsest, the scraping away of layers of meaning; it may allude to blank spaces and lacunae; skin as the polychrome surface of a statue, or a fresco; architectural skins and façades; it could relate to surfaces, spaces, and landscapes; to the veneers of civilization and society.

We invite papers that engage these topics, or any related to the field of medieval studies.

Please send proposals of 250 words by 1 June to Caroline Jewers at cjewers@ku.edu.

 

Symposium: A Celebration of Music Manuscripts

The Medieval and Early Modern Centre and Rare Books and Special Collections at the University of Sydney present A Celebration of Music Manuscripts, convened by Jane Hardie (MEMC) and Julie Sommerfeldt (RBSC).

In early 2017 Rare Books and Special Collections at the University of Sydney added three manuscripts to its significant collection of Spanish Liturgical Music Manuscripts. This Symposium is to celebrate these additions, and to mark the doubling of this collection since the last Symposium ten years ago (“Cathedral, Court, City and Cloister:  Spanish Liturgical Music Manuscripts and their International Contexts, 2008”).

14 June 4.00–8pm
1
5 June 9.30am–5pm.
Fisher Library, The University of Sydney

Free. As space is limited please register using the link below.

https://usyd.libcal.com/event/3891993

See the full program below (PDF) and for further information, please contact jane.hardie@sydney.edu.au

[gview file=”https://anzamems.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Music-Symposium-USydney-Program.pdf”]

CFP: Migration, Health and Humanities Conference, 26-27 Nov. 2018 University of Otago

In a world that is valuing science and technology to solve our health problems and erecting walls to solve apparent migration concerns, what is the role for the Humanities? This multidisciplinary conference to be held at the University of Otago seeks to explore whether and how the Humanities can contribute to improving health outcomes in relation to the movement of people.

Disciplinary fields include: Ethnic History / Studies, Health and Health Care, Humanities, Immigration & Migration History / Studies, Race Studies

Themes include:

• How might the Humanities improve health in migrants?
• How can Humanities research improve health concerns for globally mobile health professionals?
• In what ways can a focus on the Humanities improve cultural competence in relation to migration?
• How can interdisciplinary collaboration improve health in migrants?

Please provide the following details to Lea Doughty (email: gmevents@otago.ac.nz) before the deadline of 30 April 2018:

• Paper title
• Abstract (200 words maximum)
• Brief biographical information (including institutional affiliation and contact details)

Each presenter will have 20 minutes for their presentation and 10 minutes discussion time.

We welcome all submissions, including from post-graduate students. Regrettably, we are unable to provide funding support for participants.

Contact: 

Call for Papers: International Society for the Study of Medievalism

On behalf of the International Society for the Study of Medievalism, Brock University is hosting the 2018 International Conference on Medievalism.

ISSM 2018 Boundary Crossings
October 12-13, 2018
Brock University, St. Catharines, ON, Canada

St Catharines, Ontario, Canada, the location of Brock University, is just 19 kilometres from the Niagara River, the boundary between Canada and the United States of America. In this location, then, it seems appropriate to think about medievalism and boundary crossing. Plenary sessions will cross disciplinary boundaries by investigating similarities in concerns, methods, and themes between the fields of (neo)medievalism(s) and the Neo-Victorian. For regular conference sessions, proposals are invited on the conference theme. Papers might address the ways in which medievalism crosses the boundaries of, or is used to interrogate the boundaries of

• genres/subgenres
• national designations
• temporal periods
• academic disciplines
• the academic and the popular
• gender
• sexuality
• class
• race
• human / non-human

Please send one-page abstracts or session proposals to Dr. Ann F. Howey, Associate Professor at Brock University (ahowey@brocku.ca), by April 10, 2018.

For more information, please go to the following website:

http://medievalism.net/conference/callforpapers

National Oral History Association of New Zealand (NOHANZ) Biennial Conference – Call For Papers

National Oral History Association of New Zealand (NOHANZ)
University of Waikato, Hamilton
28-29 November, 2018

The National Oral History Association of New Zealand (NOHANZ) invites abstract submissions for their biennial conference to be held at the University of Waikato, Hamilton, Wednesday 28 and Thursday 29 of November 2018.

This year the theme of their conference focuses on the sweet sound of the voice, the singers of tales (te waha kairongorongo), storytellers, and the resonance of the voice through time and space. How is oral history transient through time and space? How do the voices of our participants travel through, or resonate in, time and space as a vehicle for memory? What significance do we find in the spaces we use to access, listen to, co-create, and present voices that give meaning and memory to the past? How is the notion of “time” apparent in the transmission of memory across generations of voices?

More details, including how to submit an abstract, can be found here: http://www.oralhistory.org.nz/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/CFP-NOHANZ-2018-FINALII.pdf.

Making Connections: Digital Humanities Australasia Conference – Call for Papers

Making Connections
Digital Humanities Australasia
2-5 October, 2018
University of South Australia, City West Campus

Deadline: 9 April, 2018
More info: http://dha2018.org.au

All sessions will explore the central theme of “Making Connections”. This could include connections in any combination between data, tools, people and their stories, systems, platforms, organisations, sectors, environments, places, and approaches to working, teaching and research. Submissions may feature projects or case studies ranging from research and teaching to creative practice, community outreach and problem solving.

Collaborative and multi-partner submissions are particularly welcomed in all categories.

The following proposal types are invited.

  1. Lightning talks: Lightning talks will be allocated 10 minutes (plus 5 minutes for discussion) and are suitable for describing work-in-progress and reporting on work in the early stage of development.
  2. Papers: Papers will be allocated 20 minutes (plus 10 minutes for discussion) and are intended for presenting substantial unpublished research, new digital resources or addressing broader questions of interest to digital humanists.
  3. Birds of a Feather sessions: These collaborative, informal and participatory sessions will be allocated 60 minutes to be used as participants decide, ensuring that time is allocated for questions and discussion.
    Workshops: Hands-on sessions exploring the latest digital humanities tools, techniques and resources. All workshops will be run twice to maximise participation. Workshops will range from software carpentry and visualisation techniques to app development and hackathons. Workshops will be allocated 90 minutes.
  4. Posters: A poster competition will be run during the conference, with an award for the entry which demonstrates most convincingly how the Digital Humanities can enhance collaborative problem solving by “Making Connections”.

Abstracts of no more than 500 words, together with a biography of no more than 100 words, should be submitted to the Program Committee by Monday 9 April 2018. All proposals will be fully refereed.

Proposals should be submitted via the conference website. Proposals will be assessed in terms of alignment with the conference themes and the quality of research within these or related themes. Presenters will be notified of acceptance of their proposal by mid-May 2018.

It is a condition of acceptance that presenters register to attend the conference and pay the applicable delegate fee. Fees will be no more than $450 for full registration. Significant discounts will apply for aaDH members and research students. We are working with prospective sponsors to reduce the cost for all delegates.

Devotion, Objects and Emotion, 1300–1700 – Registration Now Open

Devotion, Objects and Emotion, 1300–1700

Date: Friday and Saturday, 16-17 March, 2018
Venue: Woodward Conference Centre, The University of Melbourne, 10th floor, Melbourne Law (Building 106), 185 Pelham Street, Carlton VIC 3053
Conveners: Charles Zika, Julie Hotchin, Claire Walker, Lisa Beaven
Registrations Now Open: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/devotion-objects-and-emotion-1300-1700
Full Program: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/media/259700/devotions-program-lowres.pdf
Contact for further enquiries:
Julie Davies, daviesja@unimelb.edu.au , or 8344 5981

Religion is a cultural field in which emotions exercise a preeminent role. Feelings are integral to religion, and their significance is encapsulated in the concept of religious devotion. This symposium will focus on the relationships between religious devotion, objects and emotion in Europe between 1300 and 1700. Religious devotion promotes the exercise of a wide range of emotional expressions and behaviours that assume, communicate and give shape to the broader religious belief systems and cosmologies of which they are part. Objects used in religious practices accrue the power to arouse, channel and mediate our emotions; while their materiality and use in devotional practice can expand our understanding of the historical layering and expression of religious emotions, and how they change over time. In this way, devotional practices and objects provide a rich vantage point from which to explore the multifarious and fundamental role of emotions in individual and collective lives.