Monthly Archives: February 2017

Summer School in Latin (2017): Bracciano and Rome – Call for Applications

Summer School in Latin
Bracciano and Rome
8-22 July, 2017

THE COURSE

This two-week intensive course will guide participants through the basics of Latin to selected literature from the classical and medieval ages. We shall also read works in neo-Latin (Latin written in the Renaissance and since) and inscriptions from all periods, ancient and modern. The major emphasis will be on the Latin of the Middle Ages.

THE VENUES

Week one will be taught at the Villaggio Betania, run by the Nashville Dominican Sisters, in Bracciano, an attractive town about 30 kms from Rome. Week two will be spent at the Bernardi campus of the University of St Thomas, overlooking the Tiber in central Rome, and close to sites of extraordinary interest and beauty.

WHY LATIN?

Latin is arguably the mother-tongue of Europe. Its literature is immensely rich: original work continued to be written in the Latin language up to modern times. It is arguable that some knowledge of Latin is essential to the full appreciation of English literature written up to at the least the beginning of the twentieth century, because Latin was part of the intellectual equipment of most authors until that time. Students of history, philosophy and modern languages also recognize the value of increased familiarity with primary sources. Latin is a doorway that can lead you to wonderful delights.

PREREQUISITES?

There are no formal prerequisites. However beginners, especially those who have never studied a language other than English, are strongly urged to buy a self-instruction primer and work through the initial stages at least prior to the start of the course. On the other hand, already proficient readers of Latin have enjoyed our courses and derived benefit and pleasure from reading material from outside the standard curricula. The teaching method allows this versatility. All translation is done by the lecturer to ensure rapid and efficient coverage of material, and no participant is embarrassed by questioning. On the other hand questioning and discussion is encouraged: participants from a diversity of backgrounds have contributed wonderfully to the success of these schools.

COURSE CONTENT

We shall read only ‘real’ Latin. Scripture and basic liturgical texts will be included as introductory material due to their relative ease and familiarity. Patristic authors such as St Augustine will be examined. Other material covered: philosophical and theological Latin (Boethius, Aquinas); secular poetry (e.g. the Carmina Burana) and religious poetry including specimens of the great tradition of Latin hymnody (Ambrose, Venantius, sequences); narrative and history (Einhard, the Legenda Aurea); texts representing the continuation of the classical tradition. Other material can be included on request.

WHY ITALY?

What better place to learn Latin than in its heartland? Excursions to sites of particular interest in Rome and surrounding areas form a part of the course. We shall learn to interpret inscriptions that tell us so much yet escape the notice of ordinary visitors. Italian culture and language are intimately involved with Latin and the course will seek to clarify the linkage between the two.

THE LECTURER

David Daintree has taught intensive summer schools in Latin for over twenty years. His courses have been offered in Hobart, Sydney, Perth and New Zealand. With Dr Susanna Rizzo he established Campion College’s biennial Rome Summer School in 2012.

THE COST

The cost of the two-week programme will be 1,500 Euros for twin-share accommodation. Single accommodation will also be available on request. The cost includes accommodation, tuition, written materials and some meals – all meals at Bracciano and breakfast only at the Bernardi campus. It excludes air fares and airport transfers – participants should make their own arrangements to arrive in time for the course. Arrive Bracciano Saturday 8 July (own arrangements). We shall travel as a group by train to central Rome on Saturday 15 July. Check out Saturday 22 July.

FURTHER INFORMATION AND ENROLMENTS

Please contact Dr Daintree directly – dccdain@gmail.com

Early Modern Manuscripts Online (EMMO)

The IMLS-funded Early Modern Manuscripts Online (EMMO) project at the Folger is thrilled to announce the beta launch of our free, searchable repository of manuscript images, metadata, and transcriptions.

Early Modern Manuscripts Online (EMMO) is a project of the Folger Shakespeare Library, funded by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), to provide scholars and the general public with convenient web access to transcriptions, images, and metadata for manuscripts from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

EMMO provides high-quality images and consistent transcriptions for a variety of manuscripts, such as letters, diaries, wills, coats of arms, literary pieces, recipe books, miscellanies, and more. Making the rich content of these manuscripts available online enhances research capabilities in many disciplines by adding important sources for scholars to examine and also promotes the learning of paleography (the study of pre-modern handwriting methods).

For more information, and to access EMMO, please visit: http://emmo.folger.edu.

Prof. Lorna Hutson, Free Public Talk @ University of Newcastle, Sydney Campus

“The Shakespearean Unscene: Sexual Phantasy in A Midsummer Night’s Drearm”‘ Lorna Hutson, Merton Professor of English Literature, Oxford University

Date: Friday February 24, 2017
Time: 3-5pm
Venue: University of Newcastle, Sydney Campus, Room 229, 55 Elizabeth St, Sydney
RSVP: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lorna-hutson-public-talk-tickets-31591800927

Abstract: Post-Freudian and post-Foucauldian readings of A Midsummer Night’s Dream assume that the play celebrates the freeing up of female sexual desire from neurotic inhibitions or disciplinary norms. But this is incompatible with what we know historically about sixteenth century society’s investment in female chastity. This paper addresses the problem of this incompatibility by turning to Shakespeare’s use of forensic or legal rhetoric. It argues that Shakespeare animates the chief topics of proof – Time, Place and Manner – as the mysterious Night, Wood and Moonlight which make sexual crimes (violence, stealth, infidelity) take on the form of likelihood and fairy agency. The play thus brilliantly represents the stories of Theseus’s notorious rapes, abandonments and perjuries as fearful ‘phantasies’ or imaginings experienced by Hermia and Helena. This explains how the Victorians could interpret the play as a chaste, childlike ballet, while moderns and postmoderns take it to be a play about psychological repressions working against the free play of sexual desire.

Patricia Crawford Postgraduate Publication Prize Announcement

ANZAMEMS is delighted to announce Anna Milne-Tavendale as the winner of ANZAMEMS’ inaugural Patricia Crawford Postgraduate Publication Prize for her article:

‘John of Paris and the Apocalypse: The Boundaries of Dominican Scholastic Identity’, published in John of Paris: Beyond Royal and Papal Power, ed. Chris Jones (Brepols, 2015), pp. 119–49. http://www.brepols.net/Pages/ShowProduct.aspx?prod_id=IS-9782503532806-1.

All four judges agreed that Anna’s article was of exceptionally high quality in a field of strong entrants.

Congratulations Anna!

Philippa Maddern ECR Publication Prize Announcement

ANZAMEMS is delighted to announce Dr Heather Dalton as the winner of its inaugural Philippa Maddern ECR Publication Prize for her article:

‘A Sulphur-crested Cockatoo in Fifteenth Century Mantua: Rethinking Symbols of Sanctity and Patterns of Trade’, published in Renaissance Studies 28/5 (November 2014): 676–94. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rest.12042/abstract

All four judges agreed that Heather’s article was of exceptionally high quality in a field of strong entrants.

Congratulations Heather!

Shakespeare, Technology, Media, Performance – Call For Papers

Shakespeare, Technology, Media, Performance
University of Exeter
Saturday 24 June, 2017

This conference will examine the recent significant changes in how Shakespeare’s plays are performed and disseminated through old and new technologies and media.

At one end of the spectrum, through performances in reconstructed early modern theatres, early modern performance technologies have re-entered mainstream culture. The Sam Wanamaker Playhouse is only the most recent example of how early modern technologies and the plays written by Shakespeare’s contemporaries and successors have returned to the cutting edge of present-day theatre.

At the other end of the spectrum, the current production of The Tempest by the RSC in partnership with Intel exemplifies how mainstream theatre companies have, in the wake of productions by smaller companies experimenting with digital and virtual theatre, embraced digital media. The digital revolution has generated new ways of creating characters, moving them across physical and conceptual spaces and reimagining the spectacular technologies of the Jacobean masque. This Tempest is the latest in a string of productions that have made use not only of complex backstage technology but also of social media to reach out to new physical and virtual audiences. Moreover, with the increased use of theatre broadcast technologies, productions of early modern drama can now reach global audiences and be disseminated in a multitude of formats: screened in cinemas or on television, re-edited for educational use, streamed online, sold as DVDs or Blu-Ray discs, extracted on company websites and in promotional tweets, and staged live.

Meanwhile, changes in technology have also affected how early modern drama is remediated on television, in feature films and on our computer screens. We can now find a dizzying range of appropriations and mash-ups of Shakespeare and early modern drama across a variety of online platforms and social media sites, with individuals able to use digital technologies as an entry-point into participating in performance. Technology is thus affecting the production and dissemination of early modern drama along with access to the productions, modes of spectatorship and participation in fan cultures.

This conference is organised and sponsored by Shakespeare Bulletin to mark the end of Pascale Aebischer’s term as General Editor of the journal. It responds to the technological turn in performance studies evident in a significant part of the work submitted to the journal between 2012 and 2017 and aims to bring together a range of scholarly approaches to the technologies of performance that shape the production of Shakespeare and his contemporaries today.

Keynote speakers:

  • Courtney Lehmann (University of the Pacific)
  • Ramona Wray (Queen’s University Belfast)
  • Pascale Aebischer (University of Exeter)

We call for papers on any of the following or related topics in relation to the performance of Shakespeare and/or early modern drama:

  • Re-imagined performance technologies in reconstructed playhouses and Practice-as-Research
  • Intermedial performance practices
  • Social media performance
  • Theatre broadcast technology and spectatorship
  • Television and feature film adaptation
  • Digital objects and digital media
  • Technology of the classroom

Paper proposals of up to 300 words, accompanied by a short biographical statement, should be submitted to Emma Bessent (E.Bessent@exeter.ac.uk) by Monday 27 February. Up to 6 postgraduate bursaries covering the conference attendance fee plus a standard contribution of £50 to assist with travel expenses are available to encourage contributions to the debate by a new generation of scholars. Please specify in your proposal if you wish to apply for one of these. Early submissions will be preferred.

University of Poitiers: Semaines d’Études Médiévales – Registration Now Open

University of Poitiers, “Semaines d’Études Médiévales”, June 2017

Every year in June, the CESCM (Centre of Researches for Medieval Studies) at the University of Poitiers in central France organizes conferences and visits during two weeks called “Semaines d’Études Médiévales”. These international and pluri-disciplinary sessions gather students and scholars from all around the world, including Australia.

The 2017 event will be held between 19–30 June. For more information, including program and registration details, see the Centre’s blog: https://cescm.hypotheses.org/5169. The registration deadline is 30 March; for additional details, contact secretariat.cescm@univ-poitiers.fr.

Medieval Manuscripts in Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland Libraries – Now Available Online

Digital images of medieval manuscripts held in Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland Libraries are now available online.

Full images of 11 of the medieval manuscripts held in Sir George Grey Special Collections, Auckland Libraries are now available online through the manuscripts catalogue Manuscripts Online: http://www.aucklandcity.govt.nz/dbtw-wpd/msonline and search using the term “Med. Ms*”

The search results in a list of all the medieval manuscripts including the ones with images. Images can be viewed page by page or as a PDF.

There are extra images of details of some manuscripts – these are available as part of the PDFs.

A further 11 medieval manuscripts have been digitised — these images will be gradually added to the catalogue over the coming months. Of the remaining manuscripts here, more will be digitised over the next few years, but a few are too tightly bound and cannot be digitised with current technology.

For further information, please contact specialcollections@aucklandcouncil.govt.nz.

Dr David Caldwell, Sydney Society for Scottish History Lecture

Sydney Society for Scottish History Lecture:

“Scottish medieval seals — some revelations”, Dr David Caldwell (President, Society of Antiquaries of Scotland)

Date: Thursday, 23 February 2017
Time: 6:30 p.m. for 7:00 pm start
Venue: Non-members of SSSH should contact Dr Matthew Glozier (MRG@sydgram.nsw.edu.au) or Dr Lorna Barrow (lorna.barrow@mq.edu.au) for further details of venue and time.

The recent discovery of two remarkable medieval Scottish seal matrices has inspired the speaker to consider afresh the whole subject of seals, how they were used and what they can tell us. He also looks in detail at the two seals which attracted his intention, one a customs seal of King Robert Bruce, the other a seal of the noted Scottish patriot, William Lamberton, Bishop of St Andrews at the time of the Wars of Independence.

Spaces, Images, Mentalities – Call For Papers

Spaces, Images, Mentalities
Lisbon Medieval Culture and War Conference
Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa
22–24 June, 2017

War shaped the medieval world. It configured all kinds of social models and human processes, including political and economic systems, religious doctrines, cultural transformations and changes of mindsets.

Following a previous meeting held at the University of Leeds in 2016 (Leeds Medieval Culture and War: Ideals, Representations, Realities), this conference, organised by the Centre of History of the University of Lisbon, will pursue the development of new approaches to medieval warfare by discussing spaces, images and mentalities in interdisciplinary perspectives.

We warmly welcome papers that draw on several theoretical backgrounds (e.g. archaeological, art historical, historical, literary or sociological methodologies). Topics may include, but are not limited to the following:

    • Theory and doctrine of war
    • Strategy and tactics
    • Organisation, command and logistics
    • Fortifications and weaponry
    • Communication, intelligence and counter-intelligence
    • Bellatores in medieval societies
    • Non-combatants and prisoners of war
    • Literature, art and war
    • Warfare and religion
    • Body and soul: the warriors’ assistance
    • Superstitions, devotions, fears and behaviours

War at sea

The conference will be held at the School of Arts and Humanities of the University of Lisbon (Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa). On the third day participants are invited to join us for a visit to a museum with a medieval military collection. There will be a registration fee of €25.

Please submit a 300 word abstract for a paper of 20–25 minutes along with a short biographical note of about 150 words, or a joint proposal for a thematic panel of 3 papers, to lisboncultureandwar@gmail.com by 3 March, 2017. The papers will be selected by an independent Scientific Committee, through a blind review. Contributions from postgraduates and early career researchers are especially encouraged.

The working language is English.

The organisers plan to publish selected papers presented during the conference in a peer-reviewed edited collection.

Lisbon Organisation Committee: Inês Meira Araújo and António Martins Costa

Leeds Organisation Committee: Sophie Harwood, Trevor Russell Smith and Iason-Eleftherios Tzouriadis

Coordinator: José Varandas