Daily Archives: 26 November 2012

Revealing Records – Call For Papers

Revealing Records V
King’s College London
24 May 2013

Conference Website

Revealing Records V will be held at King’s College London on 24th May 2013. This postgraduate conference series brings together researchers working with a wide range of sources from across the medieval world; papers that adopt an interdisciplinary approach, drawing upon palaeography, archaeology or other related disciplines are particularly welcome.

Postgraduate students who are interested in giving a paper should send an abstract of no more than 200 words, providing their name, institution, contact information, paper title and synopsis by Friday 14th December 2012.

For more information or to submit an abstract, please contact: revealingrecords@gmail.com

British Library Illuminated MSS Collection Digital Images Now in Public Domain

The British Library in London has declared the digital images in its Illuminated Manuscripts collectionto be public domain. 

The Catalogue of Illuminated Manuscripts content is now available for download and reuse. Although still technically in copyright in the UK (and a number of other common law territories) the images are being made available under a Public Domain Mark which indicates that there are no copyright restrictions on reproduction, adaptation, republication or sharing of the content available from the site. 

For full details, see the Guidance Notes at this link: http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/illuminatedmanuscripts/reuse.asp

Most of the illuminated manuscripts in the Harley and Sloane collections already have images uploaded into the digital collections. (The only major BL collection of illuminated MSS not yet digitized is the Cotton collection.) Note that the emphasis here is on the illuminations; most MSS have not been digitized in full, though you can check the separate collection, BL Digitised Manuscripts to see if they have what you’re looking for. (There is a good selection of Harley MSS in this latter collection.).

Genre, Affect and Authority in Early Modern Europe (1517-1688) – Call For Papers

Genre, Affect and Authority in Early Modern Europe (1517-1688)
The University of Melbourne

11-12 July, 2013

Convenors: Justin Clemens and Anna Cordner, The University of Melbourne

Conference Website

Keynote Speakers: Professor Ian Donaldson and Professor James Simpson

This conference explores the struggle for political authority in early modern Europe through the creation and development of such influential media as public pamphleteering, anonymous libels and permanent popular playhouses. From the Protestant Revolution to the Glorious Revolution, the terms and technologies of political struggle are radically transformed, from late medieval disputes to recognisably modern debates. Recent scholarship has returned to the proliferation and cross-grafting of genres in early modern Europe, re-examining the very familiar (for example, Elizabethan-Jacobean tragedy and comedy), as well as the lesser-known (for example, the heroic drama of the Restoration stage). Such studies have shown how these genres emerge as partial responses to contemporaneous political, religious and media developments. Hence we see real political struggles for domination taken up as generic forces; for instance, in the anonymous libels of the period. We also see the five-act structure of new drama as not only a revivification of classical modes, but as tied to the efficient stage-management of permanent playhouses; for instance, as in the mnemotechnics and directions of Shakespeare plays. These new genres do not only emerge as symbolic responses to real political problems, but become forces of problem-creation in their own right. In doing so, they provoke, channel and modify affect, often even being directed towards the confection and control of certain emotions. The problem of authority — of symbolic authority, of authorization, of authorship — thereby receives a new and decisive impetus in early modern Europe. This conference will examine the relationships between genre, affect and authority in their historical context, as well as the continuing import that these early modern developments have for us today.

We welcome proposals for individual papers and themed panels on any aspect of genre, affect, and authority in early modern Europe. These could include papers on: the dynamics of printing and authority; the relationship of textual production to legislation governing forms of speech and language; the new science and its consequences for political authority; the changing status of genres of textual production and their relation to affect; the appropriation and refunctioning of religious discourses; the politics of the theatre; visual culture and the ‘image wars’ of royal authority.

Papers are to be 40 minutes in length with 15 minutes scheduled question-time.
Panels are to comprise 3 papers of 15 minutes each, with 10 minutes scheduled question-time.

Please send proposals of 200-250 words and a brief biography to Anna Cordner <cordnera@unimelb.edu.au> or Ruby Lowe <ruby.lowe@unimelb.edu.au> by Monday 10 December 2012.