Monthly Archives: August 2013

University of Queensland Summer Scholars Program at CHED – Call For Applications

The Centre for the History of European Discourses at the University of Queensland is accepting applications for advanced undergraduate/honours students interested in participating in the UQ Summer Scholars Program for 2013/14.

Details of the program, and how to apply, can be found at the following link:

http://www.ched.uq.edu.au/?page=179087&pid=132264

Successful applicants will receive a weekly stipend in order to work half-time on their own research and half-time as a research assistant for the Centre for the History of European Discourses (CHED) during a residency of 6-8 weeks. Research areas are identified on the webpage, but we welcome applications from students in a variety of fields – e.g., History, Philosophy, Literature, and Cultural Studies – interested in producing an intellectual history research paper, advised by one of the postdocs or senior researchers currently at CHED.

Closing date for applications: 5pm, Friday August 30, 2012.

Bibliographical Society of America: New Scholars Program – Call For Applications

Each year, the Bibliographical Society of America (BSA) invites three scholars in the early stages of their careers to present twenty-minute papers on their current, unpublished research in the field of bibliography as members of a panel at BSA’s Annual Meeting, which takes place in New York City in late January. The New Scholars Program seeks to promote the work of scholars who are new to the field of bibliography, broadly defined.

Those selected for the panel receive $600 toward the cost of attending the Annual Meeting and a complimentary one-year membership in BSA.

For more about the New Scholars Program and application procedures, see:
http://bibsocamer.org/newscholars.htm

The application deadline has been extended to Sept. 15, 2013.

Emotion, Ritual and Power in Europe: 1200 to the Present – Call For Papers

ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions Collaboratory
Emotion, Ritual and Power in Europe: 1200 to the Present
The University of Adelaide
11-12 February

Collaboratory website

Keynote Speakers:

  • Prof. Carol Lansing, University of California, Santa Barbara and Prof.
  • Harvey Whitehouse, University of Oxford

The relationship between emotion, ritual and power has been at the heart of anthropological research for over a century, yet it is only recently that the emotions, rather than the ritual, have moved to the centre of the academic debate. This shift in focus has been motivated both by Renato Rosaldo’s observation that some rituals are designed to manage emotions (such as grief), as much as rituals are designed to create emotion in the participants. Equally, the growth of the field of emotionology has led to greater complexity in the understanding of how emotions work in cultural context. The relationship between ritual and the creation, maintenance and destabilisation of power has not gone unexplored given the centrality of ritual to religious practice and to institutional structures, yet the place emotion plays in the relationship between ritual and power has received less attention, particularly in an historical context. This collaboratory, hosted by CHE Adelaide, will explore the nature of these relationships, seeking to better understand how emotions act within ritual to inform balances of power. We are particularly interested in the ways that rituals and emotions have changed over time, and the ways that rituals, emotions and power have been implicated in processes of change and continuity.

Papers are now sought that address this theme within a European context, or explore European emotions in a global context, between 1200 and the present day. Within the bigger conference theme, papers may wish to explore, but are not limited to:

  • the relationship between rituals and routines and where these cross over
  • where rituals happen – the household, the street, sacred spaces, institutions – and its implications
  • the emotional resonances of objects and texts (including visual culture and architecture) in rituals
  • types of rituals – rites of passage, religious ceremonies, state-sponsored spectacles – and their emotional contexts
  • individual emotions v. collective emotions, and participant v. audience emotions
  • rituals that inform different types of power, including personal, familial, community, institutional and national
  • the interplay of facets of identity, such as gender, class and ethnicity in ritual
  • the dynamics and performance of ritual and how it is informed by emotion or in turn creates emotion
  • rituals and change over time v. rituals as static/traditional
  • and boredom as emotion in ritual contexts

Rituals could include: public and private executions; coronations and state rituals; religious rites (baptism, weddings, confirmation); rituals associated with festivals; food and cleanliness rituals; family rituals, such as household prayers, bedding rituals, and childbirth rituals.

Interdisciplinary perspectives are particularly welcome.

It is intended that the proceedings of this collaboratory will be published as an edited collection.

Abstracts of no more than 500 words, and a short bio, should be emailed to both Merridee Bailey, (merridee.bailey@adelaide.edu.au,) and Katie Barclay, (katie.barclay@adelaide.edu.au) by the deadline of the 31 August 2013. Questions or queries can also be addressed to the above.

Conflict and Rebellion in the North Sea World – Call For Papers

Conflict and Rebellion in the North Sea World: Creating, Managing and Resolving Conflict in the 12th–13th Centuries
Department of History, University of Glasgow
9-10 April, 2014

Conference website 

From the 8th to the mid-11th century, Scandinavia, the British Isles, Ireland and the Low Countries have been considered as part of a larger North Sea World, linked by trade, culture and conquest. Such comparisons in British scholarship, however, have tended to end at the late 11th Century and the Norman Conquest of England. This conference seeks to extend beyond this traditional frontier by focussing upon the themes of conflict and rebellion in the regions of the North Sea World in the 12th and 13th centuries. The aim will be to help provide fresh perspectives on these subjects by highlighting the contrasts and similarities in conflict creation, management and resolution in different countries.

The conference is a two-day interdisciplinary conference for postgraduate and early career researchers and will be hosted by the Department of History at the University of Glasgow 9-10 April, 2014.

The keynote speakers will be Professor Matthew Strickland (University of Glasgow) and Professor Sverre Bagge (University of Bergen).

We invite proposals from current postgraduate, postdoctoral and early career researchers in History, and any other relevant subject area, for papers of 20 minutes on the topic of conflict and conflict resolution in the 12th and the 13th centuries ranging geographically from Scandinavia and Iceland to the British Isles and the Low Countries. Abstracts must be 200 words maximum. The proposals must include name, institution, contact information, paper title and abstract.

Possible topics for papers include but are not limited to:

  • Rebellion against the crown
  • Gender in conflict and rebellion
  • The Church and Rebellion
  • Strategies of conflict
  • Conflict resolution
  • Family conflicts
  • Architecture of rebellion (castles and defensive structures)
  • Visual and literary depictions of rebellion and rebels
  • Urban rebellion

Proposals are to be sent to arts-conflictandrebellion@glasgow.ac.uk by Friday 29 November 2013.

Urban Culture and Ideologies in Medieval and Early Modern Europe – Call For Papers

Urban Culture and Ideologies in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: c.1100‐1600
Massey University, Albany Campus, Auckland, New Zealand
Thursday 30‐Friday 31 January, 2014

This conference will focus on the textual traditions of the urban world: the literature of all kinds produced in the urban context, from chronicles to song, illumination to speech acts. Its main theme is notions of ‘urbanity’. What is ‘urban’ about ‘urban culture’? In what ways did urbanity contribute to cultural and ideological sign systems in political speech, historiography, literature, the visual arts and music? How did the production and reception of chronicles shape urban identity – or identities?

Speakers include:

  • Tracy Adams (University of Auckland)
  • Mark Amsler (University of Auckland)
  • Jan Dumolyn (University of Ghent)
  • Constant Mews (Monash University)
  • James Murray (Western Michigan University)
  • Johan Oosterman (Radboud University, Nijmegen)
  • Kim Phillips (University of Auckland)

If you would like to give a paper, please submit an abstract to Tina Sheehan, t.m.sheehan@massey.ac.nz

Senior scholars and postgraduate students are equally welcome.

If you would like to register attendance at the conference, please do so on the website, http://urbanculture.massey.ac.nz

Abstract submission and early‐bird registration closes 6 December 2013.

If you have any queries please contact: Dr Andrew Brown, School of Humanities, Massey University A.D.Brown@massey.ac.nz