Monthly Archives: October 2016

Associate Professor Mark Seymour, The University of Melbourne Free Public Lecture

“Emotional Arenas: Historicising Emotions through Spaces and Places in Nineteenth-Century Italy,” Associate Professor Mark Seymour (The University of Otago)

Date: Thursday 27 October 2016
Time: 6:15pm–7:30pm
Venue: Arts West North Wing-361, Collaborative Learning Room, Bld 148, The University of Melbourne
Enquiries: che-melb-admin@unimelb.edu.au

Registration not required.

The ARC’s CHE and other centres around the world attest to the fact that over the past decade emotions have emerged as a dynamic field of historical inquiry. In the process, terms such as ‘emotives’, emotional ‘regimes’, ‘communities’ and ‘practices’ have now established secure places in the scholarly lexicon. Yet historians pursuing this evanescent quarry could still do with further conceptual tools that might help to pin down, visualise, and analyse moments and mechanisms of emotional change in the past. Based on ideas developed through research on marriage, love affairs, a murder and a sensational trial in 1870s Italy, this seminar proposes historicising emotions in a way that emphasises space and place. Italy’s rapid transformation from ancien-régime backwater to constitutional nation provides the context for my argument that the spaces and places of modern western life function as ‘emotional arenas’, where subjective feelings meet the external world in a process of mutually re-shaping interplay.


Mark Seymour is Associate Professor of History at The University of Otago, New Zealand. He received a BA (Hons) from The University of Sydney, and an MA and PhD from the University of Connecticut. His research area is nineteenth- and twentieth-century Italy, with a particular interest in the nexus between private life and more public, institutional forces. His first book, Debating Divorce in Italy (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006), reconstructed Italy’s long struggle (1870–1970) to introduce a divorce law. He has since published articles in Social History, Rethinking History, Gender and History, Storicamente, and the Journal of Modern Italian Studies. In 2012, with Penelope Morris and Francesco Ricatti, he co-edited a special issue of Modern Italy on ‘Italy and the Emotions’ and the volume Politica ed emozioni nella storia d’Italia dal 1848 ad oggi (Rome: Viella). His most recent article was a review essay for the Journal of Women’s History on love and politics from eighteenth-century America to twentieth-century East Germany (2015). He is co-editor of the journal Modern Italy.

ANZAMEMS PATS 2017: “Marginalia and Markings: Reading Medieval and Early Modern Readers” – Call for Applications

Marginalia and Markings: Reading Early Modern and Medieval Readers
The National Library of New Zealand, Wellington
Saturday 11 February, 2017

Presenters include: Professor Lorna Hutson (Oxford), Associate Professor Rosalind Smith (Newcastle, Australia), Dr Malcolm Mercer (Royal Armouries, Tower of London), Dr Anthony Tedeschi (National Library of New Zealand)

A Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar (PATS) will be held on the day following the ANZAMEMS conference in Wellington, on Saturday 11 February (9-5pm).

This PATS workshop will maximise the presence of multiple international experts in Wellington for the ANZAMEMS biennial conference, and link their scholarship on marginalia and markings in early books to the special collections of the National Library of New Zealand. Each of the presenters has distinct expertise in working with marginalia and other reader markings in medieval and early modern manuscripts and printed books, and the National Library’s collections provide ample materials for hands-on examination and discussion by PATS participants.

This one-day workshop will take the form of speaker presentations in the morning, followed by student-focused workshop sessions in the afternoon. Numbers are strictly limited to 20 students.

Morning tea, afternoon tea, and lunch will be provided for all participants.

A strictly limited number of bursaries will be available to support postgraduate student attendance at the PATS. Applications for these bursaries can be submitted with your application for the PATS.

For full details and to apply, please visit: https://anzamems2017.wordpress.com/pats

Applications close on Friday 4 November, 2016.

Folger Shakespeare Library: Long- and Short-Term Fellowships 2017/18

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington DC supports research on all aspects of British and European literary, cultural, political, religious, theatrical, and social history from the fifteenth through the eighteenth centuries. The collections include over 160,000 printed books, 60,000 manuscripts, and 90,000 prints, costumes, drawings, photographs, paintings, historical objects, and other works of art.

APPLY BY 1 NOVEMBER 2016
For long-term fellowships with residencies of six to nine months. Stipends up to $50,000.

APPLY BY 1 MARCH 2017
For short-term fellowships with residencies of one to three months. Stipends of $2,500 per month.

We welcome applications from humanities faculty, and also from artists, archivists, curators, independent scholars, and librarians.

APPLY NOW FOR 2017-18: For further information please visit: http://www.folger.edu/fellowships

Art for the Powerful, Multiple Objects: Medals and Tokens in Europe from the Renaissance to the First World War – Call For Papers

Art for the Powerful, Multiple Objects: Medals and Tokens in Europe from the Renaissance to the First World War
Art du puissant, objet multiple: Médailles et jetons en Europe, de la Renaissance à la Première Guerre mondiale
Institut national d’histoire de l’art, Paris
30 March — 1 April, 2017

The medal was revived in the princely courts of fifteenth-century Italy as a commemorative art and quickly adopted by sovereigns across Europe. Medals, tokens, and other metallic objects devoid of fiduciary value became more and more widespread and benefitted from several peaks of popularity in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, as illustrated by the metallic histories of Louis XIV or Napoleon, a format adopted by others as far afield as the Tsar of Russia. Whilst changes in taste led the medal to be seen as in or out of fashion at different moments, it has continued to maintain its essentially commemorative function and has been used to express the ideals of all manner of political regimes from monarchies to republics.

This symposium seeks to explore the specificity of a form of official art that associates image and text, producing objects whose message is also partially conveyed by the hierarchy of values intrinsic to the metals used, from the noblest gold to more modest alloys. As objects that can be reproduced, that are easily portable and largely distributed, their biographies also tend to be quite distinct from that of other types of art objects. An initial specificity is that of the role of the engraver whose function oscillates between that of an artist, an artisan, and an agent of a commissioning power. His artistic practice can be considered in some sense as paradoxical in so much as it is constrained by the conventions of the medium and by the outline of the project which his talent is called on to convey in material form. This opens up to the question of the expressive aims of this official art that seeks to capture and commemorate History as it happens, fortifying the glory of the commissioning party. Indeed, medals and tokens represent the result of the interplay of the different actors who contribute to their elaboration: from the initial idea developed by a commissioning power and affiliated scholars, to the drawing of a model, to the production and diffusion of the multiple editions of the final product. Medals also need to be considered as part of a wide range of visual productions that share a common language dedicated to reinforcing the powers in place. Finally, greater attention needs to be paid to the manner in which these objects (and their models) have circulated, in particular by considering the development of a market for modern and contemporary medals and their status in the make-up of private and public coin collections. This may also be an opportunity to consider the reciprocal influence between the evolution of the taste and interest of collectors and production styles, techniques, and themes through time.

This conference will showcase current research that can provide an alternative to a very dispersed historiography dominated by the genre of the catalogue. We hope that a comparative effort, with cases from across Europe, in a large chronological frame will help to establish an interdisciplinary approach to the production and circulation of medals and similar objects; one that reflects their complex nature and the specificity of their biographies. We welcome perspectives from a range of disciplines and research perspectives including art history, social and political history, numismatics, material culture studies, etc.

Proposal of no more than 400 words should be sent accompanied by a short CV before the 6th of November, 2016 to the following address: colloquemedailles2017@gmail.com. Each presentation should aim to be no longer than 20 minutes, and the conference papers will be published. Languages are French and English. The organizing committee will give notice of acceptance by mid December 2016.

Organizing Committee

  • Felicity Bodenstein, docteur en Histoire de l’art, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Florenz, Max-Planck-Institut
  • Thomas Cocano, doctorant en Histoire, EPHE
  • Ludovic Jouvet, doctorant en Histoire de l’art, Université de Bourgogne/ INHA
  • Katia Schaal, doctorante en Histoire de l’art, École du Louvre / Université de Poitiers / INHA
  • Sabrina Valin, doctorante en Histoire de l’art, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre-La Défense

Scientific Committee

  • Marc Bompaire, directeur d’études, EPHE
  • Béatrice Coullaré, chargée de conservation, Monnaie de Paris
  • Frédérique Duyrat, directrice du département des Monnaies, Médailles et Antiques, BnF
  • Victor Hundsbuckler, conservateur du patrimoine, responsable de la Conservation, Monnaie de Paris
  • Thierry Sarmant, conservateur en chef, Service historique de la Défense à Vincennes
  • Philippe Thiébaut, conservateur général du patrimoine, conseiller scientifique, INHA
  • Inès Villela-Petit, conservatrice du patrimoine, département des Monnaies, Médailles et Antiques, BnF

Institutional Partners

  • Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense (École doctorale 395, Milieux, cultures et sociétés du passé et du présent – Laboratoire du HAR, Histoire des Arts et des Représentations)
  • École pratique des hautes études (EPHE)
  • Monnaie de Paris
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF)
  • Institut national d’histoire de l’art (INHA)

Receptions: 2017 Conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association – Call For Papers

Receptions
2017 Conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association
Australian National University, Canberra
21–22 April, 2017

Conference Website

This conference invites papers on the broad theme of the alterity of the Middle Ages. The state of being other or different–otherness–is at the heart of the reception theory and offers the opportunity to investigate the ways the Middle Ages have been received into the modern world; and the ways in which the Medieval world acted as conduit for the transmission of the Classical. We welcome any papers related to all aspects of the Late Antique and Early Medieval periods (c. 400–1150) in all cultural, geographic, religious and linguistic settings, even if they do not strictly adhere to the theme.

Abstracts of 250-300 words for 20-minute papers should be submitted via email to conference@aema.net.au by 15 January, 2017.

Medieval Academy of America: Travel Grants for Part-time or Unaffiliated Scholars – Call For Applications

The Medieval Academy of America provides a limited number of travel grants to help Academy members who hold doctorates but are not in full-time faculty positions, or are adjuncts without access to institutional funding, attend conferences to present their work. The deadline for application is 1 November, 2016 for meetings to be held between 16 February and 31 August, 2017.

For full details, please visit: https://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/page/Travel_Grants

Art, Objects and Emotions – Registration Now Open

ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions presents:

Art, Objects and Emotions

Convened by Prof Charles Zika and Dr Angela Hesson

Date: 15 & 16 November 2016
Venue: Conference Centre, The Woodward Centre, 10th floor, Melbourne Law School
Registrations: http://alumni.online.unimelb.edu.au/s/1182/match/wide.aspx?sid=1182&gid=1&pgid=10012&content_id=7267
Information: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/art-objects-and-emotions-1400-1800
Contact: che-melb-admin@unimelb.edu.au

Collaboratory Dinner:

Date: Wednesday 16 November, 2016
Time: TBC once program is finalised
Venue: The Carlton Wine Room, 172-174 Faraday Street, Carlton VIC 3053
Cost: Full $80, concession $45, speaker (free)

‘Art’ wrote Susanne Langer ‘is the objectification of feeling.’ A century earlier, Paul Cezanne had made the more extravagant claim ‘A work of art which did not begin in emotion is not art.’ Although the impulse to define art in such succinct and finite terms might be deemed an essentially modern one, the wider notion of the inseparability of art and emotion, and the power of art to evoke strong feelings in viewers has a long history. In more recent times scholars have also begun to explore the role of material objects in human relationships through their power to evoke strong emotions. Artistic and non-artistic objects can generate desire and also violence, pride, belonging, devotion and disgust.

This collaboratory will consider the manifold ways in which art and objects depict, reflect, symbolise, communicate and regulate emotion in Europe in the period from c.1400 to c.1800, a period when objects of all kinds circulated widely and began to be systematically collected and displayed. From so-called fine art such as painting and sculpture, to decorative art and all manner of objects, we will examine the role of emotion in shaping our conception of art and objects, and likewise, of art and objects in shaping our understanding of emotion.

Confirmed speakers include: Lisa Beaven (Art History, University of Melbourne), Thomas Dixon (History, University of London), Stephanie Downes (Literature, University of Melbourne), Elina Gertsman (Art History, Case Western Reserve University), Sasha Handley (History, University of Manchester), Angela Hesson (Art History/Literature, University of Melbourne), Matthew Martin (Curator, NGV), Shelley Perlove (Art History, University of Michigan-Dearborn), Corine Schleif (Art History, Arizona State University), Gary Schwartz (Art History, Independent Scholar), Angela McShane (Victoria & Albert Museum/History, University of Sheffield), Miya Tokumitsu (Art History, University of Melbourne) and Charles Zika (History, University of Melbourne).

Shakespeare in the Great Court @ University of Queensland

Shakespeare in the Great Court

Date: 21 October 2016
Time: 4.00pm – 5.00pm
Venue: Great Court, The University of Queensland, St Lucia Campus
Cost: Free

The Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in collaboration with the Queensland Shakespeare Ensemble present Shakespeare in the Great Court.

Bring your camping chairs and picnic rugs and join us for some Music and Madness as we take a look at some of William Shakespeare’s memorable theatrical moments in a selection of scenes, sonnets and songs performed by the Queensland Shakespeare Ensemble, resident theatre company of UQ’s Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.

This event is free and open to everyone so please spread the word.

Limited seating will be available and paid parking is available on site, for details click here.

Refreshments are available to purchase from the many cafes and bars on campus either before or after the performance.

This event is part of Delighted Spirit – the University’s tribute to the 400th anniversary of the death of William Shakespeare.

Please note: alcohol is not permitted at this event.

Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies: Volume 48 (2017) – Call For Papers

Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, published annually under the auspices of the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, invites the submission of articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies.

Submission deadline for Volume 48 (2017): 1 February, 2017.

The Comitatus editorial board will make its final selections by early May 2017. Please send submissions as email attachments to Dr. Blair Sullivan, sullivan@humnet.ucla.edu.

Lineage, Loyalty, and Legitimacy in Iberia and North Africa (600-1600) – Call For Papers

Lineage, Loyalty, and Legitimacy in Iberia and North Africa (600-1600)
Saint Louis University
19-21 June, 2017

The Center of Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Saint Louis University in conjunction with the Medieval Iberia and North Africa Group at the University of Chicago invite abstracts for an upcoming conference, “Lineage, Loyalty, and Legitimacy in Iberia and North Africa (600-1600),” to be held at the SLU campus on June 19-21, 2017 during the 5th Annual Symposium of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. The aim of this sub-conference is to build on recent scholarship which has sought to move beyond notions of “the state” as a mode of inquiry in Iberian and North African studies, and to promote instead a more holistic, interdisciplinary approach to the study of the politics, cultural production, and religious practices of these regions. Toward that end, this conference will bring together scholars from a range of disciplines in order to facilitate conversations about the relationships between politics, historiography, art, literature, and religion in medieval and early modern Iberia and North Africa.

Preliminary guiding questions for proposals include:

  • How were kinship and patronage networks forged and negotiated, dismantled and maintained?
  • What (in)formal bonds and socio-religious rituals demonstrated (dis)loyalty, whether within families or between political actors?
  • How were institutions formed and maintained?
  • How were concepts of (il)legitimacy produced, critiqued, and perpetuated during this period?
  • What role did art, architecture and material culture play in the construction of notions of legitimacy and authenticity?
  • How did the transmission or co-production of knowledge and culture across religious boundaries contribute to medieval and early modern genealogies of knowledge? How did these processes bolster or discredit claims to epistemological legitimacy?

These questions are meant to be interpreted broadly, and applicants are invited to submit brief proposals for papers addressing the conference’s title themes. Possible topics include but are not limited to: royal and noble families; inheritance and succession; marriage; dynastic politics and genealogical narratives; oaths and fealty; jurisprudence and theology; intellectual traditions and networks; textual and artistic production, especially the “co-production” of culture across social, ethnic, and religious boundaries; document authenticity and forgery; administra9tive precedent and innovation.

We encourage submissions for 20-minute papers from a range of disciplines including: history, religious studies, literary studies, anthropology, archaeology, manuscript studies, and art history. The hope is that this conference will provide a forum for discussion and collaboration between scholars. Graduate students, post-doctoral researchers, and early-career faculty are particularly encouraged to apply.

Please submit a brief CV along with an abstract of roughly 300 words to Edward Holt (eholt3@slu.edu) by December 15. Direct any questions or concerns to Edward Holt or Mohamad Ballan (mballan87@gmail.com).