Monthly Archives: February 2014

Networking Before the Net: Sharing Information in the Pre-Digital Age

The new exhibition on Pre-Internet ‘Social Media’ opening at the Rosenbach Museum and Library may interest members who will be visiting the US soon. Thanks to Anne Scott for forwarding me this information.


The Rosenbach is pleased to announce the upcoming opening of our newest exhibition—Networking Before the Net: Sharing Information in the Pre-Digital Age. Opening January 29, this exhibition explores the fascinating question of whether the internet has truly changed our social interaction with one another, through comparisons of current digital social media platforms to their analog precursors.

Displayed in two galleries in the Rosenbach brothers’ historic 1865 townhouse, Networking Before the Net offers a provocative opportunity to explore the convergence of the past and present through traditional exhibition and digital content sharing. The exhibition examines social media tenets such as image sharing, public commenting and messaging, and the role of the social network in our everyday lives. It explores the similarities between printed pamphlets and blogs, telegrams and text messages, and even shows visitors the 19th century’s version of Instagram.

Highlights include:

  • A 1780 broadside written by Benedict Arnold encouraging soldiers to abandon the Continental Army
  • An handwritten letter from Greta Garbo to Mercedes de Acosta
  • Political pamphlets written by Daniel Defoe, author of Robinson Crusoe
  • An original 1776 Philadelphia printing of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense from the Free Library of Philadelphia collection

The exhibition will be on display until June 16.

Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association – Call For Papers

Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association (JAEMA)
Volume 10, 2014
Call for Papers
Deadline for submission: 1 May 2014

The Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association (JAEMA) is an annual refereed, peer-reviewed journal devoted to the early medieval period. Volume 10 will be published in late 2014, and submissions are invited now on any topic of early medieval studies (from late antiquity and the end of the Roman Empire to about the end of the eleventh century). JAEMA seeks engaging, original work that contributes to a collective understanding of the early medieval period. The journal welcomes papers on any theme, such as history, art history, archaeology, literature, linguistics, music and theology, and from any interpretive angle – memory, gender, historiography, medievalism, consilience and beyond.

Contributions to JAEMA 10 should be submitted to journal@aema.net.au by 1 May 2014. Articles must be written in English and between 6,000–12,000 words long, including footnotes and bibliography, and should follow the Chicago Manual of Style (16th edition). All submissions will be subject to double blind reviewing.

For any queries about submissions or the journal more generally, please contact journal@aema.net.au.

Survey on Medievalism

Dear members, Dr Helen Young (DECRA Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of English University of Sydney), is conducting a survey about teaching and researching in medievalism, and is in search of volunteers. Please see the details below.


I write to ask for your participation in a short survey exploring medievalism in Australian and New Zealand universities. If you currently either teach or research medievalism, have done in the past, or plan to do so in the future, I would be very grateful for 10-15 minutes of your time to answer some questions online.

For the purposes of the survey I have defined medievalism as any research or teaching which examines a post-medieval work – literature, artwork, film, tv, architecture etc – which engages with the Middle Ages as long as the research and/or teaching is focused in some way on that engagement. For example, The Lord of the Rings – novels or films – could be considered a medievalist work, and is relevant to this survey if that medievalism is a topic for discussion in the course, but not if the focus is on, say, the films as adaptations of the novels.

I aim to gain some insights into how, where and why medievalism is researched and taught: in which disciplines, what kinds of courses, at what levels? My hope is to form a broad overview of the field as it exists at present, with an eye to where it may head in future. I will be talking about the results in a roundtable – ‘Medievalism and the Academy Today’ – sponsored by the International Society for the Study of Medievalism at the Kalamazoo ICMS in 2014, and also hope to write an article exploring current and possible future trends.

You can find the survey here: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/TeachingMedievalism If the link doesn’t work, please copy and paste into the address bar on your browser window. You can give as much or as little information as you choose. If you don’t have time to complete the survey but would like to contribute to the research, you could email me any relevant course outlines on Helen.young@sydney.edu.au. If you do so, please let me know if you are happy to be identified by name, institution, or both, or if you would prefer to remain anonymous when the results of the study are made public.

Many thanks,
Helen

Adapating Australia – Call For Papers

‘Adapting Australia’
Special Issue of Adaptation, Oxford University Press

We encourage submission of articles for a special issue of the peer-reviewed journal Adaptation (Oxford University Press), jointly edited by Ken Gelder (University of Melbourne) and Imelda Whelehan (University of Tasmania.

While adaptation studies has recently reflected on its own theoretical gaps and silences, little work has been produced on national literatures and cultures in adaptation beyond an Anglo-American framework. The purpose of this special issue is to gather perspectives on this topic: what happens when a nation reflects on its past through the adaptation of core narratives (novels, poems, memoirs, plays, films, myths, historical events, folktales, political and social movements, graphic narrative, etc)? Can changing notions of Australianness be charted through the process of adaptation; do they change a nation’s consciousness or do they more readily shore up the illusion of shared identity? What do Australian adaptations tell Australians about themselves, and who are excluded? What institutions act as gatekeepers for Australian adaptations and to what effect? What do Australian adaptations suggest to the world at large? The special issue title, ‘Adapting Australia’, invites creative interpretation. Adaptation was an important part of New Australian Cinema in the 1970s and 1980s, as was explored in the 1993 Special Issue of Literature/Film Quarterly, edited by Brian McFarlane, and it is hoped that this volume will extend that early exploration of culture and identity in adaptation, to show how much adaptation studies has diversified and broadened over the past twenty years.

We invite proposals on any aspect of contemporary Australian adaptations, but suggestions include:

  • (mis)appropriating the canon
  • adaptation and Indigenous culture
  • Screens and sounds: adaptation, audiobooks and music
  • Post-literary adaptation: cartoons, games, oral narratives
  • Horror adaptations
  • Gendering adaptation
  • Remakes/rewriting/rethinking Australia
  • Crossmedia/transmedia storytelling
  • Culture and adaptation industries: agents, institutions, copyright and funding
  • Adaptation and fandom
  • Costume and location
  • Authorial/star discourse
  • Screenwriting and script adaptation
  • Theatrical adaptations

Please submit completed papers (up to 5000 words accompanied by a 150-word abstract) directly to the Adaptation website (Flagging submissions as intended for the special issue), and following the advice on online submission: http://www.oxfordjournals.org/our_journals/adaptation/for_authors/ Manuscripts must be submitted online in an anonymous form and will be sent to at least two external reviewers. The deadline is 1 July 2014.

The Place of Spenser/Spenser’s Places – Call For Papers

The Place of Spenser / Spenser’s Places
The Fifth International Spenser Society Conference
Dublin

18-20 June, 2015

Conference Website

The International Spenser Society invites proposals for their next International Conference, to be held in Dublin, Ireland. The conference will address Spenser’s places – domestic, urban, global, historical, colonial, rhetorical, geopolitical, etc. – but also the place of Spenser in Renaissance studies, in the literary tradition, in Britain, in Ireland, in the literary and political cultures of his own moment.

Additionally, a series of programmed focus panels will offer opportunities for discussion of recent important initiatives and directions in Spenser studies: editing; biography; style; Ireland; philosophy and religion; teaching; and digital approaches.

We welcome abstracts from Spenser scholars and Renaissance scholars, graduate students and faculty, for papers that address Spenser’s historical, cultural and literary environments. These include the places and spaces in which he worked and the places and positions through which we approach that work.

The conference will take place in historic Dublin Castle (http://www.dublincastle.ie) in the heart of the city, with accommodation available in local hotels. It follows the success of four previous ISS conferences, at Princeton (1990), Yale (1996), Cambridge (2001), and Toronto (2006).

An optional bus tour to Kilcolman castle, County Cork and other Spenser-related sites will take place June 21st.

Plenaries: Helen Cooper (University of Cambridge), Jeff Dolven (Princeton University), Anne Fogarty (University College Dublin)

Confirmed speakers/presiders: Andrew Hadfield, Beth Quitslund, David Lee Miller, Julian Lethbridge, Ayesha Ramachandran, Joseph Loewenstein, Andrew Zurcher, David Wilson-Okamura, Patricia Palmer, Willy Maley, Susannah Brietz Monta, Kevin De Ornellas

Abstracts should be submitted directly to the conference website: www.spenser2015.com

The closing date for submissions is 15 September 2014.

Suggested topics might include (but are not restricted to) the following:

  • The reception of Spenser’s poetry
  • Spenser among the poets
  • Spenser and political writing
  • Digital Spenser
  • Spenser and the Sidneys
  • Spenser’s place in Renaissance studies
  • Spenser’s Europe
  • Spenser’s place in Irish studies
  • Spenser’s social networks
  • Spenser and the politics of space
  • Spenser’s imaginative spaces
  • Spenser and early modern Dublin
  • Editing Spenser
  • Spenser and early modern London
  • Spenser in Munster
  • Spenser and Shakespeare
  • Spenser and Raleigh
  • Spenser’s Atlantic world
  • Spenser, history and historiography
  • Spenser and archaeology
  • Material Spenser/Spenser’s materials
  • Structural/topomorphic approaches
  • Spenser’s style
  • Religion and philosophy
  • Teaching Spenser
  • Spenser’s books

We also invite proposals for poster-board demonstrations of relevant digital and other projects.

Conference Organisers:

Jane Grogan (University College Dublin), Andrew King (University College Cork), Thomas Herron (East Carolina University)

Speaking Truth to Power in Medieval and Early Modern Italy – Call For Papers

“Speaking Truth to Power in Medieval and Early Modern Italy”
Annali d’Italianistica (2017)

We seek original, unpublished essays exploring instances in which literary characters and historical figures from the medieval and early modern period articulate personal, political, economic, or religious freedoms or otherwise challenge the established power of the state at the risk of their livelihood or their very lives.

In a court trial in which she faced a death sentence for adultery, Boccaccio’s Madonna Filippa wittily defends herself by refuting the legitimacy of a law made without her consent, proclaiming self-ownership of her body and evoking free market principles (Decameron 6.7). She thereby not only successfully regains her freedom but also succeeds in overturning an unjust law. Yet those who defend their rights and liberties against the powers that be have not always been quite so fortunate, especially in real-life scenarios.

Just a few generations later, the humanist Poggio Bracciolini penned an account of Jerome of Prague’s pre-execution discourse which eloquently argued for intellectual freedom as it condemned the abuses of the Roman Curia (Description by Poggio the Florentine of the Death and Punishment of Jerome of Prague). As many other critics of the Church also discovered, speaking out against unsavory papal practices could have fatal consequences even if one did not attempt to enunciate alternative metaphysical or scientific views as Giordano Bruno and Galileo later did.

While expressions of the right to personal, intellectual, or religious liberty presented an implicit threat to the political establishment, some authors aimed their comments and criticisms—whether in their own voice or through the invention of literary characters—directly against the machinations of the ruling elite. Well aware of the peril to one’s person in confronting princely power, Castiglione advised courtiers to use salutary deception like a doctor who sweetens the rim of a medicine cup (Book of the Courtier 4.10). Machiavelli’s disregard for such tactics in his passionate critique of the ottimati in “Ricordi ai Palleschi” (1512) may have contributed to his imprisonment and torture in 1513 under the false accusation of conspiracy to overthrow the new Medici government.

The aim of this project is not only to examine cases in which individuals made sacrifices for liberty in medieval and early modern Italy, but also to contextualize these occurrences, thereby exploring similarities and differences in the varied social, economic, and political environments of the peninsula prior to the emergence of Italy as a nation state with the Unification of 1861.

We welcome essays that address underlying ideological premises or make use of political and social theory in treating imagined or actual expressions of individual rights in the face of institutionalized power. Attention to intellectual traditions that valorize the individual, such as libertarian theory and the Austrian School of economics, is especially encouraged. Literary or historical examples to consider might include L.B. Alberti’s Momus, Il Ruzante’s comedies, Tasso’s prison letters, the influence of Renaissance writings on Enlightenment thinkers, and Jacob Burckhardt’s celebration of Renaissance individualism in light of his concern over the repressive collectivism of his time.

Essays should be submitted to the guest editors electronically. The deadline for submission is September 30, 2016; the volume will be published in the fall of 2017. Essays, not to exceed 25 double-spaced pages, can be written in Italian or English, and should conform to the style-sheet criteria set forth by Annali d’Italianistica. See “Norms for Contributors” at: http://ibiblio.org/annali/norms.html. For contributions in Italian, see: http://ibiblio.org/annali/norms.html#norme_italiano.

All contributions will be evaluated by at least two outside readers, and an invitation by the guest editors does not guarantee an essay’s publication in the volume.

Prospective contributors should address all inquiries to both guest editors:


  • Jo Ann Cavallo (Professor of Italian, Columbia University) at jac3@columbia.edu
  • Carla M Bregman (Associate Editor for Italian Literature, The Literary Encyclopedia) at cmb@world.std.com.

Australian Historical Association: Jill Roe Prize – Call For Applications

The Jill Roe Prize will be awarded annually for the best unpublished article-length work (5,000-8,000 words) of historical research in any area of historical enquiry, produced by a postgraduate student enrolled for a History degree at an Australian university.

The Award honours the career of Professor Emerita Jill Roe, an eminent Australian historian who has made a very significant contribution to the writing, teaching and public communication of history in Australia and abroad. The Award will consist of a cash payment and a citation, presented annually at the Australian Historical Association (AHA) national conference. In addition to the prize the winning entry will be considered for publication in History Australia – the journal of the AHA.

The Jill Roe Prize has a deadline of 31 March 2014.

Please note: candidates for AHA prizes must be members of the Australian Historical Association.

For full details, please visit: http://www.theaha.org.au/awards-prizes.html

Iago, the Man, the Devil and Emotion: Free Event at The University of Western Australia

“Iago, the man, the devil and emotion”

West Australian Opera (WAO), Black Swan State Theatre Company and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, Europe 1100-1800 (CHE) collaborate to present “Iago, the man, the devil and emotion” a discussion and performance event.

Date: Monday, 10 February 2014
Time: 7:00-9:00pm
Venue: Callaway Music Auditorium, School of Music at The University of Western Australia.

“This scholarly and practical event explores the ways in which drama, through spoken language, and opera, through sung text and music, arouses emotions, depicts character, and how these are translated over time,” Jane Davidson, Deputy Director of CHE.

Keynote speakers at this event include Kristin Linklater, world-renowned vocal coach and Head of Acting in the Theatre Arts Division of Columbia University, WAO Artistic Director Joseph Colaneri, Shakespeare specialist Professor Robert White (CHE), Perth-based baritone James Clayton, and actors Humphrey Bower and Kenneth Ransom.

This is a free event, but RSVP’s are essential.
Email emotions@uwa.edu.au for more information.

Complete Ben Jonson Released Online

The new Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson Online, has been launched.

Produced by a team of 30 scholars and available partly on an open-access basis, Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson Online presents the texts of all his plays, masques, poems, letters and criticism in an interactive digital format, along with hundreds of supporting documents and musical scores and a bibliography.

There is also a database of some 1,300 stage and screen productions, from the 1598 staging of Jonson’s play “Every Man in His Humor” at the Curtain Theater in London to the 2012 (currently in-production) film version of “The Devil is an Ass”.