Monthly Archives: January 2016

Stuart Successions Database – Now Online

The Stuart Successions database providing a searchable catalogue of the writing printed in response to moments of royal and protectoral succession over the long 17th century, is now available to browse at: http://stuarts.exeter.ac.uk/database.

The database is the outcome of the AHRC-funded Stuart Successions project undertaken in collaboration by the universities of Exeter and Oxford. Containing records for over 3000 examples of succession literature across several genres, including panegyric and elegy, sermon and pamphlet, address and proclamation, the database will help students of both literature and history to uncover new ways of understanding the relationship between literature, print, and politics during one of most tumultuous centuries in British history.

Romantic Rituals: ‘Making Love’ in Europe c.1100-1800 – Call For Papers

Romantic Rituals: ‘Making Love’ in Europe c.1100-1800
The University of Adelaide
4 July, 2016

Contact: Katie Barclay (katie.barclay@adelaide.edu.au) and Sally Holloway (sally.holloway@richmond.ac.uk)

Convenors: Katie Barclay and Sally Holloway

Keynote: Clara Tuite (The University of Melbourne)

The study of romantic love continues to grow apace, with the foundation of the Love Research Cluster at the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions and the Love Research Network at the University of Hull. An increasing number of works including Simon May’s Love: A History (2011), Katie Barclay’s Love, Intimacy and Power (2011) and William Reddy’s The Making of Romantic Love (2012) have scrutinised the historical, literary and philosophical dimensions of romantic emotion.

This one-day workshop will focus on the changing rituals shaping romantic relationships in Europe. The linguistic, material and emotional dimensions of ‘making love’ – meaning to court or woo – evolved significantly over the period from c.1100-1800. By the eighteenth century, Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (1755) described suitors embarking on ‘lovesuits’ using ‘lovetricks’ and ‘lovetoys’ which mediated the expression, understanding and hence the experience of love itself.

We invite papers that explore the customs of falling and staying in love through love letters, love songs, valentines, romantic gifts and similar ritual exchanges. These transactions are documented at length in letters, diaries, literature (including romances, fairy tales and novels), ballads, court records and extant objects. Our aim is to discover how men and women negotiated the process of falling in love, and how this varied according to gender, rank, region, and over time. A study of romantic love must also explore the contexts in which the rituals of romantic love were appropriate, in some contexts expanding the traditional boundaries of love between courting men and women to illicit love, romantic love within friendship, and romantic love as a religious connection to God. Papers that expand our understanding or interrogate the boundaries of romantic love in history are particularly welcome.

Abstracts of no more than 250 words, and a short bio, should be emailed to both Katie Barclay, (katie.barclay@adelaide.edu.au) and Sally Holloway (sally.holloway@richmond.ac.uk) by 1 February, 2016. Questions or queries can also be addressed to the above.

CARMEN Annual Meeting 2016

CARMEN Annual Meeting
Essen, Germany
9-11 September, 2016

CARMEN, as stated on its website, “is a worldwide network of medievalists, its name being an acronym for the “Co-operative for the Advancement of Research through a Medieval European Network”. It links a number of research institutions, universities, interest groups and individuals with common scholarly interest in the study of the Middle Ages. While based in Europe, it reaches out to all continents to create an open and truly international platform of co-operation in the field of medieval research and teaching.” For more information about CARMEN please visit: http://www.carmen-medieval.net.

CARMEN’s next Annual Meeting will take place in Essen, Germany, organised by the Historical Institute at the University of Duisburg-Essen (https://www.uni-due.de/geschichte). The general theme of the Annual Meeting will be Futures. Mark the dates 9-11 September, 2016, in your medieval events calendar, join us, make friends, and enjoy the charming medieval city of Essen, the home of the famous golden Madonna. Participants are advised to fly to Düsseldorf or Cologne/ Köln; practical information on travel and accommodation, and the program of the meeting will be available in spring 2016 on the CARMEN webpage.

Essen is a medieval site in the Ruhr region that has been a center of Carolingian missionary activity, with a cathedral church going back to a 9th century female monastery that held with close ties to the Ottonian family in the 10th century. There has been a male Benedictine monastery in Essen (Werden) from c. 800 as well.

Graduate students: If you’re interested in attending the meeting or learning more about CARMEN, please get in touch with Professor Robert E. Bjork (Foundation Professor of English and Director, ACMRS – Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies) at: robert.bjork@asu.edu

The International Australian Studies Association: Unpaid Editorial Traineeship – Call for Expression of Interest

The International Australian Studies Association (InASA) and the editors of the Journal of Australian Studies are seeking expressions of interests from HDR candidates, graduate students in editing programmes, or ECRs, who are interested in Australian Studies and would like the opportunity to gain editorial experience as an editorial trainee with the leading journal in Australian Studies.

We expect to appoint two trainees, one based in Brisbane and one based in Melbourne, initially for one year, although this would also be renewable, beginning in March 2016.

As editorial work on the journal is voluntary, trainees would not be paid, although each trainee will receive a one-off award of $500 to defray costs. Trainees will participate in the deliberations of the editors, and will be invited to attend meetings of the Editorial Advisory Committee. They might be asked to accept special responsibility as a group to work on a particular project for the journal. We envisage that the traineeship will involve approximately 2 hours of work per week.

Expressions of interest should be in the form of a letter accompanying a brief curriculum vitae, with the names of two referees, and a one page outline of why you are interested in the position, and what skills you will bring to it.

For further information please contact the editors Maggie Nolan (marguerite.nolan@acu.edu.au) or Julie Kimber (jkimber@swin.edu.au).

Please submit expressions of interest to either editor (inc. subject line: EoI: Journal of Australian Studies editorial trainee)

Expressions of Interest close at the end of January, 2016.

Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards 2016 – Entries for Non-Fiction Category Now Open

Have you published a work of non-fiction in the past two years? Why not enter it into the Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards?

Non-fiction ($15,000)
For a work of Non-fiction which may include biography, autobiography, history, natural history, literary criticism and other works of social, political or topical interest.

This category attracts a prize of $15,000 and could even win the Premier’s Prize of $25,000.
For more information, please visit: http://pba.slwa.wa.gov.au

The closing date for entries in all categories is 5pm (WST) Friday, 29 January 2016.

10th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval and Renaissance Studies – Call For Papers

The 10th International Conference of the Taiwan Association of Classical, Medieval and Renaissance Studies
National Pingtung University, Taiwan
21-22 October, 2016

Human civilization often entails various kinds of encounters. One of the most fundamental is interpersonal contact from which friendship, animosity, and companionship are born. In Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, friendship is defined in terms of ethical virtues, while in patristic writings friendship refers to a shared sense of being children of the one Father and brothers in Christ. From the Renaissance down to the modern era, there have been engaging discussions about forbidden friendships. In contrast, hostile feelings, especially jealousy and hatred, have long been favorite topics for writers such as Shakespeare who draws from the book of Proverbs in Julius Caesar and Othello to represent how the kisses of an enemy may be profuse.

On a broader scale, encounters can also be examined with reference to the contacts among different cultures and subsequent ideological transmission, conflict, hybridity, assimilation, and transformation. Ever since Classical Antiquity, communication between the East and the West has triggered a series of crucial cultural exchanges and interfaith interactions that can be inexhaustible subject matters for profound deliberation and academic research.

In addition to investigations into encounters in human societies, surveys of cross-species and eco-critical perspectives are welcomed so as to stimulate dialogue on environmental problems from both the viewpoints of the exploiters and the exploited. This discourse may help elucidate how human beings envision environments as their companions or adversaries and how human preconceptions determine the literary representation of human-animal and human-environment relationships. Therefore, aside from conventional approaches, this conference also aims to look at how the works of pre-modern environmental advocates square with the more popular drama, poetry, and even political discourse of the time and how these matters form an important part of literary, cultural, social, and environmental histories.

Within the purview of human contacts with the physical world, we would also welcome studies concerning engagement with nonphysical entities–the demonic and the heavenly—to shed light on the supernatural or transcendental perception of human encounters via different religious beliefs.

Within this four-stratum framework, this conference aims to proffer a forum for investigating human encounters that engender affection and enmity.

Topics for consideration may include (but are not limited to):

  • Philosophy of friendship in various cultures
  • Friendship from Classical Antiquity to the Renaissance
  • Forbidden friendship & homosexuality
  • Male friendship and female friendship
  • Friendship and patronage
  • Friendship and betrayal
  • Affiliation and politics
  • Human-nonhuman relationships
  • Humanism vs. anthropocentrism
  • Environmental encounters
  • Pre-modern environmental imagination
  • Representation of landscape and dreamscapes
  • Environmental impact on human psychology
  • Utopian imagination and new world order
  • Cross-species encounters
  • Bestiary and animal studies
  • Cross-boundary encounters
  • Wars and cultural encounters
  • Commerce and cultural encounters
  • Cosmography and the human world
  • Cosmology east and west
  • Pilgrimages and healing environments
  • Exorcism vs. healing practices
  • Interfaith encounters
  • Religious notions of friendship and relationship

TACMRS cordially invites papers that reach beyond the traditional chronological and disciplinary borders of Classical, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies. Please submit abstracts of 250 words and a one-page CV to Sandra Yu or Phoebe Yang at 2016tacmrs.nptu@gmail.com with a subject line stating “Submission for the 10th TACMRS Conference” by 3 February, 2016.

For more information, please visit the 2016 TACMRS Conference website: http://www.english.nptu.edu.tw

Discipline and Excess: A Graduate and Early Career Conference – Call For Papers

Discipline and Excess: A Graduate and Early Career Conference
Faculty of English, University of Cambridge
Friday, April 15, 2016

We invite paper proposals for Discipline and Excess, a conference which seeks to consider questions relating to boundaries and their transgression until 1750. The theme invites diverse interpretations of “discipline”—moral, religious, cultural, aesthetic, generic, geographic—in papers which explore the realms of penance and perfection, challenge the orderliness implicit in systems of knowledge, or examine the nature of punishment and retribution. The conference is aimed at early career scholars and graduate students from a range of academic fields. Discipline and Excess is organized by the M.Phil programs in Medieval, Renaissance, and 18th-Century Literature at the Faculty of English. Our external respondent will be Dr. Helen Barr, Associate Professor at the University of Oxford.

Papers should be a maximum of 20 minutes. Please email 250-word abstracts (text only, no attachments) by 1 February, 2016 to disciplineandexcess2016@gmail.com. Possible topics may include:

  • Crime and Punishment
  • Bounds of the Mind
  • Feast and Fast
  • Disciplining the Body
  • Exceeding the Page
  • Intertextuality
  • Sin, Play, Transgression
  • Rhetorical Limits
  • Disciplinary Boundaries
  • Material Excess

Black + White + Grey: The Lives + Works of Eric Gill + Robert Gibbings – Now Online

The Eric Gill and Robert Gibbings exhibition that ran at the University of Otago’s Special Collections Library from June to August, 2015, is now available as an online exhibition. Eric Gill was the creator of many of the fonts we use today, but also was involved with the Arts and Crafts movement which was strongly medievalist in inspiration.

To view the online exhibition, please visit: http://www.otago.ac.nz/library/exhibitions/gillandgibbings