The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature: Research Travel Bursaries – Call For Applications

The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature
Research Travel Bursaries

The purpose of the Society’s Research Travel Bursaries is to support relevant research by scholars, at any stage in their career, who are not in receipt of the requisite funding from other sources. The value of all grants is between £300 and £1000 (GBP). There are two application rounds each year, with the deadlines falling on 1st September and 1st March; applicants will be informed of the Society’s decision within three weeks of the deadline.

Eligibility and Requirements: Bursaries are open to all scholars whose research falls within the interests of the Society, broadly defined; but preference may be given to those who are members of the Society. The Society regrets that the Travel Research Bursaries scheme cannot provide funding to attend academic conferences or other organized events.. Successful applicants will be required to submit a report following their research trip, with accounts. The Society’s support should be acknowledged prominently in any subsequent publication, and the Society informed of these. For more info. please visit: http://mediumaevum.modhist.ox.ac.uk/bursaries

To apply, please visit and complete this online form: http://mediumaevum.modhist.ox.ac.uk/bursaries/apply

Popular Culture Association of Australia and New Zealand: 8th Annual International Conference – Call For Papers

The Popular Culture Association of Australia and New Zealand (PopCAANZ)
8th Annual International Conference
Massey University, College of Creative Arts, Wellington, New Zealand
28–30 June, 2017

The Popular Culture Association of Australia and New Zealand (PopCAANZ) is devoted to the scholarly understanding of everyday cultures. It is concerned with the study of the social practices and the cultural meanings that are produced and are circulated through the processes and practices of everyday life, as a product of consumption, an intellectual object of inquiry, and as an integral component of the dynamic forces that shape societies.

We invite academics, professionals, cultural practitioners and those with a scholarly interest in popular culture to send a 150 word abstract and 100 word bio to the area chairs listed below by March 31, 2017.

PopCAANZ will publish double-blind peer reviewed Conference Proceedings online following the conference, and presenters will be invited to submit suitable articles to our new journal from June 2016, The Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture (Penn State University Press). Queries about new areas should be directed to vicepresident@popcaanz.com For Conference information see www.popcaanz.com.

Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies Conference: From Far & Wide: The Next 150 – Call For Papers

“From Far & Wide: The Next 150″
Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies Congress 2017
Ryerson University, Toronto, Ontario
27-29 May, 2017

The 2017 conference of the Canadian Society for Renaissance Studies will be hosted by Ryerson University in Toronto as a part of the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences’ annual Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences.

The theme for Congress 2017, the year of Canada’s sesquicentennial, is “From Far & Wide: The Next 150.” The CSRS invites members to submit proposals that address this theme in relation to the early modern period, or on any Renaissance topic in a variety of disciplines, including literature, history, philosophy, music, art history, history of the book, bibliography, digital humanities, medicine, and cultural studies. Cross-disciplinary and interdisciplinary proposals are also welcome.

Proposals can be submitted in either English or French, and should fall into one of the following categories:

  1. an individual proposal (maximum 300 words) for a 20-minute paper
  2. a panel of three proposed 20-minute papers on a shared theme (to be submitted in one file including the names and institutional affiliations of the organizer and participants, the proposed title of the session, and 300-word abstracts of the three papers)
  3. a workshop or panel discussion (to be submitted in one file including the names and institutional affiliations of the organizer and proposed panelists, the proposed title of the session, and a 300-word paragraph outlining the focus and goals of the session, as well as the anticipated contributions of participants)

Please note that this year the deadline for submitting a proposal is: 15 January, 2017 (for individual proposals and completed panel proposals).

Please submit your proposal or proposed panel to Dr. Katie Larson, 2017 CSRS/SCÉR Program Chair, at this email address, no later than 15 January, 2017: csrs.scercongress2017@gmail.com.

Birkbeck PhD Studentships – Call For Applications

Birkbeck, University of London is now accepting applications for ESRC studentships, the Bonnart Trust PhD scholarship and the Stuart Hall PhD scholarship for October 2017 entry. There are also a number of scholarships specifically for international students. Some are offered directly by Birkbeck; others are offered in partnership with other organisations.

For full details of all scholarships on offer, please visit: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/sshp/research/funding-for-research-students.

Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy: 2017 Philosophy Summer School – Call For Applications

The Melbourne School of Continental Philosophy is proud to present the 2017 Philosophy Summer School Curriculum.

The Summer School has nine courses on offer. Substantial discounts apply for those doing multiple courses. All courses are available for distance enrolment.

When: 9 Jan – 17 Feb, 2017
Where: Kathleen Syme Centre, Faraday St, and somewhere else yet to be finalised (Either in Carlton in Parkville).
Courses: For a full list of courses and to enrol, please visit: http://mscp.org.au/courses/summer-school-2017. All courses are 10 hours in length. Fees start at $80.

Poor Taste and the Exclusionary Mechanisms of Cultural Consumption – Call For Papers

Poor Taste and the Exclusionary Mechanisms of Cultural Consumption
University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA
28 April, 2017

“Taste classifies, and it classifies the classifier.”
– Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction

Cultural consumers are defined and classified by their taste. Through an evaluation of their choices and preferences, whether biologically or socially informed, taste functions as a mechanism of distinction and exclusion. Art and Architectural History has arguably been a cornerstone of this very tradition, disciplining bodies and senses in the formation of canons and cultural hierarchies. While taste is now widely accepted to be subjective and localized rather than universal, ideals of good taste and quality endure in both our disciplinary frameworks and institutional practices.

This symposium therefore aims to address the judgment of taste, and the agents and spaces involved in its creation and enforcement. We consider such questions as: Can terms like consumption, digestion, and indigestion provide useful metaphors or models for the processes by which cultural traditions and products are validated and/or dismissed? How has cultural consumption been designated as legitimate or alternatively illegitimate in various historical and cultural contexts? In the history of cultural consumption, how have poor taste and good taste proven to have both opposed and informed one another?

We welcome proposals from emerging scholars of all disciplinary backgrounds whose work engages with the themes of the conference.

Topics of Interest:

  • The Performance of Distinction
  • Decolonization of Taste
  • The Spaces and Institutionalization of Judgment
  • The Historical Construction of (Poor) Taste
  • Craft, Camp, Kitsch, and the Popular Aesthetic
  • Cultural Appropriation
  • Studies of Foods and Foodways

We invite abstracts of 300 words or less and a 1-page CV to be sent to ucsb.haa.symposium@gmail.com by December 31, 2016. (Inclusion of working title and images encouraged). Conference presentations will be 20 minutes. All participants will be notified by early February.

Please feel free to contact conference organizers J.V. Decemvirale and Maggie Mansfield at ucsb.haa.symposium@gmail.com with any questions.

The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature: Conference Grants – Call For Applications

The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature Conference Grants

The Society for the Study of Medieval Languages and Literature regularly sponsors over a dozen events in a year, in fulfilment of its goal to promote research in medieval languages and literature. The Society welcomes funding applications from any Society members via its online system.

Please note that the Society’s priorities in allocating funding are

  • to provide sponsorship which facilitates access to conferences for graduates and early career academics
  • to fund aspects of conference planning which encourage and support graduate and early career academic attendance and participation

The Society is unable to support honoraria paid to tenured academics.

There are two application types; to begin, please click on the appropriate link and follow the instructions.

Small Grants (up to £500) – Application Deadline: Apply All Year

Applications for smaller grants (up to £500) are considered all year round. Applications should be submitted no less than two months before the planned event – and, ideally, before the Call for Papers has closed; in the case of successful applications, this will help the Society to publicise the event at an early stage. You can expect to be notified of a decision within three weeks of your application.

Large Grants (over £500) – Application Deadline: Monday, January 23, 2017 (All day)

Applications for larger grants (over £500) are considered thrice yearly, in the New Year, spring and autumn (please see the side-panel for the next application deadline). The planned event should be taking place no less than two months after the relevant application deadline – and at which time, ideally, the Call for Papers will not yet have closed; in the case of successful applications, this will help the Society to publicise the event at an early stage. You can expect to be notified of a decision within three weeks of the relevant application deadline.

For more information, and to apply, please visit: http://mediumaevum.modhist.ox.ac.uk/conferences/funding

Theatre, Masque, and Opera in England and Italy, 1580 to 1650 (Summer Research Seminar, 2017) – Call For Applications

Theatre, Masque, and Opera in England and Italy, 1580 to 1650: Performance Practices and Cognitive Ecologies
Summer Research Seminar, 2017
McGill University, Montréal, Québec
31 July – 23 August, 2017

Seminar leaders:

Sponsored by:

Doctoral students in their final year, recent PhDs, postdocs, and junior faculty focusing on scholarly work and/or performance are invited to apply to take part in the research seminar. Research projects should have to do with spoken theatre (broadly defined) or theatrical music (broadly defined), or both, in England or Italy, c. 1580 to 1650.

English theatre and Italian opera between c. 1580 and 1650 have a great deal in common. Both regions had significant traditions of court theatre (masque; intermedii and court opera); both saw the rise of commercial theatre (the London theatres; Venetian public opera); both engaged with issues of love, history and politics, religion, disguise, and conversion. Boy actors, castrati, and cross dressing raise fascinating gender issues. Professional training combined with theatrical conventions were required for professionals (actors, writers; singers, instrumentalists, composers) to put on shows with very limited rehearsal time. Significant bodies of scholarship on both traditions exist, but the researchers rarely engage with one another, and there is little comparative scholarly work.

Our summer research seminar will bring together scholars and performers who specialize in English theatre, and others who specialize in early Italian opera, to share their work and learn from each other. While we are open to a wide array of methodologies and interests, we will focus on the performance practices and cognitive ecologies of these two theatrical worlds. How did they create works and learn their parts? How did material supports (scripts, libretti, stages, theatres) affect what they could do (on and off stage) and what they couldn’t? What makes these traditions similar, and how are they different? Can theatre, masque and opera be seen as conversion machines, operating within distinct cognitive ecologies?

Montreal allows for interaction with other researchers, including faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students associated with McGill, IPLAI, the Schulich School of Music, and Early Modern Conversions. Activities during the seminar will include workshops on period performance practices in theatre and music (including theatrical gesture, staging practices, musical improvisation, and facsimiles of original performance materials).

Travel and accommodation will be provided by the Early Modern Conversions Project. At the end of the seminar, participants will participate in the annual team meeting of the Early Modern Conversions project, at McGill, 24-26 August. Seminar participants will have rooms at the Trylon Apartments for the duration of the seminar and team meeting. McGill offers rich resources for study including excellent libraries, access to early instruments, and a vibrant theatrical and musical scene.

Doctoral students in their final year, recent PhDs, postdocs, and junior faculty focusing on scholarly work and/or performance are invited to apply to take part. Candidates should send a cover letter, CV, brief research proposal, and article-length writing sample to conversions@mcgill.ca by 15 December, 2016. Two confidential letters of recommendation should be sent by e-mail to the same address by the same deadline; referees are asked to indicate the name of the candidate in the subject line. At least one referee should confirm time to completion for applicants who have not yet graduated.

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.