Daily Archives: 4 September 2012

Auckland Conference Papers Published In New On-Line Journal, Digital Philology

The University of Auckland’s Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEDEMS) is happy to announce the upcoming appearance of a special journal issue on “Understanding Emotions in the Middle Ages” in Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures, published by The Johns Hopkins University Press, forthcoming late 2012. The issue has been edited by Associate Professor Tracy Adams of the University of Auckland and originated in the eleventh annual MEDEMS colloquium which took place over the weekend of April 16-17, 2011. The conference attracted speakers from New Zealand, Australia, Belgium, England and the USA, who gathered in Auckland to discuss “Devotion and Emotion in the Medieval and Early Modern Periods.”

This issue is the first of what we hope to be a long series of collaborative on-line projects produced by MEDEMS. Papers from the conference have been brought together in what will be just the second issue of the new journal. Digital Philology is intended as a scholarly venue where “global and interdisciplinary perspective pushes traditional national and temporal boundaries” and which represents the “first such publication linking peer-reviewed research and scholarship with digital libraries of medieval manuscripts”. Digital Philology will be published twice a year and is intended to include “scholarly essays, manuscript studies, and reviews of relevant resources such as websites, digital projects, and books.”

The journal’s website is: http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/digital_philology/

ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions – Collaboratory: The Authenticity of Emotions

For scholars in Adelaide: An upcoming Collaboratory sponsored by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions:

ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions
Collaboratory: ‘The Authenticity of Emotions: Sceptical and Sympathetic Sociability in the Eighteenth-Century British Public Sphere’

Date: Tuesday 18 & Wednesday 19 September 2012
Time: 9.00am – 4.30pm
Place: The Science Exchange, 55 Exchange Place, Adelaide, South Australia

Keynote Speakers:

  • Michael Frazer (Philosophy, Harvard University)
  • W. Gerrod Parott (Psychology, Georgetown University)
  • Laura J. Rosenthal (English University of Maryland)
  • Conal Condren (Centre for the History of European Discourses, University of Queensland)

This interdisciplinary Collaboratory will discuss the public sphere and emotional change in eighteenth-century Britain from the perspective of literature, philosophical ideas, political and religious debate, print culture and literary sociability. We are especially interested in: literary and political controversies; the rise and development of the novel; satire; contemporary ideas about sentiment and the passions; and the shared culture of sensibility, sociability and politeness. The principal aim of the meeting is to consider the ’emotionalization’ of eighteenth-century print culture and its larger influence on contemporary public affairs via the formation of communities – either public or self-selecting – of sympathetic or sceptical readers. Indeed sympathy and the communication of ideas and sentiments among the reading public(s) are central to our interests.

The period under discussion is the ‘long eighteenth century’ (from the late 1600s to the early 1800s) wherein changes of psychological expression occurred alongside the development of wider and deeper print cultures. Various social and artistic media served to channel and contain fissile emotions while also providing scripts for creating and communicating the sentiments. The Collaboratory is designed to encourage a more general discussion about the cultural and intellectual context of the eighteenth-century British public sphere by looking more broadly at the growth of a print culture which seems to exemplify Hume’s (and other thinkers’ and writers’) emphasis on sympathy and emotional communication. Among other things it will be important to consider how – and how far – communities were united by humorous but biting criticism, as well as positive sympathy, and whether the balance between these emotions can be seen to change over time. This is not to suggest that there was no emotion in public discourse before 1700, but rather to argue that the coincidence of burgeoning print culture and an emphasis on feeling as the key to ‘authentic’ humanity may have had an unprecedented impact on the style of public debates, especially among a middle class readership.

Registration:

For more information, and to complete the registration form please visit the Collaboratory page at the CHE website. Please complete and return the registration form by 7th September.

2013 Medieval Association of the Pacific Conference – Call For Papers

2013 Medieval Association of the Pacific (MAP) Conference
University of San Diego, San Diego, CA
March 21-23, 2013

The Program Committee invites proposals for individual 20-minute papers in any area of medieval studies, as well as organized sessions of three 20-minute papers. All speakers must be fully-paid (“active”) members of MAP in order to register for the conference.

To submit an individual abstract or a session proposal, please click the appropriate link below:

Submit an Individual Abstract
Submit a Session Proposal

The deadline for submissions is 15 October 2012.