Daily Archives: 4 February 2015

2016 Annual Meeting Of The Medieval Academy Of America – Call For Papers

2016 Annual Meeting Of The Medieval Academy Of America
Boston, MA
February 25-27, 2016

The Program Committee invites proposals for papers on all topics and in all disciplines and periods of medieval studies. Any member of the Medieval Academy may submit a paper proposal, excepting those who presented papers at the annual meetings of the Medieval Academy in 2014 or 2015; others may submit proposals as well but must become members in order to present papers at the meeting. Special consideration will be given to individuals whose field would not normally involve membership in the Medieval Academy.

Location: Boston is home to numerous universities, art museums, and performing arts companies. Hosted by several Boston-area institutions, the meeting will convene at the Hyatt, across the street from the renovated Opera House and in the heart of Boston’s theater district. The final reception will be held at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Theme(s): Rather than an overarching theme, the 2016 meeting will provide a variety of thematic connections among sessions. The Medieval Academy welcomes innovative sessions that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries or that use various disciplinary approaches to examine an individual topic. To both facilitate and emphasize interdisciplinarity, the Call for Papers is organized in “threads.” Sessions listed under these threads have been proposed to or by the Program Committee but the list provided below is not meant to be exhaustive or exclusive.

Proposals: Individuals may propose to offer a paper in one of the sessions below, a full panel of papers and speakers for a listed session, a full panel of papers and speakers for a session they wish to create, or a single paper not designated for a specific session. Sessions usually consist of three 25-minute papers, and proposals should be geared to that length, although the committee is interested in other formats as well (poster sessions, digital experiences, etc). The Program Committee may choose a different format for some sessions after the proposals have been reviewed.

The complete Call for Papers with additional information, submission procedures, selections guidelines, and organizers is available here.

Please contact the Program Committee at MAA2016@TheMedievalAcademy.org with any questions.

THREADS:

CAROLINGIAN WORLDS
“Contacts with Islam”
“Frontiers”
“Transformations, 877-987″

THE ELEVENTH CENTURY
“The 1000th Anniversary of Cnut the Great (1016/2016)”
“Art and Architecture in the Eleventh Century: An Age of Experiments”
“Creative Liturgies in the Eleventh Century”

MONASTICISMS
“Monastic Visual Cultures”
“Monastic Identities”
“Ascetic Bodies in the Late Middle Ages”

LYRIC TRANSFORMATIONS
“The ‘Lyric’ Dante”
“Poetic Form”
“Petrarch between the Vernacular and Latin”

GREEN WORLDS/MEDIEVAL ECOLOGIES
“Garden, Park, Wasteland”
“Material Ecologies”
“Medieval Anthropocenes”
“Water Worlds and Seascapes”
“Mediterranean Landscapes”

WORKS: UNFINISHED, TRANSFORMED OR IN RUINS
“Unfinished Books, Incomplete Texts”
“Medieval Art and Architecture as Work(s) in Progress”
“Ruins”

MEDIEVAL STUDIES AND THE DIGITAL HUMANITIES
Papers are invited for a thread devoted to the exciting new ways in which medieval studies and digital humanities intersect. Topics might include (but are not limited to) issues of visualization and the re-presentation of medieval spaces, soundscapes, the implications of digital archives for the editing of medieval texts, the digital (re)construction of medieval collections and libraries, GIS and mapping projects, social network analysis, text encoding, and computational approaches to texts and scribal behaviors.

SESSIONS:
“800th Anniversary of the Dominican Order”
“800th Anniversary of Pope Innocent III’s Death”
“Mortality / Facing Death”
“Margins of War”
“Images of Coercion and Dissent”
“Dangerous, Deviant, and Disobedient Women in the Middle Ages”
“Vernacular Exegesis”
“Drama/Performance”
“Literature of Pastoral Care”
“Boston Area Medieval Manuscripts”

Connectivity from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages – Call For Papers

Connectivity from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages
The University of Auckland
21 April, 2015

On the 21st of April 2015 the Disciplinary Area of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Auckland, with support from the Australian Early Medieval Association, will host a workshop entitled “Connectivity from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages”.

This workshop will explore the theme of connectivity as it applies to the periods of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages (c. A.D. 350 – 1000). Connectivity is the measure of cohesion and interaction between groups and individuals in a society. Key questions for this workshop are: how did individuals and groups maintain and build connectivity in their societies? Did traditional networks and systems, such as Roman amicitia, remain or were they replaced by new networks and systems? Did the societies of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages remain ‘connected’ in a time of disruption to older networks?

We welcome papers on a wide range of topics that engage and discuss the theme of connectivity, including, but not limited to: friendship; letter writing; social cohesion, geographic connectivity; social, economic, religious, and political networks; and ethnic identity.

Papers should be between 20-25 minutes long. Abstracts (100-200 words) should be submitted by the 1st of March.

Presenters are also encouraged to consider submitting their paper to the 2015 volume of the Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association.

Please send abstracts to Dan Knox dkno024@aucklanduni.ac.nz along with any enquires about the workshop.

Download the Connectivity Workshop CFP.