Monthly Archives: December 2016

Before Shakespeare – Call For Papers

Before Shakespeare
University of Roehampton, London
24-27 August, 2017

The Before Shakespeare conference explores the first three decades of the London playhouses (c. 1565-95). We encourage papers from a rich variety of approaches, interests, and methodologies, including but not limited to:

  • Popular culture of the period
  • Literary developments of the mid to late sixteenth century social history
  • Archaeology
  • Theatre history
  • Performance criticism

We encourage proposals for different kinds of presentations: traditional papers, panels, performance workshops, shorter speculations or provocations into the state of the discipline, or roundtables. On the third day of the conference, we will be working closely with the theatre company attached to the project, The Dolphin’s Back, and welcome proposals to work with them. If you are interested in different forms of presentation or in putting together a panel, you are welcome to contact us to discuss.

Please send abstracts of up to 300 words and a short biography to beforeshakespeare@gmail.com by 30 March, 2017.

The conference features workshops and performances in collaboration with The Dolphin’s Back (director and actor James Wallace); theatremaker Emma Frankland; and Shakespeare’s Globe.

Keynotes: Nandini Das, William Ingram, Heather Knight, Cathy Shrank, Holger Syme, and Emma Whipday.

The conference ends with the final Before Shakespeare Read Not Dead at the Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, Shakespeare’s Globe, on Sunday 27 August. (The Read Not Dead staged reading of Sapho and Phao is a conference event, but tickets must be booked separately via the Globe website.)

Full price: £115; with accommodation (incl. breakfast): £315

PhD/ECR subsidised price: £35; with accommodation (incl. breakfast): £125

We also offer two UK travel grants (£50) and one international travel grant (£180), including fee waivers, for PhD/ECR delegates thanks to a Small Conference Grant from the Society for Renaissance Studies. Please apply by email to the above address with a short CV and 250-word statement in addition to your abstract.

Tales of Ice and Fire: Queenship, Female Agency, and the Role of Advice in Game of Thrones – Call For Papers

Call For Contributions: Tales of Ice and Fire: Queenship, Female Agency, and the Role of Advice in Game of Thrones

We are pleased to announce a call for contributions to a new collection of what will be a selection of ground-breaking scholarly essays to be edited by Zita Eva Rohr and Lisa Benz, in
association with the Royal Studies Network. The collection will be published in a 90,000-word volume, which has already welcomed the interest of a major international scholarly press of
considerable prestige and standing. It is the editors’ intention that the volume will likewise initiate a series of conference sessions to be sponsored by the Network at selected international conference events.

We seek proposals from distinguished scholars, early career researchers and exceptional graduate students who understand the importance of the Game of Thrones phenomenon to twenty-first century medieval, and early modern historical, feminist, gender, literary, and cultural studies. It has been noted elsewhere that premodern queens endured considerable challenges in the acquisition and maintenance of power and influence. The path to power for a premodern queen is still very much a road less travelled by researchers, one which increasingly demands rigorous exploration by specialist scholars to help us understand the challenges with which these women were confronted as well as their ultimate successes or failures. Game of Thrones is in some senses a watershed cultural moment, providing a platform from which to tackle questions and issues raised by popular culture, current geopolitics, and the study of premodern men and women and the times in which they lived.

Intellectual Justification

The aim of this collection is to study the questions, issues and themes raised by both Game of Thrones, the television series, and George R. R. Martin’s epic novels series, A Song of Ice and Fire, for the consideration of twenty-first century audiences and readerships. This scholarly collection will focus upon their relevance to, and points of intersection with, existing and emerging queenship scholarship and how popular historical understandings of this scholarship informs Game of Thrones and A Song of Ice and Fire.

Medieval and early modern queens and powerful elite women were expected to adhere to the gold standard set by the Virgin Mary. They further emphasized this standard by the conscious and careful display of visible and overt femininity and devotion. However, to be recognized as a force to be reckoned with in premodern times, a powerful queen needed to synthesize masculine qualities to manifest un cuer d’homme, whilst paradoxically adhering to gendered social norms—a non-threatening pious and devout feminine outward appearance.

While some hold that most of the female characters in Game of Thrones/A Song of Ice and Fire exist and act solely in the service of male protagonists, their elite women such as Daenerys Targaryen, Cersei Lannister and Arya Stark exhibit independent agency and drive the plot forward. This is especially the case with the most recent sixth television season, about which a commentator has recently remarked “is suddenly all about powerful women getting their way”. (LaSota, 2016) Season six has likewise tapped into a trope of longstanding: “anxieties about women being something other than they seem” (Garber, 2016) — especially evident in the great reveal of Melisandre, the Red Woman, as well as the subtle strategies employed by Margaery Tyrell to neutralize her power-hungry mother-in-law, dowager-queen Cersei. In the case of Melisandre, George R. R. Martin employs “the historical definition of ‘glamour’—as a brand of magic that specializes in deceptive appearances.” (Garber 2016) In many respects, Melisandre’s resemblance to Jean d’Arras’s late fourteenth century heroine, Mélusine of Lusignan, is striking and worthy of scholarly comparison and analysis.

In Game of Thrones, one notable example of a queen who manages the difficult balancing act between her masculine and feminine qualities is Daenerys Targaryen. (Rolker 2015) Margaery
Tyrell is yet another. Premodern queens and elite women could aspire to carve out a career for themselves in politics and diplomacy through their children as guardians and queens-regent. A
queen’s power frequently pitted females against one another. In the imaginary world of Game of Thrones this is reflected, for example, in the competition for political power between Margaery and Cersei. There are many such examples of instances of female to female power struggles during the actual world of the premodern period.

For feminist scholars, anxieties surrounding the Unknowable Woman, women such as Daenerys, Melisandre and Margaery Tyrell in Game of Thrones, bring into play such analytical lenses as reputation, self-fashioning and gender. The role, place and efficacy of advice in general, and advisors in particular, are significant ideas embedded within all six seasons of Game of Thrones and the epic novels of the A Song of Ice and Fire series. For scholars of history and literature, this is of considerable relevance to the study of women such as Christine de Pizan and Anne of France, who counselled queens and elite women to look to the achievement of a spotless reputation and an enduring legacy. To exercise independent agency, power and influence in what was almost exclusively a man’s world, both Christine and Anne urged for the deployment of a good dose of juste ypocrisie combined with conscious acts of self-fashioning and self-representation. For Anne, no mere observer and commentator of gender politics, this was the secret to her success.

Likewise, the evolution of the character of Tyrion Lannister offers a place to explore the idea of good counsel from not just the perspective of women’s studies, but the wider social context.
Tyrion uses his powerful intellect, combined with his facility for reading the character of others as easily as he does books, to overcome the travails and prejudices he must face to rise to the
position of Hand of the Queen on Daenerys’s Small Council. The Small Council itself, the body advising the King of the Seven Kingdoms, and its shifting membership, is likewise worthy of
attention in light of the functioning of privy councils and secret councils of monarchs across multiple geographies and geopolitical contexts during the premodern period, which saw the
emergence of the successful territorial monarchies that were the precursors of the early modern state.

Listed below are some suggested topics and themes contributors might wish to explore, but should not confine themselves to (not in any particular order of precedence):

  • The Unknowable Woman
  • Reputation
  • Self-fashioning
  • Self-representation
  • Patronage
  • Female Agency
  • Female Power and Influence
  • Gendered Strategies for the Acquisition and Maintenance of Power
  • Soft Power
  • Violence and Conquest
  • The Male Gaze
  • Revenge
  • Viricide, Familicide etc.
  • Female Military Prowess
  • Female Regency
  • Marriage
  • Dynasties
  • Succession
  • Illegitimacy
  • ‘Proactive’ Motherhood
  • Rape
  • Incest
  • The Other
  • Queerness
  • Alliances
  • Allegiances
  • Advice and Advisors
  • Magic
  • Myth and mythical creatures
  • Mélusine of Lusignan/Melisandre, the Red Woman
  • Spirituality, Spiritual Leaders
  • Gendered Discourse and Action
  • Male and Female Relationships and Partnerships

Please send a 500-word proposal and a one-page c.v. to both Zita Rohr, zita.rohr@mq.edu.au, and Lisa Benz, lisalbenz@gmail.com. Due date for proposals is May 1, 2017, with notifications
of accepted proposals to be made by June 1, 2017. Chapter drafts of 8,000 words, including notes and bibliography, will be due to the Editors by September 1, 2017.

Before Orientalism: The “images” of Islam (15th-17th c.) and their Mediterranean Connections – Call For Papers

Before Orientalism: The “images” of Islam (15th-17th c.) and their Mediterranean Connections
Fundación BBVA, Madrid
18-19 May, 2017

In recent years, the study of religious otherness has experienced a significant surge. Regarding the perception of Islam in Europe, the Romantic dichotomous vision between the orientalist attraction and the rejection and hatred is being left behind. The purpose of this conference is to analyse, from a pluri-disciplinar perspective, which conceptions or images of Islam were developed, from the end of the Middle Ages to the decline of the Austria dynasty in the Iberian Peninsula and other Mediterranean enclaves closely connected to the Hispanic Crown. The aim of this event is to analyse the stereotypes, which have traditionally limited historical studies; and also, the dissociation between the imaged produced by literature and the visual discourses of several social strata which were in closer contact with Islam.

The topics addressed during the conference will be:

  1. How the (literary and visual) image of Islam was created and developed in the Iberian Peninsula during the 15th to 17th centuries.
  2. What are the convergences and divergences between the spheres of the letters and the arts.
  3. The value of stereotypes in the building of the image and identity of Muslims.
  4. The weight of 19th century literary and artistic historiography in the blurring of the Medieval and Modern images of religious otherness.
  5. The contribution of 16th and 17th orientalist images in the later construction of 19th century orientalism.
  6. Is it possible to elaborate a cartography of the representations of Muslims in the different Hispanic territories?
  7. Was there an invisible Islam? How was it materialized?

Call for papers

Papers submitted must be of maximum 500 words in Spanish, English, Italian or French, together with a brief summary of the research record of the author, and main publications. Deadline is 1 February, 2017. Acceptance of papers will be communicated by February 10. The papers must be submitted to proyecto.impi@gmail.com. Oral communications will be 15-20 minutes. The registration fee is 50 €. Registration includes both attendance and publication of the texts (once approved by peer review procedure). To participate in the publication it is necessary to attend the conference to present the paper. News related to this conference will be published in https://impi.hypotheses.org

ANZAMEMS 2017 – Early-Bird Registration Closes on 15 December

A reminder that Early-Bird registration for the 11th Biennial Conference of the Australian & New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (to be held at Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand from Tuesday 7 – Friday 10 February 2017) closes in one week!

The deadline for Early-Bird registration is 15 December, 2016.

To register, please visit: https://anzamems2017.wordpress.com/registration

Reformations during the Middle Ages and Renaissance – Call For Papers

“Reformations during the Middle Ages and Renaissance”
Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association 2017
Colorado Mesa University, Grand Junction, CO
June 22–24, 2017

The Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association invites paper and panel proposals for its 2017 conference, to take place on the campus of Colorado Mesa University in Grand Junction, June 22–24, 2017. The conference theme is “Reformations during the Middle Ages and Renaissance,” in honor of the 500th anniversary of the publication of Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses. The program organizers invite proposals that consider the idea of reform, broadly conceived, during the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Proposals may consider religious reform during the medieval and Renaissance periods but may also investigate continuity and change with regard to various aspects of the history and historiography of the periods as well as changes in literary culture, style, patronage, criticism, and subjects. The Program Committee encourages proposals from scholars and students working in all relevant fields, including but not limited to theology, history, literature, theatre, music, and the visual arts. As always, while paper and panel proposals addressing the conference theme will receive special consideration for inclusion, proposals in any area of medieval and Renaissance studies are welcome.

Graduate student presenters are eligible to compete for the Michael T. and Phyllis J. Walton Graduate Travel Award to help defray expenses associated with travel to and presentation at the annual conference. The RMMRA also awards two annual paper prizes: the Allen DuPont Breck Award for the best paper at the conference presented by a junior scholar, and the Delno C. West Award for the best paper at the conference presented by a senior scholar (at the rank of Associate Professor or higher). For additional information on the RMMRA, please visit http://www.rmmra.org.

Paper and panel proposals should be directed to the RMMRA Program Committee via email to RMMRA President-Elect Ginger Smoak (ginger.smoak@utah.edu). Proposals are due by March 15, 2017. A proposal must include:

  1. Name of presenter
  2. Participant category (faculty/graduate student/independent scholar) and institutional affiliation
  3. One-page CV (in case of panel proposal, include one for each participant)
  4. Preferred mailing and email address (in case of panel proposal, indicate a panel contact person)
  5. An abstract of the proposed paper/panel (250 words)
  6. Audiovisual requirements and any other specific requests

The Program Committee will notify participants if their proposals have been accepted by April 5, 2017. Please note that all presenters at the conference must be active members of RMMRA who have paid their annual dues of $25 by the time of the conference.

Romances in Middle-earth – Call For Papers

Romances in Middle-earth
14th Annual Tolkien at UVM Conference
University of Vermont
Saturday April 8th

Organizers of the Tolkien at UVM Conference are now accepting abstracts for the 2017 conference until the February 1 deadline. We welcome papers on every topic but will give priority to those addressing the theme. Tolkien wrote that he had the romances of William Morris in mind when writing The Lord of the Rings. We also know he was ispired by the Arthurian romances of England, Wales, and France. Tolkien’s own interlacing narrative style is very much derived from this medieval genre (while also anticipating the Post-modern). Additionally, Tolkien wrote of numerous romances of great intensity and poignancy within his narrative framework. Papers might consider these within the context of miscegenation, gender fluidity, or the homo-erotic, or they might explore other areas of interest.

Please submit abstracts by the February 1, 2017 deadline to Christopher Vaccaro at cvaccaro@uvm.edu.

The Art of the Network: Visualising Social Relationships, 1400-1600 – Call For Papers

The Art of the Network: Visualising Social Relationships, 1400-1600
Annual Postgraduate Renaissance Symposium
Courtauld Institute of Art, London

28 April, 2017

In recent years, the analysis of social networks has generated a fruitful field of scholarly enquiry. Research addressing the dynamics that govern personal relationships within and without communities of various kinds has permeated through historical, anthropological, and sociological studies. These investigations have traced the ways in which societies structured according to gender, family bonds, and neighbourhood ties as well as political, professional, and religious associations regulated social interaction. However, the role of art and architecture in cultivating these interpersonal relationships has not been explored comprehensively. Even art historical approaches have frequently given preference to textual rather than visual evidence in elucidating these social networks.

This conference seeks to shed light on the ways in which social networks have been represented visually. Such an approach has great potential to deepen the discussion surrounding the commission, production, and reception of art and architecture between 1400 and 1600. We invite studies that bring into dialogue social connections on the one hand and visual manifestations on the other. Preference will be given to papers that present unpublished material while engaging with methodological frameworks and/or historiographical perspectives.

Topics might include but are not limited to:

  • how artistic networks affect the construction of identities
  • the mobility of art and artists within networks
  • whether formal, iconographic and/or stylistic features denote adherence to a community
  • the identification of specific individuals in works of art
  • how issues of display influence social bonds
  • the employment of personal, familial, political, ecclesiastical or professional devices

Proposals of no more than 350 words should be submitted together with a short CV to Alexander Röstel (alexander.rostel@courtauld.ac.uk) and Alexander Noelle (alexander.noelle@courtauld.ac.uk) by 31 December, 2016. Successful candidates will be notified in mid-January. Papers should not exceed 20 minutes in length. Costs for travel and accommodation cannot be covered but partial funding might become available and catering will be provided for all speakers.

Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship – Call For Applications

Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship
University of London – School of Advanced Study

Location: London
Hours: Full Time
Contract Type: Contract / Temporary

The School of Advanced Study, University of London invites applications for Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowships, to start between 1 September 2017 and 1 May 2018. Early Career Fellowships aim to provide career development opportunities for those who are at a relatively early stage of their academic careers, but who have a proven record of research. The expectation is that Fellows should undertake a significant piece of publishable work during their tenure, and that the Fellowships should lead to a more permanent academic position.

Each year the School is pleased to support a limited number of applications to the Trust for outstanding projects from exceptional candidates. We welcome expressions of interest from candidates with a completed PhD and an excellent track record, working in any of the disciplines covered by our constituent institutes.

For full instructions on how to apply, see http://www.sas.ac.uk/support-research/fellowships/externally-funded-fellowships/leverhulme-trust-early-career-fellowships.

Applications close on 6 January, 2017.