Monthly Archives: December 2011

Perth Medieval Fayre 2012

The 2012 Perth Medieval Fayre will be held at Supreme Court Gardens on March 17 from 10:00am-5:00pm.

Admission costs
Adult: $10.00
Concession: $5.00
Children under 12 years of age: free entry

Entertainment includes: sword fighting displays, medieval merchants, arts and crafts, food vendors, minstrels, dancers, and performance of the play, Virgin Warrior, based on the story of Joan of Arc (to be held from 7:30pm-10:00pm).

More details can be found at the West Australian Medieval Alliance website.

Early Modern Colloquium of the University of Michigan 2012 – Call For Papers

Early Modern Colloquium of the University of Michigan

Nations and Empires of the Early Modern Period
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
March 9-10 2012

Keynote Speakers: Joyce MacDonald, University of Kentucky, and Daniel Vitkus, Florida State University

The Early Modern Colloquium, a graduate interdisciplinary group at the University of Michigan, is seeking submissions for a conference on the construction of nations and empires in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Europe. This conference will engage with the idea of emerging and changing national identities in this period. More specifically, it will investigate the particular social dynamics that characterize negotiations between categories such as the foreign and the domestic or the individual and the state. How is the status of the nation and its inhabitants defined? How does the cultural production of nation engage with shifting political realities? Do changes in geographical borders or ideologies produce new discourses of difference in terms of race, religion, gender, sexuality, class, and/or disability?

We welcome papers that examine how early modern writers, collectives, and cultures grappled with these questions within a series of interrelated realms—e.g., academic, artistic, economic, epistemological, geographical, legal, medical, occult, philosophical, private, public, religious, scientific, and theatrical. Potential topics might include radical religious dissent, the rise of Protestantism and/or the Counter-Reformation, colonialism and expansion in the Americas, the beginnings of the slave trade, the shift from monarchy to commonwealth in seventeenth-century England, relations between the East and West, or European interactions with the Ottoman Empire.

Please send a 250-word abstract to Cordelia Zukerman (czukerma@umich.edu) and Leila Watkins (lrwatkin@umich.edu) by January 15, 2012.

Borderlines XVI – 20-22 April 2012 – Call For Papers

Borderlines XVI – Site & Sound 20-22 April 2012
Queen’s University Belfast

Conference Website

Special guest speaker: Prof. Paul Strohm (Columbia University)

Borderlines is an annual postgraduate conference in medieval and early modern studies, which aims to bring together researchers in a variety of disciplines, at MA, PhD and postdoctoral level, from across Ireland, Britain, Europe and around the world. The theme of this year’s conference will be Site & Sound. Amongst our many inheritances from the medieval and early modern ages, perhaps the most apparent and accessible are the streets, churches and landscapes we share with our ancestors. Along with these sites we have inherited a host of cultural assumptions about our spaces – big and small – from the home, through the city and the country, to our nations and the wider world around us. While echoes persist in the spaces we inhabit, the languages we speak and the music we enjoy today, the sounds of the medieval and early modern ages are often obscured by the signal to noise ratio of the past to the present. In this conference, we hope to explore the sites and sounds of the past as the framework for an open and interdisciplinary consideration of current research in medieval and early modern studies. We welcome papers from researchers in the fields of Anthropology, Archaeology, Codicology, Drama, Film Studies, Folklore, Geography, History, History of Art, Languages, Literature, Music, Paleography, Philosophy and Theology.

Topics may include (but are not limited to):

  • Architecture and landscapes in the past and through time.
  • Spatial dichotomies: urban/rural, public/private, male/female.
  • The acoustics of space.
  • The archaeological site and the idea(s) of excavation.
  • The space of the page, the painting or the statue.
  • The spaces and sounds of the text.
  • Oral tradition.
  • Drama on the stage and the page. Its spaces, sounds and spectacles.
  • Art music, popular music and folkmusic in the past and in modern revivals.
  • Music and space in the past and the present.
  • Religious spaces, sounds and silences.
  • Space, sound and the senses.
  • (Re)creations of medieval and early modern spaces and sounds in film and television.

Please submit proposals of 250 words to borderlinesxvi@gmail.com by 1st March 2012.

Follow Borderlines on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/BorderlinesXVI
Join the Borderlines Community on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/Borderlines.ie

21st Biennial Conference of the Southern African Society for Medieval and Renaissance Studies – Call For Papers

21st Biennial Conference of the Southern African Society for Medieval and Renaissance Studies
Mont Fleur, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 30 August-2 September 2012
Conference Website

The theme of the conference is: Mortality and Imagination: The Life of the Dead in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.

Deadline for abstracts: 31 January 2012

Keynote Speaker:  Helen Fulton, Professor of Medieval Literature in the Department of English and Related Literature and the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of York. Her main research areas are medieval literatures, Celtic studies, Arthurian literature, and critical theory.

In an effort to facilitate a wide-ranging, interdisciplinary conversation, we encourage scholars working in any discipline to submit abstracts addressing this theme. We also invite scholars working on any related aspect of the Middle Ages or Renaissance to submit abstracts for consideration.

Please send proposals (250-300 words) for 20-minute papers to Professor David Scott-Macnab by 31 January 2012.

London Palaeography Summer School 2012

London Palaeography Summer School
Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of
London, 18–22 June 2012

The London Palaeography Summer School is a series of intensive courses in
Palaeography and Diplomatic. Courses range from a half to two days duration
and are given by experts in their respective fields from a wide range of
institutions. The full list of courses on offer is available at:

http://www.ies.sas.ac.uk/cmps/events/courses/SummerSchool/School12/index.htm

New Courses in Palaeography and Manuscript Studies

The Institute is pleased to announce that it will co-ordinate two new courses on behalf of the School of Advanced Study: Western Historical Scripts from Antiquity to 1600: palaeography, codicology and contextualisation, which will run as part of the London Rare Books School 2012 and a ten-week course on Palaeography and Diplomatic for Historians, commencing January 2012.

All the courses are suitable for MA, MRes, MPhil and PhD students and are also open to professional and other participants.

For enquiries, registration and programme information:

Website:  http://ies.sas.ac.uk
Tel:  +44 (0)20 7862-8680
E-mail:  cmps@sas.ac.uk

Medievalism in Australian Cultural Memory

The Medievalism in Australian Cultural Memory project provides the first long-range analysis of Australian cultural responses to the medieval period, and the first comparative study of Australia’s relationship with international medievalism. It examines how Australians have used references to the medieval past, both favourable and hostile, to articulate our complex relations to European tradition and our aspirations to a distinctive national culture.

The Medievalism in Australian Cultural Memory database is a resource which aims to facilitate research by providing access to an abundance of digital resources in a user-friendly environment. The materials on this database have been organised into four major categories which cover a variety of original approaches to medievalism’s impact on the development of Australian cultural identity. They are:

  • Medievalism at the Foundations: This collection focuses on discourses about, debates over, and changing interpretations of Australia’s medievalist political and religious institutions and rituals, its architecture, and its civic environment. 
  • Medievalism in the Classroom: This collection traces the development of academic medievalism in Australia’s universities and other educational institutions. 
  • Medievalism on the Page: This collection examines literary medievalism from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day. 
  • Medievalism on the Streets: This collection examines popular medievalism in material and public culture and spaces from the mid-nineteenth century to the present.

Through these categories, the Medievalism in Australian Cultural Memory digital repository aims to enhance public understandings of our British and European heritage in the context of contemporary debates about globalisation, republicanism, the monarchy, and ethnic and cultural diversity.

Website: http://ausmed.arts.uwa.edu.au

Email: australianmedievalism@gmail.com

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Medievalism-in-Australian-Cultural-Memory/313085105382443?sk=wall

Medieval Association of the Pacific: John F. Benton Award – Applications Open

The John F. Benton Award

This award, named in honor of its progenitor, John F. Benton, MAP President 1982-1984, provides travel funds for all members of the Medieval Association of the Pacific–independent medievalists and graduate students in particular–who might not otherwise receive support from institutions.

The award may be used to defray costs connected with delivering a paper at any conference, especially for MAP conferences, or connected to scholarly research. Up to three awards will be presented each year, for $400 apiece. Applications should include a one-page vita, an abstract of a paper submitted to the conference, and a photocopy of the Call for Papers or conference announcement; if the application is for travel to research, it should include a one-page vita, and a letter outlining the research project. Send applications via email attachment by January 5, 2012 to the vice president of the Association, Anita Obermeier: AObermei@unm.edu

For more information about the award and MAP visit the grants page at the MAP website.

South Italy, Sicily and the Mediterranean: Cultural Interactions Conference 2012 – Second Call for Papers

South Italy, Sicily and the Mediterranean: Cultural Interactions Conference
Museo Italiano, Carlton, Melbourne, July 17-21, 2012.
Conference Website

Hosted by the Centre for Greek Studies and the A.D. Trendall Research Centre for Ancient Mediterranean Studies at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia, this conference will focus on the movement of people and interactions of culture in the region of Southern Italy and Sicily from antiquity until the present. This inter-disciplinary conference seeks to foster critical analysis of geographical and chronological interconnections between Southern Italy, Sicily and the Mediterranean. Consideration of cultural interaction, population movements, and changing religious and philosophical ideas over a period of approximately 3000 years will prompt scholarly discussion around continuity and change over time in this region of the Mediterranean.

Abstracts of 300 words are being sought from academics and graduate students. Abstracts should be sent to Sarah Midford at s.midford@latrobe.edu.au before 6th February 2012. Papers will be programmed into 30 minute timeslots and should be no longer than 20 minutes.

**Edit: the deadline for abstract submissions has been extended until the of 17th of February 2012.**

Graduate Conference of Magdalene Medievalists Society 2012 – Call For Papers

Medieval Multilingualism in the British Isles
Graduate Conference of Magdalene Medievalists Society 2012
Magdalene College, Cambridge, Saturday 21st July, 2012
Conference Website

Keynote Speaker: Dr Tony Hunt, St Peter’s College, Oxford

Call for papers – now open 

Abstract submission date: February 1 2012

We invite papers that address any aspect of the interaction between the speakers of different languages in the Middle Ages, including, but not limited to:

  • attitudes to the tres linguae sacrae and to the vernaculars
  • pedagogy and medieval perceptions of language acquistion
  • translation
  • orality and its depictions
  • medieval views of linguistic history
  • code-switching, miscellanies and scribal practice

Submissions acepted from graduate students and early career scholars in English and other languages and literatures, History, Linguistics, and all related disciplines. Papers should be no more than 20 minutes in length; please send abstracts of 250 words or less to Sara Harris at mms@magd.cam.ac.uk by February 1st, 2012.

ANZAMEMS: Ninth Biennial International Conference 2013 – Call For Papers

Cultures in Translation
Caulfield Campus, Monash University, Melbourne
12-16 February 2013
 
ANZAMEMS Conference Website

The conference seeks to explore the many varieties of translation at work in medieval and early modern studies. We invite papers which deal with diversity and change in areas such as language, culture, religion, space. We are interested in exploring both how medieval and early modern cultures understood translation, and how modern scholars make disciplinary, linguistic and social translations in their work. We encourage papers on these themes (and others pertaining to medieval and early modern studies), and papers from postgraduate students and early career researchers are especially welcome.

Abstract Submission Dates

For early acceptance: May 1 2012
Final deadline: September 1 2012

Instructions

We welcome proposals for standard paper presentations (typically 20 minutes) and for thematic panels comprising several presenters. Proposals should be no more than 200 words and must include your full name, contact details, Institutional affiliation & email address.

Proposals should be uploaded at: http://bit.ly/uwsbuq

To use this online system you will need to create an author account (a simple process) and then submit your proposal either by attaching it (with full details as listed above) as a PDF or by using the copy/paste function. Contact clare.monagle@monash.edu if you would like to discuss the format or focus of your presentation before you submit it, or if you are having trouble or questions regarding uploading your papers.


Travel Grants

There are some travel grants available for graduate students whose papers will focus on issues in the History of Emotions. These grants have been made available by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. If you would like to apply for a travel grant, please notify the organisers at the same time that the abstract is submitted by noting in the abstract or as an attachment.
Other Awards & Prizes include:

  • Anzamems Awards and Bursary
  • Kim Walker Postgraduate Travel Bursary
  • George Yule Postgraduate Essay Prize

Enquiries

Contact: clare.monagle@monash.edu
Conference website: http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/history/conferences/anzamems-2013