Daily Archives: 14 October 2015

ANZAMEMS PATS 2015: Medieval and Early Modern Digital Humanities

Medieval and Early Modern Digital Humanities: Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar | University of Canterbury

Date: Wednesday 18 November, 2015
Time:
9am–5pm
Venue: The Undercroft, University of Canterbury
More information: Dr. Francis Yapp

Does your research involve digital methodologies? Or are you interested in learning how digital tools can help us answer new and existing questions in Medieval and Early Modern Studies?
This Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar (PATS) at the University of Canterbury will bring students together with established scholars to discuss digital research in Medieval and Early Modern Studies.

The PATS will consist of two keynote presentations, an interactive session, and a panel discussion. The two keynotes will focus on using digitised sources in researching the medieval and early modern periods, and on the key issues and digital archival work on the digital English Broadside Ballad Archive respectively. The panel discussion will focus on digital humanities project management, and students will have the opportunity to discuss their own research and gain hands-on experience of digital tools in the interactive session.

Cost

There is no cost for postgraduate students attending this PATS. However, places are limited to ensure the day is focused. Lunch and refreshments will be provided; please advise of any dietary requirements when applying.

Travel Grants

Travel grants are available for students from outside the Christchurch area. Ten travel grants are available for New Zealand students, and two grants are available for Australian students. If you are intending to apply for a travel grant, please submit an application form plus a short academic reference before 26 October 2015. Applicants will hear back shortly after 26 October.

Application forms for the PATS at the University of Canterbury can be downloaded HERE.

CANCELLED EVENT: Professor Michael Schoenfeldt, Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (UWA Node) Free Public Lecture

Unfortunately Professor Michael Schoenfeldt has had to cancel his trip to Australia at short notice.  Regretfully therefore the following  event has been cancelled.  Apologies for any inconvenience.

CHE Public Lecture with:

Professor Michael Schoenfeldt (John Knott Professor of English Literature at the University of Michigan)

Date: Wednesday 21 October, 2015
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: Webb Lecture Theatre, Geography and Geology Building, The University of Western Australia

Professor Michael Schoenfeldt, Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (UWA Node) Free Public Lecture

EDIT: Unfortunately Professor Michael Schoenfeldt has had to cancel his trip to Australia at short notice.  Regretfully therefore the following event has been cancelled.  Apologies for any inconvenience.

ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions UWA node, Free Public Lecture:

“Places of Pleasure and Pain: Environment and Embodiment in Spenser and Milton”, Professor Michael Schoenfeldt (John Knott Professor of English Literature at the University of Michigan)

Date: Wednesday 21 October, 2015
Time: 6:00pm
Venue: Webb Lecture Theatre, Geography and Geology Building, The University of Western Australia

While we in the twenty-first century rightly worry about the ways humans contaminate their environment, early modern writers were far more concerned about how the environment contaminates human. Renaissance medicine and ethics conspired to produce a porous sense of self, always in danger of pernicious environmental influences. I would like in this session to explore the ways that England’s two greatest epic poets, Edmund Spenser and John Milton, investigate the relationship between environment and embodiment. Lacking a full vocabulary of inner pleasure, both Spenser and Milton keep projecting pleasure outward into space, into gardens of illicit temptation or divinely sanctioned gratification. Milton learns from Spenser the ability to create landscapes that put immense ethical pressure on his subjects For Milton, though, pleasure has a different ethical valence; his Garden of Eden is a Bower of licit bliss. The Fall of humanity, moreover, entails the primal act of environmental contamination, as the effects of human sinfulness are felt throughout creation. For Milton, finally, Hell is less a physical place than a state of internal agony, and so cannot be escaped. But Paradise becomes as well an internal state, which ameliorates the agony of our exile from the original garden of fulsome pleasure.


Michael Schoenfeldt is the John Knott Professor of English Literature at the University of Michigan, where he has taught since he received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1985. He is the author of Prayer and Power: George Herbert and Renaissance Courtship (University of Chicago Press, 1991), Bodies and Selves in Early Modern England: Physiology and Inwardness in Spenser, Shakespeare, Herbert, and Milton (Cambridge, 1999) and The Cambridge Introduction to Shakespeare’s Poetry (2010); and editor of the Blackwell Companion to Shakespeare’s Sonnets (2006). He is currently editing John Donne in Context for Cambridge, writing a book for Blackwell’s entitled Reading Seventeenth-Century Poetry, and researching a book-length study of pain and pleasure in early modern England.