Category Archives: short course

Voyage to the Moon – Performance and Masterclass

Voyage to the Moon
Melbourne Recital Centre
15,16,18,19 February, 2016

Presented in partnership with Musica Viva, Victorian Opera and the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions.

Info & Tickets: http://www.victorianopera.com.au/what-s-on/season-2016/voyage-to-the-moon/ and http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/voyage-to-the-moon-melbourne/?date=2016-02

A 16th century knight Astolfo travels to the heavens, his destination, the Moon. His quest, to find a cure for his friend, the great warrior Orlando who has fallen into a deep madness. The moon is, as Astolfo discovers, home to many lost things including Orlando’s sanity. But before he can save his friend, he must first convince the all-powerful Selena, Guardian of the Moon, that Orlando is indeed worth saving.

Legendary Australian playwright and director Michael Gow together with renowned musicologist and conductor, the late Alan Curtis reimagine the epic 16th century poem Orlando Furioso. Part new work, part baroque pastiche, Voyage to the Moon will feature old and new text with existing 18th century music performed by a period ensemble.

One of the greatest Australian sopranos, Emma Matthews assumes dual roles as both the all-powerful Selena, Guardian of the Moon, and the mad Orlando while leading Australian mezzo Sally-Anne Russell is the loyal knight Astolfo. Former Victorian Opera emerging artist Jeremy Kleeman sings the role of Magus, with Victorian Opera’s own Head of Music Phoebe Briggs conducting from the harpsichord.

A Free Baroque Music Masterclass is associated with this event – details here: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/baroque-music-performance-emotions-insights/?page=1

State Library of NSW: Australasian Rare Books Summer School – Course and Lecture of Interest

The 11th Australasian Rare Books Summer School (1-5 February, 2016), will be running three intensive five-day courses, a two-day short course, and a number of public lectures presented by leading experts.

For full details of all courses on offer at the Australasian Rare Books Summer School, including fees and how to apply, please visit: http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/events/docs/4608_PLE_RareBooks_SummerSchool2016_A4web.pdf

The following course and public lecture, may of interest to members:

The Book in the Renaissance

Date: 1-5 February, 2016
Time: 9 am – 5 pm daily
Venue: Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW

This course is a comprehensive introduction to the history of the book in early modern Europe, from the beginning of the fifteenth century to the middle of the seventeenth. Drawing on the State Library’s collections, students will learn to ‘read’ a Renaissance book, both as a physical object and as a carrier of cultural values. We will examine how these books were produced, how they were distributed, and how they were used by those who bought and read them. Topics include:

  • the transition from manuscript to printed book
  • the mechanics of early printing
  • famous scholar-printers
  • editing and correcting
  • woodcuts and engravings
  • typeface and its meaning
  • the popular print
  • bindings
  • the Renaissance book trade
  • censorship
  • the formation of libraries, both individual and institutional
  • marginalia as clues to reading practices and information management
  • researching a Renaissance book, using both print and online sources

The course is intended for special collections librarians, collectors, booksellers, and scholars and graduate students in any field of Renaissance studies.

COURSE TUTOR
Dr Craig Kallendorf, Professor of English and Classics, Texas A&M University, has taught book history at the undergraduate and graduate levels for 30 years. He is the author or editor of 20 books and almost 150 articles and reference entries, with a focus on the relationship of the book as physical object to the content it carries.



“Books As Carriers of Relationships”, Dr Craig Kallendorf (Texas A&M University)

Date: Thursday, 4 February, 2016
Time: 6 pm – 7 pm
Venue: Metcalfe Auditorium, Macquarie Street building, State Library of NSW

We tend to think of books as carriers of ideas, but books were made by people for people.

This talk will identify some of the relationships involved in creating books in the Renaissance — between author and publisher, among author, publisher, and editor, and between publisher and distributor — before settling on two kinds of relationships that were especially important in this period.

Classic texts provided the foundation of education in the Renaissance, with schoolmasters mediating between the authors of their textbooks and the students who read them. Evidence of this approach
to reading can been seen in the margins of books from the era.

Not all books were circulated freely in the Renaissance, and the relationships between clerical censors and the writers, publishers, distributors, and readers of books will also be discussed.

The talk will focus on books as objects that carry the evidence of these relationships, with some closing thoughts on the dangers that digitisation poses for recovering this kind of information.

UWA Extension 2016 – Three Courses of Interest

UWA Extension has announced a great program of short courses and events hosted at The University Club of Western Australia in 2016.

The following three courses run by Professor Susan Broomhall may be of interest to members:

The insider’s guide to Versailles

Date: Saturday 30 April, 2016
Time: 9:30am – 12:30pm [1 session, 3 hours total]
Venue: UWA Crawley Campus
Cost: $55

Take a peak inside the exclusive world of Versailles, a lavish palace complex that housed the cream of the French aristocracy during the ancient regime. Discover the history, politics, the intrigues, and the garden and palace spaces where monarchs, elites and commoners mingled. We will explore the music, art, literature and enlightenment philosophies that shaped a fantasy world and stoked a revolution.

Join historian Professor Susan Broomhall for this illuminating and enjoyable seminar.

More info: https://www.extension.uwa.edu.au/course/CCDR001


The insider’s guide to the Dutch Golden Age

Date: Saturday 28 May, 2016
Time: 9:30am – 12:30pm [1 session, 3 hours total]
Venue: UWA Crawley Campus
Cost: $55

Spices, silks, gold, silver, tulips and porcelain arrived in Dutch society in the seventeenth century via the Dutch East India Company and were celebrated in vibrant artistic styles that captured the spirit of the Golden Age.

Join historian Professor Susan Broomhall for this absorbing seminar. We will explore the immense international power of the trading companies (reaching as far as the western Australian coast in 1616, under Dirk Hartog), the beauty of Dutch art and porcelain, the story of its political emergence and role of key women and men in the dynasty whose name, Orange-Nassau, is forever linked with this nation and its sporting colour.

More info: https://www.extension.uwa.edu.au/course/CCDR002


The insider’s guide to Renaissance Florence

Date: Saturday 25 June, 2016
Time: 9:30am – 12:30pm [1 session, 3 hours total]
Venue: UWA Crawley Campus
Cost: $55

Discover the cultural politics of power in Renaissance Florence, focusing on the House of Medici, the banking family and political dynasty that first began to gather prominence under Cosimo de’ Medici and went on to produce four Popes and two regent queens of France.

This interactive and rewarding seminar, presented by historian Professor Susan Broomhall, will explore the city spaces, processions and buildings of Brunelleschi, the music of Dufay, as well as artworks of Lippi and Botticelli, the literature of Machiavelli and the birth of humanism.

More info: https://www.extension.uwa.edu.au/course/CCDR003

11th Australasian Rare Books Summer School – Call For Applications

11th Australasian Rare Books Summer School
The State Library of NSW
1–5 February, 2016

The State Library of NSW is delighted to host the 11th Australasian Rare Books Summer School.

Three intensive five-day courses and a two-day short course presented by leading experts.

All courses will be based at the State Library of NSW from 1–5 February 2016. Some courses may include visits to neighbouring institutions and studios. Lunch will be provided.

For full information, and to apply, please visit: http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/events/series/rare_books_summer_sc.html

Applications close on Friday, 18 December.

Macquarie Ancient Languages School: 11-15 January 2016 – Call For Applications

The 2016 Summer Week of the Macquarie Ancient Languages School (MALS) runs 11-15 January 2016.

MALS provides a unique opportunity to explore ancient cultures through the study of their languages in a friendly and stimulating environment. The School, which has a history reaching back to 1981, runs every year in January and July.

MALS began as an intensive Summer School in ancient Greek. It has expanded over the years and now offers courses in a range of ancient languages associated with the teaching and research programs of the Department of Ancient History at Macquarie University, especially Greek, Egyptian, Latin (in winter only), Coptic, Hebrew, Sanskrit, and Akkadian. We also offer additional languages, either on a regular or rotational basis (for example, Aramaic and Phoenician, Old and Middle Irish, Middle Welsh, Old Norse, and in recent times indigenous Australian languages).

Beginners, intermediate, and advanced classes are taught by enthusiastic tutors, some of whom have been sharing their skills and passion for languages at the School for many years.

For more information, please visit: https://www.mq.edu.au/about_us/faculties_and_departments/faculty_of_arts/department_of_ancient_history/macquarie_ancient_languages_school/

Sydney University: Latin Summer School – Applications Now Open

The 22nd Latin Summer School
Education Building, the University of Sydney
Monday January 18-Friday January 22, 2016

The Latin Summer School held annually in January at the University of Sydney, was founded by the late Professor Kevin Lee and Dr Trevor Evans. It attracts about 200 students of all ages, from 14 up. It consists of daily tutorial sessions on a wide selection of Latin texts (provided) at all levels from beginners to advanced. The tutorials are conducted by experienced teachers from universities and schools in NSW and ACT.

In addition there is a series of lectures (a choice of two each day, except for the first day when there is a key note lecture). These lectures cover a wide variety of topics of classical interest.

There is plenty of opportunity for social inter-action and the week concludes with a barbecue for all.

In 2016 there will be two competitions as in 2015: a Neo-Latin poetry translation, and a Classical/Neo-Latin prose translation which will be based on various Neo-Latin sources.

This year there will be a Diurna Competition: two prizes of $150 each will be awarded for an original 450 word contribution on any subject related to the Classical Word. This could take the form of a revue of an exhibition, a book, a film, a play, an opera/ballet, a game etc. or even a mini story.

For full information, and to register for the Latin Summer School, please visit: http://www.latinsummerschool.com.au/

Kenneth Moss Bursary

Thanks to a generous donation in memory of Dr Kenneth Moss AM (Chancellor of the University of Newcastle, NSW), a Bursary is available for one student to attend the Latin Summery School each year. The closing date for bursary applications is January 6, 2016.

ANZAMEMS PATS 2015: Medieval and Early Modern Digital Humanities – Livestream Details

The Canterbury PATS, entitled Medieval and Early Modern Digital Humanities, will be live-streaming on YouTube on 18 November.

You can join the live-stream at this link: https://youtu.be/hYb2GDxvIpk. Participants attending via live-stream will be able to engage in the discussion and questions via the commenting feature in YouTube, and by using the #ANZAMEMS hashtag on Twitter.

Christopher Dawson Centre: Annual Summer School in Medieval and Church Latin

Christopher Dawson Centre
Annual Summer School in Medieval and Church Latin
Jane Franklin Hall, 4 Elboden Street, South Hobart
18-22 January, 2016

Latin is arguably the mother tongue of Europe. Its literature is immensely rich. In a sense it never died; original work continued to be written in Latin up to modern times. This course will offer a general introduction to Latin with particular emphasis on medieval and ecclesiastical literature. We shall read easy original passages from Scripture, liturgy, history, theology and poetry, both secular and religious. There will also be an introduction to palaeography, including an opportunity to handle original medieval manuscripts. There will be a strong emphasis on the pronunciation of Latin in speech and music.

Designed for students of all standards, absolute beginners should purchase a self-instruction primer and work on the basics between now and the start of the course. Participants will never be embarrassed by their shaky Latin: the teaching method leaves the entire task of translation and exposition to the Lecturer. This approach has been useful to relative beginners as well as those who are more experienced.

THE PROGRAMME
There will be four lectures a day on each of the five days, from Monday 18 to Friday 22, starting at 9.00 am. There will be only one lecture after lunch each day, to free up the afternoons for private study.

Day 1 Liturgy and Scripture.
Day 2 Latin prose narrative, incl. Bede, Brendan, Isidore, Grosseteste
Day 3 Hymns and religious poetry, incl. Ambrose, Fortunatus, Aquinas.
Day 4 Secular Poetry, incl. pieces from the Carmina Burana
Day 5 Theology and patristics, incl. Aquinas, Benedict, Thomas a Kempis.

Any Latin Primer designed for self-instruction can be used, but F. Kinchin Smith’s Teach Yourself Latin (out of print, but cheap copies are easily available from internet sites such as www.abebooks.com) is in many ways the best. Participants should bring both their grammar and a small dictionary to classes.

The cost of the course will be $350. A concessional rate is available. Meals and accommodation are not included. PROCEEDS FROM THIS COURSE GO TO THE CHRISTOPHER DAWSON CENTRE (http://www.dawsoncentre.org).

To enrol and for further information contact d.daintree@campion.edu.au

ANZAMEMS PATS 2016: The Manuscript Book

The Manuscript Book | University of Sydney (2016)

Date: February 9, and Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Time: 9am–5pm
Venue: Seminar Room, Level 2, Fisher Library, The University of Sydney
More information: patssydney2016@gmail.com

Does your research involve using or learning from manuscripts? Or are you interested in gaining hand-on experience working with primary sources transmitted from the Middle Ages?

This Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar (PATS) at the University of Sydney is open to postgraduate students and early career researchers in any field who are engaged in a study of the manuscript book, broadly speaking, and is designed to equip the student with the requisite skills and care necessary for the proper use and study of manuscript materials.

This PATS consists of an intensive two-day course run by Professors Margaret Manion and Rod Thomson. It will be devoted to a full range of activity involved with working with manuscript evidence and utilize the collection of books and fragments of books preserved at the University of Sydney. Beginning with a study of the raw materials, we run through codicology and old bindings, palaeography, decoration and illumination, to contents and provenance history. Additionally there will be also two special plenary sessions, run by experts in their fields, showcasing aspects of the Fisher’s rich collection.

Cost

There is no cost for students to attend this PATS, but places are strictly limited. Lunch and refreshments will be provided; advise of any dietary requirements when applying.

Accommodation Grants

Rooms are available at St. John’s College, within the University. The cost of $99 per night includes wifi and breakfast. A limited number of accommodation grants will be available to students from outside Sydney.

Travel Grants

Eight travel grants are available for Australian students, and two grants are available for New Zealand students. If you are intending to apply for a grant, please submit your application together with an academic reference before 4 December, 2015. Applicants will hear back shortly after 4 December.

Application forms for the PATS at the University of Sydney can be downloaded HERE.

Space and Time in the Early Medieval World: 11th Conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association (AEMA) – Call For Papers

Space and Time in the Early Medieval World
The 11th Conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association (AEMA)

Medieval and Early Modern Centre, The University of Sydney
11–12 February, 2016

Throughout history humans have struggled to describe the world, but the concepts of space and time have persisted as touchstones. The 11th annual conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association in February 2016 at the University of Sydney will explore medieval conceptions of space and time across all disciplines.

Submissions are invited for papers on the broad theme of space and/or time in all aspects of the Late Antique and Early Medieval periods (c. 400–1150) in all cultural, geographic, religious and linguistic settings:

  • issues of chronology and historiography
  • literary representations of space and time
  • calendars and cartography
  • cosmology, theology, science, and philosophy
  • town and country divides; rural and urban landscapes
  • colonisation and postcolonial attitudes
  • architecture and art history
  • rituals and traditions
  • religion and space
  • cultural spaces
  • timekeeping; recordkeeping
  • archaeological issues
  • the dating of sources

Abstracts of 250-300 words for 20-minute papers should be submitted online at http://aema2016.net/submission by 11 December, 2015.

The conference will also include some special sessions on digital methods related to the conference theme. If you would like to contribute to these, or for more information about the conference, please contact the conference organisers at conference@aema.net.au.

A Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar on manuscripts (sponsored by ANZAMEMS, full details TBA) will be held prior to the conference at the University of Sydney. For information about the PATS please contact Nicholas Sparks: nicholas.sparks@sydney.edu.au.

Limited financial assistance may be available for postgraduates and early career researchers travelling interstate or from New Zealand for this conference. For more information, please contact the conference organisers.