Monthly Archives: July 2014

Biopic Adaptations – Call For Papers

Biopic Adaptations
Centre for Adaptations, De Montfort University, Leicester
24 February 2015

Although ‘biopics’, or film biographies, have been around since the beginning of cinema, scholarly interest in the subject is only beginning to develop. This one day conference hosted by the Centre for Adaptations will bring together scholars and practitioners in a range of topics, such as the evolution of the biopic from the silent to the contemporary period, biopics of writers, sporting heroes, politicians, royalty and gangsters, and debates concerning gender, sexuality, race and historical integrity. Proposals (between 50-100 words) and a brief biographical note should be sent to Deborah Cartmell (djc@dmu.ac.uk) and Hila Shachar (hila.shachar@dmu.ac.uk) by 27 November 2014. Papers will be selected for publication.

University of Oxford : Postdoctoral Fellow in Early Modern Europe – Call For Applications

University of Oxford, Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Postdoctoral Fellow in Early Modern Europe

Salary: £29,837 to £36,661 Grade 7, p.a.
Hours: Full Time
Contract: Contract / Temporary
Closes: 6 August 2014
Job Ref: 113813

Applications are invited for a fixed-term 2-year postdoctoral fellowship within the HERA-funded international research project ‘Marrying Cultures: Queens Consort and European Identities 1500 – 1800’, led by Professor Helen Watanabe-O’Kelly. The post is tenable from 1 September 2014 to 30 September 2016.

Further details about the project are available on the project’s website at: http://www.marryingcultures.eu

The post is available because the current postdoctoral researcher has been appointed to a permanent position elsewhere.

Applicants must have completed doctoral degree in a relevant discipline relating to early modern Europe (e.g. history, art history, modern languages and literatures, history of music, cultural history), have excellent communication skills, knowledge of another European language and good organisational skills. The successful applicant will undertake independent research on a relevant foreign queen consort of the appointee’s own choosing, to be agreed with the Project Leader, and will assist the Project Leader in the administration of the project

The closing date for applications is 12.00 noon on 6 August 2014. Interviews will be held week beginning 18 August 2014.

For full details and to apply, please visit: https://www.recruit.ox.ac.uk/pls/hrisliverecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.display_form

University of Texas at Austin: Curator of Early Books and Manuscripts

University of Texas at Austin: Harry Ransom Center
Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Curator of Early Books and Manuscripts

Founded in 1883, the University of Texas at Austin is the largest university in the University of Texas System. One of the world’s finest cultural archives, the Harry Ransom Center provides access to forty-two million literary manuscripts, one million rare books, five million photographs, and over 100,000 works of art.

The Ransom Center seeks a curator, reporting to the Associate Director & Librarian, who will provide support for the Ransom Center’s extensive holdings of early books and manuscripts, including promoting access to, and use of, the collections and interpreting them for the Center’s varied audiences. These include 16th- through 18th- century printed works in the Wrenn Library, the Pforzheimer collection of early modern books and manuscripts, the Recusant collection, the Queen Anne collection, and extensive holdings of 18th-century books and periodicals. The Pforzheimer collection is internationally known for first and important editions of plays, poems, novels, essays, polemical writings, and translations of the most important English writers from 1475 to 1700. Caxton, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Marvell, Donne, Dryden, Congreve, Marlowe, and Bacon, among many others, are represented.

The Pforzheimer Curator will participate in a variety of interpretive activities (writing, exhibitions, speaking, etc.) that promote a greater appreciation for the Ransom Center’s early book and manuscript holdings, as well as development activities in support of the collection. Principal responsibilities: Provides specialized reference support for researchers working in the Center’s early book and manuscript collections and supports research service operations as a member of the public services staff. Has primary responsibility for collection care of early books and manuscripts and works with conservation and other staff in setting treatment and other priorities. In collaboration with cataloging and digital services staff, promotes enhanced access to the collection by consulting on cataloging and access initiatives, including grant-funded initiatives. Selects books and manuscripts to expand and strengthen the Pforzheimer Library and refines and interprets policies for the development of early modern book and manuscript collections, taking into account existing strengths, trends in scholarship and book history, as well as classroom use. Represents the Ransom Center within professional and scholarly communities related to early modern book and manuscript history.

Required Qualifications: Ph.D. in English literature or history (or related discipline), with a strong record of scholarly publication preferred. Master’s degree in Library Science or three or more years’ experience with early modern book and manuscript collections in a research library setting. Reading knowledge of at least one European language, Latin preferred. Knowledge of bibliography and the history of the book and familiarity with early modern paleography. Understanding of the appropriate roles of digital surrogates in a research environment and familiarity with trends in digital librarianship. Familiarity with rare book cataloging principles and standards. Record of participation in scholarly or professional organizations at the national or international level.

Salary: $65,000-80,000 depending on qualifications

Benefits: Benefits include annual accrued leave, paid holidays, and health insurance options. Eligible for Optional Retirement Program. Deferred compensation and tax-sheltered annuity programs available. Professional travel funding available.

Application procedure: Go to https://utdirect.utexas.edu/apps/hr/ jobs/nlogon/search and refer to job number 140509010606. Applicants must complete the online job application and must also submit online a letter of interest, a current resume, and contact information for three references.

Further information available from Dr. Richard W. Oram, Associate Director & Hobby Foundation Librarian, Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin, roram@austin.utexas.edu.

Review of applications begins August 15, 2014.

Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies – Call For Papers

The Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies
Old Library of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, Oxford
8-10 December, 2014


Conference Website

The Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies is a forum for discourse and presentation of papers by scholars who have a particular interest in the study of religion. Canon Brian Mountford, Vicar of St Mary’s Church and Fellow of St Hilda’s College in the University of Oxford, will host the meeting.

You are invited to make a presentation and lead a discussion of a relevant aspect of religious studies, or you may wish to participate as a panel member or as an observer. Your disquisition must adhere to an abstract of about 300 words approved by the Programme Committee of the Symposium. You are, also, encouraged to submit a paper, in keeping with your abstract, which may be published in an appropriate journal, book of conference proceedings. All papers presented for publication or inclusion in books or sponsored journals will be subject to peer review by external readers.

Deadline for abstracts: 8 September 2014

For more information please visit: http://www.oxfordsymposiumonreligiousstudies.com

AMPHORAE VIII: Emerging Horizons: Material Culture, Text & Thought – Call For Papers

AMPHORAE VIII: Emerging Horizons: Material Culture, Text & Thought
Eighth ‘Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in Hellenic or Roman Antiquities and Egyptology’
University of Melbourne
26-28 November, 2014

Conference Website

The conference is designed to provide an opportunity for postgraduate students from Australia and New Zealand, and internationally, to interact with their peers and share their work in a friendly and stimulating environment. The keynote address will be delivered by Professor Hans Beck of McGill University. Professor Beck has also offered to run a Masterclass for attendees.

This year’s theme is Emerging Horizons: Material Culture, Text & Thought and is intended to accommodate research from (but not limited to) all of the fields of Classical Philology, Classical Art and Literature, Ancient History, Archaeology, Late Antiquity and all other areas of the Ancient World. Abstracts addressing any interpretation of the conference theme are welcome. As in previous years, ASCS will be providing a number of bursaries for students travelling to the conference.

Abstract submissions of 100-200 words for papers of 20 minutes’ duration, as well as a brief biography, should be submitted by 9pm AEST on Tuesday 30 September to amphoraeviii@gmail.com. Offers of poster presentations will also be welcomed, especially from Honours students. If you would like to attend the conference, but do not wish to present a paper, simply submit a registration form informing us of your attendance by the same date. Please note also that the Australasian Women in Ancient World Studies (AWAWS) will be hosting a special panel this year. If you would like to be considered, or contribute to this panel, please contact AWAWS directly at socawaws@gmail.com, in addition to submitting your abstract and registration form to us.

The conference is free to attend, but there will be a charge of AU$50 to attend the conference dinner on Friday 28 November, payable in cash at the registration desk on the first day of the conference. More details are available on our web site.

More information and all relevant forms can be found on our web site: http://amphoraeviii.weebly.com. If you have any other enquiries, please do not hesitate to direct them to amphoraeviii@gmail.com.

Lecturer in English Literature (Medieval and Early Modern) – Call For Applications

University of Hull: Lecturer in English Literature (Medieval and Early Modern)

Salary: £31,644 to £36,661
Hours: Full Time
Contract: Contract / Temporary
Placed on: 23rd June 2014
Closes: 18th July 2014
Job Ref: FA0077
Faculty/Area: Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

The successful applicant will be expected to provide teaching and undertake assessment for the following undergraduate modules: Introduction to Poetry (semester one); Introduction to Medieval Literature (semester one); Introduction to Renaissance Literature (semester two) and the following postgraduate module: Research Skills II (semester two).

Candidates must have a good degree and a PhD or equivalent in in a relevant discipline together with the ability to teach Medieval and Early Modern English literature effectively at undergraduate and postgraduate level in a variety of teaching.

This work is offered on a fixed term basis and does not guarantee an offer of similar work in a subsequent academic year.

To discuss this role informally, please contact Professor Janet Clare on 01482 465567 or email: j.clare@hull.ac.uk

For further details and to apply, please visit: https://jobs.hull.ac.uk/Vacancy.aspx?ref=FA0077

10th World Shakespeare Congress: Creating and Re-creating Shakespeare – Call For Papers

International Shakespeare Association 10th World Shakespeare Congress 2016
Creating and Re-creating Shakespeare
London and Stratford-upon-Avon
31 July to 6 August, 2016

The year 2016 marks four hundred years of popular, artistic, and scholarly enthusiasm for Shakespeare’s life and works. We justly celebrate Shakespeare as a creator of plays and poems, characters and ideas, words and worlds. But so too, in the centuries since the playwright’s death in 1616, have scholars and thinkers, writers, artists, and performers—of all kinds and from around the globe—re-created him. In such perpetual reinventions of Shakespeare we seem to have confirmation of Ben Jonson’s words: Shakespeare was “not of an age, but for all time”.

The tenth World Shakespeare Congress of the International Shakespeare Association will honour Shakespeare’s 400-year legacy and celebrate the continuing global resonance of his work. The Congress’s rich programme of plenary lectures, seminars, panels, workshops, events, and performances will take place across two successive locations: first in Stratford-upon-Avon, among the key sites of Shakespeare’s personal life; and subsequently in London, close to the site of his most famous workplace, the Globe theatre. WSC 2016 will offer unparalleled opportunities to engage with current Shakespeare performance, criticism, and pedagogy, and to connect with fellow Shakespeareans from around the world.

The Congress organisers welcome proposals for papers, panels, workshops, and other events (including performances and other creative responses) relating to any aspect of Shakespeare’s work, life, and continuing legacy.

Proposals of 500 words for seminars, panels, and workshops may be submitted to wsc2016@contacts.bham.ac.uk

Workshops and seminars should be co-hosted with at least one other delegate. The Congress is an international event, and, as such, potential co-hosts are strongly encouraged to collaborate with delegates from other countries or geographical regions. Proposers will understand that there will be more space for seminars than panels on the conference programme.

Deadline for submissions: 30 September 2014.

Those submitting proposals should ensure that their membership of the ISA is current.

Financial donations to the World Shakespeare Congress are greatly appreciated. All such donations will be used to provide grant subsidies for early-career scholars and delegates from countries with less competitive economies. For further information please write to isa@shakespeare.org.uk

Folger Library: Curator of Early Modern Books and Prints – Call For Applications

The Folger Shakespeare Library invites experienced, innovative, and collaborative applicants for the position of Curator of Early Modern Books and Prints. The Curator has primary responsibility for our world-renowned collection of early modern books and prints. Some of the great strengths of this collection are English publications from the period 1470 to 1640 (including 82 copies of Shakespeares First Folio), Continental publications relating to the Reformation, and etchings by Wenceslaus Hollar. This is a rare opportunity to join the staff of an internationally recognized cultural institution during an exciting period of growth.

As a key member of the curatorial team, the Curator of Early Modern Books and Prints will share collection development and conservation-related responsibilities; and be part of creating new avenues of access to the Folger collections through exhibitions and web-based initiatives. The Curator will represent the Folger within the broader community of scholars, collectors, dealers, librarians, students, and the public, nationally and internationally. We invite you to learn more about this unique opportunity at: http://www.folger.edu/Content/About-Us/Employment-and-Internships/#CBP

Posting Date: 26 June 2014
Closing Date: When Filled

The Spiritual Geopolitics of the Early Modern World – Call For Papers

The Spiritual Geopolitics of the Early Modern World (1500-1800)
Service Historique de la Défense, Château de Vincennes (France)
March 13, 2015

Early modern Europeans lived during an age of faith, but the role of religion in geopolitics and diplomacy remains poorly understood. Likewise, historians and social scientists often downplay the role of religious arguments, issues and protagonists in favor of purely secular ones, such as economic, commercial, dynastic or territorial motives. Was religion a genuine motive in geopolitical thinking and policy-making or was it more of a conscience-appeasing fig-leaf in the face of more worldly concerns?

In this symposium we will explore the concept of “spiritual geopolitics” in early modern Europe and its imperial extensions, from the Atlantic World to the Mediterranean and Indian Oceans, in every place where states fought or negotiated over new or existing territories. Our understanding of “geopolitics” is both literal (decision-making process dealing with specific strategically significant sites) and broad enough to include the related field of diplomacy and war.

We seek proposals on any aspect or early modern spiritual geopolitics, but especially around the following questions or issues:

  • The role of religious arguments in the decision-making process at both central and local level;
  • The place of missionaries, priests, ministers, and other religious agents in the world of diplomacy and warfare, as negotiators, spies, or advisors;
  • The role of communities of religious refugees in imperial geopolitics;
  • Confessional borderlands as fertile grounds for spiritual geopolitics, or, the geography of spiritual geopolitics;
  • The importance, and limits, or Protestant-Catholic rivalry in European and international diplomacy;
  • The links between confessional and national identities; and the role of religious “others” in cementing national or confessional bonds

Proposals, which should not exceed 500 words, should be sent by September 15, 2014 to lauric.henneton@uvsq.fr.
Papers, which will be pre-circulated, are due by Feb. 15, 2015. They may be in French or English.

Pip Willcox, The Many Lives of the Bodleian First Folio of Shakespeare’s Plays – UWA IAS Public Lecture

University of Western Australia: Institute of Advanced Studies Public Lecture
““for Harry, England, and” … everyone: the Many Lives of the Bodleian First Folio of Shakespeare’s Plays”, Pip Willcox (Curator of Digital Special Collections, Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford)

Date: 6 August, 2014
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: Webb Lecture Theatre, Geography Building (ground floor), UWA
Parking: P18 & 20, via Fairway entrance 3
Cost: Free, but RSVP essential. RSVP – Book a seat

A copy of Shakespeare’s First Folio arrived at the Bodleian Library in 1623. Why and when did it leave? What chance brought it back in 1905? What had happened to it in the meantime? This lecture tells its curious stories, from its arrival in Oxford, through its two public campaigns (1905 and 2012), conservation and digitization, and current serial publication in searchable text form, to the apple pip languishing in the pages of Henry VI Part 2.

The remarkable story of perhaps the most-read copy of one of the world’s most iconic books is a window on literary, social, and physical book history. Read it online, and come and be part of its story!


Pip Willcox is the Curator of Digital Special Collections at the Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford. With a background in scholarly editing, she collaborates with colleagues to support research, managing projects, offering consultancy, and enabling online access to rare books and manuscripts. She is an advocate for knowledge exchange and public engagement within and beyond the humanities, with a particular focus on the digital. Recent collaborative projects include Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership, the Shakespeare Quartos Archive, the Stationers’ Register Online, the public campaign Sprint for Shakespeare and the Bodleian First Folio project.

Pip is also a 2014 Institute of Advanced Studies Short-Stay Visiting Fellow.