Monthly Archives: November 2014

Department of Medieval Studies – CEU Budapest

The Department of Medieval Studies at Central European University (Budapest) offers two-year MA and PhD programs, coordinated with the Bologna process requirements and accredited in Hungary (and accepted throughout Europe) as well as in the US; and a one-year MA accredited in the United States. You can find further details at: https://medievalstudies.ceu.hu.

CEU offers full or partial tuition waivers and various other types of financial support on a competitive basis. For an update on recent policies please visit: http://www.ceu.hu/admissions/financialaid.

The Department, together with the department of History, hosts numerous research units, among them the Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies (http://cems.ceu.hu/sems), the Center for Religious Studies (http://religion.ceu.hu), the Jewish Studies Program (http://web.ceu.hu/jewishstudies/), and offers a number of specializations like: the Specialization in Religious Studies (SRS), Specialization in Eastern Mediterranean Studies, Jewish Studies Specialization (JSS), the Political Thoughts etc. For a complete list of specializations please check the departmental website from November onwards. In order to render the work of students more effective, the Source Language Teaching Group offers Latin and Greek courses and on demand Hebrew, Turkish, Arabic, Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, Armenian, Old Georgian, Syriac, Russian, Ottoman, Turkish, Old Church Slavonic and Persian.

The new two-year interdisciplinary and interdepartmental MA program in Cultural Heritage Studies (https://medievalstudies.ceu.hu/Culturalheritagestudies) is coordinated by the department but offered together with other CEU units such as the Departments of History, Sociology and Social Anthropology, Environmental Sciences and Policy, and Legal Studies and Public Policy, plus the CEU Business School. It focuses on developing aptitudes for the critical assessment of tangible structures and objects such as buildings, monuments, and works of art, as well as intangible heritage like traditions, languages, and knowledge (see also the attached flyer of the program).

The department also participates in the international ERASMUS exchange program, which offers a 3-12 month long study abroad for PHD and two-year MA students and an internship for the one-year MA students. For more information please visit: http://acro.ceu.hu/erasmus-for-ceu-students.

For undergraduate students who are interested in the program CEU organizes an interdisciplinary conference on Empire and Nations between August 6 and 9, 2015. For more information please visit https://medievalstudies.ceu.hu/events.

You can also get a glimpse of their activities through the Medieval Studies Department’s CEU Medieval Radio (http://medievalradio.org), which is a twenty-four-hour webcast dedicated to medieval and early modern history and culture, as well as pre-1700 music. CEU Medieval Radio is web-casting interviews, talk shows, and lectures by resident and guest scholars and is devoted to authentic medieval and Renaissance music.

 

Dr Jenny Spinks, ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions Public Lecture

“Divided Emotions, Radical Religions and Apocalyptic Expectations in the Sixteenth-Century Augsburg ‘Book of Miracles’”, Jenny Spinks (The University of Manchester)

Date: Monday, 8 December 2014
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: The University of Melbourne, Room 209, Old Arts Building
Registration: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1mXldZpqTU6AgaRQB27Y08SO7jAAzMfFpTJezXGufadg/viewform

Sixteenth-century printed and manuscript wonder books compiled reports of comets, floods, earthquakes, monstrous births, and other terrifying and extraordinary phenomena. Such compendia appeared in great numbers after 1556, and German-language wonder books were produced most commonly in Switzerland and in northern German lands. Some wonder books also appeared before the mid-1550s, and in other German regions, although these are works that have received much less attention and analysis. This paper will examine a recently-discovered and richly illustrated manuscript wonder book that was produced in Augsburg in the late 1540s, during a period of intense religious and political division within the city around the 1548 Augsburg Interim. German-language wonder books generally reflect Lutheran or Swiss Protestant approaches to the interpretation of the natural world and the coming Last Days (which could evoke both joy and fear). Possibly uniquely, parts of this Augsburg manuscript instead draw upon Anabaptist and other radical Reformation sources. Lurid colour images are paired with terse texts that warn the reader of how often such events occur close to home. This paper will situate the manuscript in a wider context of disappointed apocalyptic expectation, fearful reports of prodigies across print and manuscript sources, divided communal experiences of religion, and the contested emotional meanings of wonders in this context.


Jenny Spinks is a Lecturer in Early Modern History at The University of Manchester, and was previously an Australian Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow and CHE Associate Investigator at The University of Melbourne. Her publications include Monstrous Births and Visual Culture in Sixteenth-Century Germany (London, 2009), and – co-edited with Cathy Leahy and Charles Zika – the exhibition catalogue The Four Horsemen: Apocalypse, Death and Disaster (Melbourne, 2012). She is currently writing a study of sixteenth-century northern European wonder books, and is also working towards a 2016 co-curated exhibition titled Magic and the Expanding Early Modern World at the John Rylands Library, Manchester.

Mediating the Sacred and Secular in the Medieval and Early Modern Period – Call For Papers

“Mediating the Sacred and Secular in the Medieval and Early Modern Period”
Graduate Conference hosted by the University of Michigan Early Modern
Colloquium (EMC)
February 20-21, 2015

The Early Modern Colloquium, a graduate interdisciplinary group at the University of Michigan, is seeking submissions for its conference on the conceptualizations of the sacred and secular during the Medieval and Early Modern periods. This conference will engage with issues of periodicity through questions of secular versus sacred authority both during and between these eras. More specifically, it will investigate particular literary and visual representations that negotiate and mediate the divide of the sacred and the secular in Medieval and Early Modern Europe.

Keynote speakers will be Nancy Warren, Professor of English (Texas A&M), and Sara
Poor, Associate Professor of German (Princeton).

  • How is the sacred or the secular defined?
  • How does premodern culture define the status and authority of
    religion and state?
  • Do changes in geographical borders or ideologies produce new
    discourses of sacred or secular?
  • How might we consequently think about or challenge periodicity?
  • What are the meeting places or shared spaces of sacred and secular?
  • How do these terms come together to confront rival forms or terms?

Conference participants are invited to examine how Medieval and/or early modern writers, collectives, and cultures grappled with these questions within a series of interrelated realms—e.g., academic, artistic, economic, geographical, legal, medical, philosophical, private, public, religious, and scientific.

The Early Modern Colloquium will give priority to abstracts submitted by graduate students. Please send 250-300 word proposals to Maia Farrar at mfarrarw@umich.edu by December 5.

Professor Pat Simons, ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions Public Lecture

“The Rocco Erotics of Disguise and Innocence: Revisiting the issue of viewing pleasure in the ancient regime,” Professor Pat Simons (History of Art and Women’s Studies, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

Date: Thursday 4 December, 2014
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: Macmahon Ball Theatre, The University of Melbourne
Registration: RSVP here.

The erotic pleasure of rococo art is usually considered frivolous and feminine, but what if the seeming superficiality and insincerity did have emotive impact? By considering images of playful babes and mythological nymphs, this lecture demonstrates that the masquerade of insignificance enabled the true mask, the nonchalant disguise of innocence, which nevertheless luxuriated in sensuality.


Patricia Simons’ scholarly interests include the art of Renaissance Europe (primarily Italy, France and the Netherlands) with a special focus on the representation of gender and sexuality and interdisciplinary research on materiality, visuality and material culture. Her work, published in anthologies and peer-review journals like Art History, Renaissance Quarterly, and Renaissance Studies, has investigated such issues as portraiture as a mode of fictive representation, medical discourse in relation to visual culture, the representation and reception of homoeroticism, and metaphors both visual and textual (literary or “popular”). It is distinguished for its combination of rigor and innovation, as well as for analyzing the breadth of visual and material culture, from badges to maiolica, anatomical illustration to erotic prints, life size sculpture to canonical oil paintings and frescoes.

Her most recent book is The Sex of Men in Premodern Europe: A Cultural History (Cambridge University Press, 2011). Her numerous essays analyzing the visual and material culture of Early Modern Europe range over such subjects as female and male homoeroticism, and the visual role of humour.

21st Annual ACMRS Conference – Call For Papers

The 21st Annual ACMRS Conference
Scottsdale, AZ
February 5–7, 2015

Conference Website

ACMRS invites session and paper proposals for its annual interdisciplinary conference to be held February 5-7, 2015 at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Scottsdale. We welcome papers that explore any topic related to the study and teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and especially those that focus on: “Trades, Talents, Guilds, and Specialists: Getting Things Done in the Middle Ages and Renaissance”.

Selected papers focused on “Trades, Talents, Guilds, and Specialists: Getting Things Done in the Middle Ages and Renaissance” will be considered for publication in the conference volume of the Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance series, published by Brepols Publishers (Belgium).

Keynote Speaker:
Henry S. Turner, Associate Professor of English and Director of the Program in Early Modern Studies at Rutgers University. Intellectually imaginative and energetic, Professor Turner is one of the few – and the finest – scholars now writing on the historical intersection of literature and science.

Sponsored Session: TEAMS: The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages” invites proposals on any topic related to the teaching of medieval and Renaissance studies.

Pre-Conference Workshop:

ACMRS will host a workshop on manuscript studies led by Professor Timothy Graham, Director of the Institute for Medieval Studies at the University of New Mexico. The workshop will be held on the afternoon of Thursday, February 5, and participation will be limited to the first 25 individuals to register. Email acmrs@acmrs.org with “Pre-Conference Workshop” in the subject line to be added to the list. The cost of the workshop is $30 and is in addition to the regular conference registration fee.

Les Enfans Sans Abri:

Since 1989, the ad hoc medieval/Renaissance drama troupe Les enfans sans abri (LESA) has been performing comedies all over the country and even in Europe. To learn more about Les enfans sans abri, visit their website at: www.lesenfanssansabri.com.

The deadline for proposals is midnight, Mountain Standard Time on December 5, 2014. Please submit an abstract of 250 words and a brief CV to ACMRSconference@asu.edu. Proposals must include audio/visual requirements and any other special requests; late requests may not be accommodated. Visit our web page at www.acmrs.org/conferences/annual-acmrs-conference for further details on submissions.

Questions? Call 480-965-5900 or email acmrs@acmrs.org or visit our website: http://acmrs.org

University of St Andrews: Research Fellow in Mediaeval History – Call For Applications

The School of History and Department of Mediaeval History at the University of St Andrews invite applications for a 6-month postdoctoral fellowship to work with Dr Justine Firnhaber-Baker on her AHRC-funded project ‘The Jacquerie and Late Mediaeval Revolts’.

The postdoctoral fellow will co-edit a volume of essays with Dr Firnhaber-Baker, as well as contribute an article of his or her own to the volume. The postdoctoral fellow will also do some of the organization for a conference in April 2015 and will set up and populate a bibliographic wiki dedicated to mediaeval revolts. Applicants should have a completed PhD in mediaeval history or a related field. A reading knowledge of Latin and at least one European language other than English is essential. Reading knowledge of other European languages, especially Dutch or Italian is desirable, as is some experience with digital humanities and conference organization.

Applicants should submit a letter of application along with a curriculum vitae and the names of three referees. In addition to a list of publications (if any), candidates should submit a plan of the research they would plan to undertake over the duration of the project that would result in the publication of an article to be included in the edited volume.

Informal enquiries can be made to Dr Firnhaber-Baker at jmfb@st-andrews.ac.uk to discuss the role.

This post is for 6 months, starting on 2 February 2015, or as soon as possible thereafter.

Applications close 8 December 2014.

For further information and to apply, please visit: http://www.jobs.ac.uk/job/AJZ343/research-fellow-in-mediaeval-history-ml1579/

Crossing the Virtual Divide: Digital Tools and Digital Divides in the Practice of Medieval Studies – Call For Papers

Call for Chapters: “Crossing the Virtual Divide: Digital Tools and Digital Divides in the Practice of Medieval Studies”

We are in the process of putting together a volume of chapters and commentary, currently under strong consideration by Amsterdam University Press, discussing the problems and opportunities of digital methods and tools for the specific humanistic problems scholars working with medieval texts and materials face. You do not have to self-identify as a digital humanities scholar to contribute – only have an interest in what is made possible by these new methodologies or a project you are working on that includes a digital element. It is also our desire that the volume becomes a conversation, and as such we would like all authors writing for the volume to read and comment on the other chapters when the topics are of interest.

If you have an idea for a chapter that you think might fit the planned outline of the book, attached below, please send an abstract of your proposed chapter (roughly a page) to matthew@matthewedavis.net by December 1. Our plan is that all chapters will be completed and in the editors hands by November of 2015 and the completed volume, including commentary, will be in the hands of the publishers by March of 2016.

Matthew Evan Davis (North Carolina State University)

Tamsyn Rose-Steel (Johns Hopkins University)

Ece Turnator (University of Texas at Austin)


The book will be organized into four broad categories intended to reflect the practice of digital humanities in medieval studies, and reflecting our desire to explore both the contributors’ work on digital medieval projects and their thoughts on how digital tools and methods have changed medieval study. These categories should not be seen as an attempt to wall off methods of scholarship – the intention of the volume is that the contributed pieces will be in dialogue with each other – but to place thematically similar pieces in proximity to each other. The categories are:

Texts and Contexts

The binary foundation of the digital – the zero and one or off and on at the heart of it – causes its division into discrete pieces. That tendency them migrates up the chain of data categorization, placing those discrete items into their own pigeonholes. Those things that resist neat categorization or binary distinction have a tendency to be lost, and that loss will only increase as more and more analog cultural artifacts are described and categorized digitally. Those chapters in the Texts and Contexts section are thus concerned not only with the content of a work – things intentionally placed such as the text of a poem, the image of an artistic work or sculpture, or the presentation layer of a website – but with the ancillary elements that define, or once defined, the context of the work and which are equally important to its production and understanding.

Things and Spaces

Complementary to the question of text and context is one of representation: how do you represent a three-dimensional object, with its real, physical presence, in an essentially two-dimensional digital construct presented on a screen? Should there be large- scale visualization spaces available so that individuals can ‘walk’ inside a scale representation of a medieval cathedral, for example, and if so how should the cathedral be represented? Should its artificial nature be occluded in an attempt at true verisimilitude or should it be acknowledged and the real and physical privileged? Furthermore, our relationships with virtual representations of small objects, such as codices, appear on the surface to be well-trod ground but in fact their reconstruction forces us to think anew about concepts such as reception and memory. The chapters in this section engage with the presentation of objects as objects, with their own physicality and cultural weight, and question how best to both engage with and honor all of those aspects digitally.

Tools and Techniques

Because very few digital tools and platforms are actually built for humanities questions, much less the specific questions that medievalists working with those tools might ask, there is a tension between what the researcher wants from the tool, what the tool can do, and what the tool might be reasonably be made able to do. The chapters in this category deal primarily with the technical opportunities and issues of using computational tools to do medieval humanities scholarship. What exactly are the underlying implications of choosing a particular metadata standard – can such choices be seen as ‘neutral’? In choosing a tool such as TEI or creating an algorithm to track word usage across a corpus, to what are scholars committing themselves, and what are they discarding?

Collaborations

Due to the nature of training in the humanities and the hardware and software packages necessary to undertake a digital project, there are very few scholars who can engage in a digital project alone. Thus, unlike the traditional model of the lone scholar working on a monograph, digital scholarship tends both to be collaborative and to require significant funding. The scholar who manages such a project faces two interrelated challenges: first, that the project not exceed its original scholarly intent – a condition known to the programming community as “scope creep.” Second, that all members of the collaborative team be rewarded in the ways that are meaningful to their particular discipline – a CV line for the scholar, a service item or additional technical tool for a library employee, or a particularly challenging technical “hack” that can then be used elsewhere or foregrounded on the resume for the programmer. The chapters in this section discuss specific pitfalls involved in trying to explain and justify a medievally-focused digital project to the larger funding structures of an institution.

Intentionally broad, these categories are not designed to be traditionally disciplinary. Instead, our aim is that they reflect the interdisciplinary nature of some of the best digital humanities projects, the holistic nature of medieval culture that has been artificially divided by modern disciplinary boundaries, and the push towards interdisciplinary scholarship in the academy. Furthermore, by suggesting an alternate way of thinking about the objects of our study and the scholarship produced, notions that this “isn’t my area” are abolished and discussions amongst the participants – either in the volume itself or in an ancillary website – are fostered.

Individuals

We are envisioning roughly sixteen chapters to the volume divided amongst the four categories, with a different author writing each chapter. After completing their chapters the authors will be encouraged to read and comment on each other’s work, and that conversation will be included in the volume and hopefully on an ancillary, ongoing website forum.

Special Edition of ‘New Scholar’: Cosmopolitan Culture and its Critics – Call For Papers

The View from Above: Cosmopolitan Culture and its Critics

We are calling for papers for a Special Edition of New Scholar that will explore the notion of cosmopolitanism, both as a utopian project and as an object of critique. This Special Edition follows on from the conference, “The View from Above: Cosmopolitan Culture and its Critics”, which was held at the University of Melbourne on 22 and 23 September 2014. We invite contributors (especially postgraduate students and early career researchers) to submit papers (scholarly and/or creative) that address some aspect of cosmopolitanism. Potential topics include:

  • old and new cosmopolitanisms (including the influence of classical, medieval and early modern texts on more recent understandings of the cosmopolitan)
  • cosmopolitan sensibilities in colonial, postcolonial and diasporic literatures
  • cosmopolitanism and class
  • feminist engagements with cosmopolitanism
  • cosmopolitanism and sexuality
  • cosmopolitanism, advertising, popular culture and everyday life
  • transnationalism and globalisation, parochialism and provinciality
  • cosmopolitan readerships and polities; the role of translation
  • creative practice and the cosmopolitan
  • the text as a cosmopolitan space
  • utopianism and cosmopolitan futures

Submissions should be 4000-6000 words in length, and must be submitted via the New Scholar website by 12 January 2014. Articles will be single-blind peer reviewed. Submissions must conform to the Author Guidelines for New Scholar. These Guidelines are available at http://www.newscholar.org.au/index.php/ns/about/submissions#authorGuidelines

For any queries on this Special Edition, please contact the editorial committee at viewfromaboveconference@gmail.com

University of Illinois, Rare Book & Manuscript Library: John “Bud” Velde Visiting Scholars Program (2015-16) – Call For Applications

The John “Bud” Velde Visiting Scholars Program
The Rare Book & Manuscript Library
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

The Rare Book & Manuscript Library annually awards two stipends of up to $3,000 to scholars and researchers, unaffiliated with the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who would like to spend a month or more conducting research with our materials.

The holdings of The Rare Book & Manuscript Library are substantial. Comprehensive collections support research in printing and printing history, Renaissance studies, Elizabethan and Stuart life and letters, John Milton and his age, emblem studies, economic history, and works on early science and natural history. The library also houses the papers of such diverse literary figures as Carl Sandburg, H. G. Wells, William Maxwell, and W. S. Merwin.

For information about this program, how to apply, and to find out more about The Rare Book & Manuscript Library, please visit our Web site at: http://www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/research_fellowships.html

Please contact the Public Programs Manager, Dennis Sears, with further questions about the program or the Rare Book & Manuscript Library, or email Dennis: dsears@illinois.edu.

Deadline for application: 1 February, 2015.

Over His Dead Body – Call For Papers

Over His Dead Body
Kings Manor, University of York
26-27 March, 2015

The legal battle between Leicester and York over the remains of Richard III came to an end in May 2014 with a High Court ruling that the last Plantagenet king is to be buried in Leicester Cathedral. This hard-fought, sometimes acrimonious, dispute over bones found in a municipal car park presented a fascinating spectacle; a modern, even postmodern, re-staging of the medieval myth of the king’s two bodies. The King is dead; long live the King.

In this research workshop, York and Leicester put their differences aside – or rather, bring them together in memory and celebration of the historical figure who inspired one of Shakespeare’s most popular incarnations. To mark the occasion of Richard’s reinterment on March 26, 2015, the Department of English and Related Literature at York and the School of Modern Languages at Leicester invite proposals for a research workshop that will explore the significance of the Shakespearean dead body on page, stage and screen. Participants will be invited to join the audience at a memorial lecture in York Minster on March 26, followed by the research workshop at Kings Manor – a seat of Tudor government in northern England – on Friday March 27.

Perhaps even more so than the ghost, the Shakespearian dead body raises fundamental questions about space, place, and belonging and about the powers that shape its medial and intermedial exhumations and reinterments. We invite proposals for 15-minute presentations offering textual readings of Shakespearian bodies, including but not only Richard, either in the Shakespearian text, or in modern or contemporary production and performance. Topics might include the following:

  • ‘The body is with the king, but the king is not with the body’: where do we find, or look for, the Shakespearian dead body?
  • ‘Look on her. Look, her lips’: the Shakespearian dead body as ‘sight’ or image; its embodiment in or by performance, and/or in other cultures.
  • ‘O gentlemen, see, see! Dead Henry’s wounds Ope their congealed mouths and bleed afresh!’ What is at stake in the physical confrontation of the dead with the living?
  • What does the Shakespearian dead body lose, or gain, in translation or remediation?
  • How have particular productions or performances used the Shakespearian dead bodyto ask questions about the ‘world’ outside the play?
  • What motivates contemporary artists, directors, translators and academics to contribute to these re-incarnations?
  • How is the Shakespearian dead body given value in non-cultural institutions (the State, science, the press)?

Inter- or multi-disciplinary perspectives are welcome. Proposals featuring abstracts of up to 250 words in English and a short biographical description should be sent in word format (doc. or .docx) to both organizers by January 5 2015. Please put ‘Over His Dead Body proposal’ in the subject line of your e-mail.

Nicole Fayard, University of Leicester: nicole.fayard@le.ac.uk
Erica Sheen, University of York: erica.sheen@york.ac.uk