Daily Archives: 13 November 2012

Brill Fellowships at CHASE – Call For Applications

The publishing house Brill (Leiden) is generously sponsoring an annual research Fellowship at the Warburg Institute’s Centre for the History of Arabic Studies in Europe (CHASE).
The Fellowship has been made possible by the “Sheikh Zayed Book Award” which was awarded to Brill Publishers in March 2012 for publishing excellence in Middle East and Islamic Studies.
The Brill Fellowship at CHASE to be held in the academic year 2013-14 will be of two or three months duration and is intended for a postdoctoral researcher. The Fellowship will be awarded for research projects on any aspect of the relations between Europe and the Arab World from the Middle Ages to the 19th century.
The closing date for applications is the 30 November 2012. Please visit the scholarship website for application details: http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/fellowships/short-term
***Newsletter Editor’s note: The Warburg website has details of several other short-term scholarships which may be of interest to Medieval and Early Modern scholars.***

Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe – Call For Papers

Theatrum Mundi: Latin Drama in Renaissance Europe
Magdalen College, University of Oxford
12-14 September 2013

Organized by the Society for Neo-Latin Studies in tandem with the Centre for Early Modern Studies, Oxford, the conference will bring together scholars to discuss early modern Latin drama, a form pivotal to the development of educational practice and literary composition across Europe. Culturally conspicuous, often ideologically engaged, original Latin plays were the pedagogical lifeblood of Renaissance schools, colleges, academies and universities. Scholars of Renaissance drama tend to focus on vernacular plays while overlooking the fact that many dramatists honed their talents at, for instance, institutional theatres constructed at the Elizabethan universities or nurtured at the French Jesuit colleges by the ancien régime. Our conference aims both to remedy such oversight and to stimulate new thought about this pan-European dramatic phenomenon.

Confirmed speakers include Thomas Earle (Oxford), Alison Shell (UCL), and Stefan Tilg (Ludwig Boltzmann Institute, Innsbruck).

Proposals are sought for twenty-minute papers on any aspect of early modern Latin drama, which might discuss but are not limited to the following topics:

  • Student life
  • Religious conformity and dissent
  • Philosophical engagement
  • Relationships between Latin and vernacular plays
  • Pedagogy and rhetorical training
  • Patronage and support

Please send your proposal and any questions about the conference to Sarah Knight, University of Leicester (sk218@le.ac.uk) by December 31 2012. Proposals should include a provisional title, approx. 150-200 words outlining your paper, and contact details