Heckman Research Stipends at St. John’s University (MN) – Call For Applications

Heckman Stipends, made possible by the A.A. Heckman Endowed Fund, are awarded semi-annually. Up to 10 stipends in amounts up to $2,000 are available each year. Funds may be applied toward travel to and from Collegeville, housing and meals at Saint John’s University, and costs related to duplication of HMML’s microfilm or digital resources. The Stipend may be supplemented by other sources of funding but may not be held simultaneously with another HMML Stipend or Fellowship. Holders of the Stipend must wait at least two years before applying again.

The program is specifically intended to help scholars who have not yet established themselves professionally and whose research cannot progress satisfactorily without consulting materials to be found in the collections of the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library.

Applications:
Applications must be submitted by April 15 for residencies between July and December of the same year, or by November 15 for residencies between January and June of the following year.

Applicants are asked to provide:

  1. a letter of application with current contact information, the title of the project, length of the proposed residency at HMML and its projected dates, and the amount requested (up to $2,000)
  2. a description of the project to be pursued, with an explanation of how HMML’s resources are essential to its successful completion of the project; applicants are advised to be as specific as possible about which resources will be needed (maximum length: 1,000 words)
  3. an updated curriculum vitae
  4. a confidential letter of recommendation to be sent directly to HMML by an advisor, thesis director, mentor, or, in the case of postdoctoral candidates, a colleague who is a good judge of the applicant’s work

Please send all materials as email attachments to: fellowships@hmml.org, with “Heckman Stipend” in the subject line. Questions about the Stipends may be sent to the same address.

Research Associate @ Leverhulme Project: Inner Lives: Emotions, Identity, and the Supernatural, 1300-1900 – Call For Applications

Inner Lives: Emotions, Identity, and the Supernatural, 1300-1900 is a three-year project funded by the Leverhulme Trust. The project will explore personal and collective identities in western Europe and America, focusing on patterns of continuity and discontinuity over six centuries. The PI Malcom Gaskill (UEA) will work on the period 1500-1700, with CIs Sophie Page (UCL) focusing on 1300-1500 and Owen Davies (University of Hertfordshire) on 1700-1900.

This RA post will work with Dr Sophie Page and be based at UCL. The RA will visit archives and libraries in France, Italy and Germany, finding information that Page will use for her monograph, ‘Cosmology, Magic and Inner Lives’. This will primarily relate to the fields of late medieval cosmology, demonology, magic and medicine. The successful candidate will engage in original research related to the project and publish the results of his/her work through papers at scholarly conferences and in an academic journal.

The Research Associate will be based in London but will travel to Europe to work in archives; and deliver papers at academic conferences both in the UK and abroad.

This post is funded for 18 months in the first instance.

Applications close: 13 November, 2015

For full information, and to apply, please visit: https://atsv7.wcn.co.uk/search_engine/jobs.cgi?SID=amNvZGU9MTUwNTYwMyZ2dF90ZW1wbGF0ZT05NjUmb3duZXI9NTA0MTE3OCZvd25lcnR5cGU9ZmFpciZicmFuZF9pZD0wJmpvYl9yZWZfY29kZT0xNTA1NjAzJnBvc3RpbmdfY29kZT0yMjQmcmVxc2lnPTE0NDY0MjkxMzktNjE3MGNmZDEzM2VjMTJmZjZiNjI3ZjgxNTM1YWI0YmIxYWMxNGE2OA==

Gender Worlds, 500-1800: New Perspectives – Call For Papers

Gender Worlds, 500-1800: New Perspectives
The Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies & Perth Medieval and Renaissance Group XXII Annual Conference
The University Club, The University of Western Australia
8 October, 2016

Keynote Speaker: Professor Merry Wiesner-Hanks (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee).

Gender is a powerful and flexible analytical tool that has profoundly influenced scholarship over the past few decades. It is widely recognised as a necessary category of analysis; and exciting opportunities to integrate it more fully into scholarly practice continue to emerge. This conference applies gender theories, concepts and methodologies to uncover and explore dynamic, new perspectives on the medieval and early modern. Possible themes include (but are not limited to):

  • Masculinities, femininities, sexualities
  • Ideologies, mentalities, thought worlds
  • Performances and practices
  • Local, global and transnational connections
  • Identities, communities, historical memory
  • Gender and emotions/gendered emotions
  • Textualities, language, rhetoric
  • Spatial and material cultures
  • Feminisms and gender historiography
  • Binaries, crossings, intersections, transgressions

We invite proposals for twenty-minute papers exploring any of the above themes. Submissions should include a paper title, a c.250-word abstract, presenter’s name, affiliation (if any), email address, and audio/visual requirements.

Please email submissions to Dr Joanne McEwan at: joanne.mcewan@uwa.edu.au.

Deadline for proposals: 1 May, 2016.

Frances Muecke, University of Sydney Public Lecture

“Montaigne goes to Rome: a sixteenth-century traveller extraordinaire,” Frances Muecke (Australian Academy of the Humanities; University of Sydney)

Date: 7 November, 2015
When: 2:00pm-3:00pm
Where: Nicholson Museum, The Quadrangle, The University of Sydney
Cost: Free
RSVP: Register online here: http://whatson.sydney.edu.au/events/published/montaigne-goes-to-rome-a-sixteenth-century-traveller-extraordinaire

On 22 June 1580 Montaigne, then aged 47, set off from his home, the Chateau de Montaigne, thirty miles east of Bordeaux, on a trip to Rome.

Being Montaigne, the most significant French writer of the 16th century, he kept a compellingly interesting journal of his travels. Never intended for publication, the manuscript lay unnoticed in the Chateau until it was discovered in a chest in 1770.

Despite what he calls the feebleness of his age and health, Montaigne was an indefatigable traveller. He ‘lives as the Romans’ do, always ready to comment on regional differences, inns, beds, food and service. He goes out of his way to see sites, and tries to find interesting locals for conversation.

What then does he make of 16th century Rome? There are too many French people there. The appearance of the streets, and their crowds remind him of Paris. It is not safe to go about the streets by night and one should not keep valuables even in the houses – deposit them in a bank. There is nothing special about the beauty of the women, even though Rome has a reputation for this. The churches in Rome are less beautiful than in most of the good towns of Italy, and in general it may be said that the churches, both in Italy and Germany are less beautiful than in France.

And what of his reaction to the ruins of Rome? Montaigne came to some challenging conclusions: the site contains many Romes destroyed and rebuilt. What could be seen in his day was not the great Rome of antiquity – that was buried far below the surface. He said that, ‘one saw nothing of ancient Rome but the sky under which it had stood and the plan of its site.’


Frances Muecke is an Elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and an Honorary Associate in the Department of Classics and Ancient History. She is also a long-standing Friend of the Nicholson Museum.

John Carter Brown Library: Fellowship Opportunities, 2016-2017

The John Carter Brown Library (JCB), an independently funded institution for advanced research on the campus of Brown University, will award approximately forty residential fellowships for the year July 1, 2016 to June 30, 2017. The Library contains one of the world’s premier collections of primary materials related to the discovery, exploration, and settlement of the New World to 1825, including books, maps, newspapers, and other printed objects. JCB Fellowships are open to scholars and writers working on all aspects of the Americas in the early modern period.

Short-term Fellowships are for two to four months with a monthly stipend of $2,100. Open to US and foreign citizens who are engaged in pre- or post-doctoral or independent research. Graduate students must have passed their preliminary or general examinations at the time of application.

Long-Term Fellowships are for five to ten months with a monthly stipend of $4,200. These include two to four NEH Fellowships, for which an applicant must be a US citizen or have lived in the US for the three years preceding the application deadline, and other long-term JCB awards for which all nationalities are eligible. Graduate students are not eligible for long-term JCB Fellowships.

Recipients of all fellowships must relocate to Providence and be in continuous residence at the JCB for the full term of the award. Rooms are available for rent at Fiering House, the JCB’s Fellows’ residence, a beautifully restored 1869 house just four blocks from the Library.

The deadline for short- and long-term fellowships is December 1, 2015.

For more information – including information about Thematic and Cluster Fellowships – and application instructions, visit www.jcbl.org or e-mail jcb-fellowships@brown.edu.

Robert L. Kindrick–CARA Award for Outstanding Service to Medieval Studies – Call For Applications

The Robert L. Kindrick–CARA Award for Outstanding Service to Medieval Studies recognizes Medieval Academy members who have provided leadership in developing, organizing, promoting, and sponsoring medieval studies through the extensive administrative work that is so crucial to the health of medieval studies but that often goes unrecognized by the profession at large. This award of $1000 is presented at the Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy.

The annual deadline for nominations is 15 November. Three nominators are required, all of whom should have first-hand knowledge of the nominee’s contributions to Medieval Studies.

For more information, please visit: https://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/?page=Kindrick_CARA_Award.

CARA Award for Excellence in Teaching – Call For Applications

The CARA Award for Excellence in Teaching Medieval Studies recognizes Medieval Academy members who are outstanding teachers who have contributed to the profession by inspiring students at the undergraduate or graduate levels or by creating innovative and influential textbooks or other materials for teaching medieval subjects.

This award of $1000 is presented at the Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy.

The annual deadline for nominations is 15 November. Three nominators are required, one of whom should be a former student of the nominee.

For more information, please visit: https://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/?page=CARA_Award_Teaching.

Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions (Melbourne Node) Seminar Series, November 2015

Culture, Emotions, Identities: Europe and the Oriental Other in the late Middle Ages, Dr Mirko Sardelic (The University of Western Australia)

Date: Wednesday, 4 November
Time: 12:00pm
Venue: Room 714, Level 7, 757 Swanston St, The University of Melbourne
Register: http://bit.ly/1NVkULW

The thirteenth century is the time when Europe rediscovered Asia, stimulated mostly by the Mongol invasion of 1241/2. This paper is an introduction into the study of the development of contacts between European and Asian cultures. The author discusses the role of culture and emotions in framing identity during this period of intensified Eurasia cross-cultural exchange. He suggests that these three categories are critical in understanding European responses to the Oriental Other in the thirteenth century and might provide a workable model for investigating later contacts in Southeast Europe.


Dr Mirko Sardelić is an Honorary Postdoctoral Research Fellow at CHE, based at The University of Western Australia. His doctoral thesis (2013) dealt with the European perception of the Mongols in the 13th century, though lately his research has shifted more towards early relations between Southeast Europe and the Ottoman Empire (up to the late 16th century).
http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/research/researchers/mirko-sardelic/



“Sexuality and Emotions in Early Modern Catholic Discourse: Manuals for Confessors, Moral Theology Treatises and Inquisition Trials in the 16th and 17th Centuries”, Professor Fernanda Alfieri (Bruno Kessler Foundation; Italian-German Historical Institute, Trento)

Date: Wednesday, 11 November
Time: 6:15pm
Venue: Room 602, Level 6, 757 Swanston St, The University of Melbourne
Register: http://bit.ly/1NVkULW

In early modern theology, emotions (affectus) are considered crucial in the biological and cognitive activities of human life. Every action is accompanied by movements of material and immaterial substances in the body, conveyed by the powers of the soul. Such movements, while making vital processes possible, influence the complex system of body and soul which is thought to be the human being, destabilizing the balance of humours, heat and humidity, and enriching the conscience with new moral nuances. The strongest emotions are the ones connected with reproduction, involving a combination of desires, pleasures and production of physiological substances which are thought to deeply affect human beings. A whole moral system is constructed around sexuality and its emotional correlates. The paper will explore this construction in early modern theological discourse, paying special attention to the period after the Council of Trent (1545-1563).


Fernanda Alfieri is a Research Fellow at the Italian-German Historical Institute (FBK-ISIG) and Adjunct Professor at the University of Trento. She is particularly interested in the conflicts and interactions between medicine and theology in Early Modern Europe (16th-19th Century). She is writing a book on a case of demonic possession in early 19th-Century Rome, which created much debate within the Curia and the Medical College and had strong public impact. Her first book, Nella camera degli sposi. Tomás Sánchez, il matrimonio, la sessualità (secoli XVI-XVII) [In the married couple’s bedroom. Tomás Sánchez, marriage and sexuality (16th-17th centuries)] (2010), analyzes theological discourses on sexuality in Early Modern moral casuistry.



“Pain: The Forgotten Emotion”, Dr Rob Boddice (Freie Universität Berlin; Max Planck Institute for Human Development)

Date: Wednesday, 18 November
Time: 12:00pm
Venue: Room 601, Level 6, 757 Swanston St, The University of Melbourne
Register: http://bit.ly/1NVkULW

Recent neuroscientific research into the way pain works has placed renewed focus on emotions as part of the brain circuitry that gives meaning to painful experience. Biopsychosocial models of pain in humans have drawn attention to the influence of fear, anger and anxiety, especially in accounts of susceptibility to chronic pain. But despite the turn to affect in the neurosciences, there remains a tendency to reduce emotions to mere functions of the brain, or to label them as human constants. In short, current medical approaches to pain still underemphasise the substantive interrelationship of body, brain and society in the construction of meaningful experiences of pain. Efforts to put emotions back into the picture have not taken into account the rich cultural history of pain, which is replete with examples of the way that pain is expressed in context, according to contingent emotional repertoires. In this paper I offer a brief sketch of the history of colloquial and conceptual knowledge of pain as an emotional experience, in some ways endorsing the direction of current pain research, but in other ways offering a corrective that may indicate a use for the medical humanities and the history of emotions for the management of pain in a clinical setting.


Dr Rob Boddice is Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter at the Department of History and Cultural Studies at Freie Universität Berlin and Research Fellow at the Center for the History of Emotions at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development. The author and editor of a number of books, Boddice’s most recent volumes include Pain and Emotion in Modern History (Palgrave, 2014) and Edward Jenner (History Press, 2015). His next monograph, The Science of Sympathy: Morality, Evolution and Victorian Civilization, will be published in the History-of-Emotions series at University of Illinois Press in the Spring. His Pain: A Very Short Introduction will be published by Oxford University Press next year. And The History of Emotions will appear in Manchester University Press’s ‘Historical Approaches’ series in 2017.



“Play and Playfulness in English 16th-Century Literature and Culture”, Professor Ros King (University of Southampton, UK)

Date: Monday, 23 November
Time: 12:00pm-2:00pm
Venue: Room 714, Level 7, 757 Swanston St, The University of Melbourne
Register: http://bit.ly/1NVkULW

Recent work on the history of childhood from prehistory to Victorian times has successfully refuted earlier notions that a) in times of high infant mortality parents did not invest emotionally in their children and b) that medieval and early modern children were regarded as mini adults. But playfulness, readily observable in all young living mammals, is more difficult to document historically. Until recently, children’s play objects have not normally been of great cost or intrinsic value. Toys were usually made of perishable material and unlikely to survive in the archaeological record or are improvised from other non-play objects, and therefore invisible as toys to non-players.

Imaginative play that is not object based is even harder to document, and has been particularly under recognised as a function of adult behaviour and intellectual and social development. Indeed since classical times, far from being seen as an intellectual benefit, playfulness has usually been collocated with wantonness and idleness. In the religious writing of the reformation it is simply sinful. At the same time, there has been a tendency in literary studies to assume that plays as art forms are merely mimetic, reflecting and bound by their societies of origin.

This paper will revisit Huizinga’s Homo Ludens in the light of recent scientific research in ethology and brain science as well as new thinking in the arts of rhetoric—specifically phantasy, irony, ekphrasis, and enargeia—to identify and evaluate play and playfulness in sixteenth-century English dramatic and non dramatic literature. It is part of a larger study on the value and function of play in human history, science and culture.


Ros King is Professor of English Studies at the University of Southampton. A musician and theatre director as well as an academic, she has worked as a dramaturg with Shakespeare’s Globe in London, the English Shakespeare Company, and Shakespeare Santa Cruz (California). She has edited a range of Early Modern plays and poems, including The Works of Richard Edwards (Manchester University Press), and revised editions of Shakespeare’s Comedy of Errors (for CUP), and Marlowe’s Faustus (New Mermaids). She was co-editor (with Paul Franssen) of the collection Shakespeare and War. Her monographs include Shakespeare: a Beginner’s Guide, and Cymbeline: Constructions of Britain.

Medieval Academy Travel Grants – Call For Applications

The Medieval Academy 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.

Awards to support travel in North America are $500; for overseas travel the awards are $750.

APPLICATION DEADLINES

(1) 1 May for meetings to be held between 1 September and 15 February.

(2) 1 November for meetings to be held between 16 February and 31 August.

Although time constraints may require an initial application before a paper has been accepted, travel grants will not normally be awarded without evidence that the paper actually will be given (such as a photocopy of the relevant part of the program).

Major national and international meetings will be given priority. Grants will be limited to one per applicant in a three-year period. Applicants must hold the Ph.D. degree and must be current members of the Medieval Academy.

For more information, please visit: https://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/?page=Travel_Grants.