Saturday, April 23, 2022

CFP II - GLOBAL MEDIEVALISM: culture, appropriations and reinventions (6/1/2022; online 6/22-24/2022)

My thanks to Richard Utz for the heads up on this.



II - GLOBAL MEDIEVALISM: culture, appropriations and reinventions


Second international medievalism studies conference organized by GEHM (Medieval Studies Group from Unimontes).

main site: https://www.globalmedievalism.org/?lang=en


The registrations are now open!


Due to the COVID-19 Pandemic, our conference will be 100% online



The event will be held from June 22-24, 2022





The Call for Papers is open until June 01, 2022




Call for papers



Our Conference also has a Panels section in which anyone interested, can submit their proposals for papers or a full session until June 1st, 2022. All proposals will be evaluated double-blind by our Scientific Council. The selected works will be, after the event, submitted to a new review and forwarded for publication through an e-book.



Papers in Portuguese, English and Spanish will be accepted. The papers must deal with themes related to medievalisms, neo-medievalisms or medieval reception. Papers that work with representations and memory of the medieval period are also welcome, as well as with the history of historiography about the period. In addition to the abstract, it is possible, but not mandatory, to send the full papers upon registration. This can assist in the evaluation process. The final version of the text may be sent between June 30 to September 30, 2022, for publication.



To submit your abstract, click here and follow the registration and submission instructions. Any questions or information, please contact: medieval.unimontes@gmail.com.


Saturday, April 16, 2022

CFP Special issue on Translation in and from the Middle Ages (10/31/2022)

CALL FOR PAPERS: Special issue on Translation in and from the Middle Ages

Posted on April 13, 2022 by Chris

Source: http://www.themedievalacademyblog.org/call-for-papers-special-issue-on-translation-in-and-from-the-middle-ages/


Medieval Studies is a particularly fruitful field of study, especially in combination with other areas, Translation Studies being no exception. Indeed, the combination of these two areas is of extreme importance, providing a better understanding of medieval texts, as well as a broader understanding of the meaning, value, and consequences of translation within this timeframe. Despite its importance, medieval translation remains poorly researched and promoted in academia. In an effort to fill this gap, submissions are invited for a special issue of the open-access journal, Translation Matters, on the subject of Translation in and from the Middle Ages.

We welcome articles dealing one of the following topics:

The phenomenon of translation during the Middle Ages:
  • Theoretical articles exploring the concept of translatio in the Middle Ages, as well as the theory behind the practice of translation in the medieval period
  • Case studies dealing with the translation or transmission of different texts, genres or concepts between two or more medieval vernaculars or between Latin (or another lingua franca or lingua sacra) and a vernacular
  • Medieval matters and cycles involving translational processes

The translation of medieval texts into contemporary languages:
  • Theoretical articles exploring methodologies, strategies and problems of the translation of medieval texts into contemporary languages
  • Case studies on the translation of specific texts or concepts
  • Contemporary reception and neo-medievalism: theory and practices.


Articles, in English or in Portuguese, should be 6000-8000 words in length, including references and footnotes, and be formatted in accordance with the guidelines given on the journal’s website. Papers should be uploaded onto the site by 31st October 2022. http://ojs.letras.up.pt/index.php/tm/index.

Sunday, April 10, 2022

CFP UVA Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXV (7/5/2022; Wise, VA 9/15-17/2022)

UVA Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXV

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/04/01/uva-wise-medieval-renaissance-conference-xxxv

deadline for submissions:
July 5, 2022

full name / name of organization:
Center for Medieval-Renaissance Studies, University of Virginia's College at Wise

contact email:
kjt9t@uvawise.edu



The Center for Medieval-Renaissance Studies of the University of Virginia's College at Wise announces Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXV, September 15-17, 2022




Keynote Address

Andrew Galloway

Cornell University

The Weight that English Carries: Vernacularity Before and After Chaucer

The University of Virginia’s College at Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference promotes scholarly discussion in all disciplines of Medieval and Renaissance studies. The conference welcomes proposals for graduate and undergraduate papers and panels on Medieval or Renaissance literature, language, history, philosophy, science, pedagogy, and the arts. Abstracts for papers should be 300 or fewer words; undergraduate proposals should include the name of a faculty mentor. Proposals for panels should include: a) title of the panel; b) names and institutional affiliations of the chair and all panelists; c) abstracts for papers to be presented (300 or fewer words). A branch campus of the University of Virginia, the University of Virginia’s College at Wise is a public four-year liberal arts college located in the scenic Appalachian Mountains of Southwest Virginia. For more information, please visit our website: https://www.uvawise.edu/academics/department-language-literature/medieva...



Deadline for Submissions: July 05, 2022





Please direct submissions on English Language and Literature and requests for general information to:

Kenneth J. Tiller, Department of Language and Literature, kjt9t@uvawise.edu



Submissions on Art, Music, and European Language and Literature:

Amelia J. Harris, Academic Dean, ajh7a@uvawise.edu



Submissions on History or Philosophy:

Donald Leech, Department of History and Philosophy, dl4fh@uvawise.edu



Submissions for Undergraduate Papers and Panels:

John Mark Adrian, Department of Language and Literature, jma6x@uvawise.edu




Last updated April 7, 2022

CFP ISSM 2022 The Lost Provinces, or Lost and Found Medievalisms (6/1/2022; Boone, NC/hybrid 10/20-22/2022)

ISSM 2022 The Lost Provinces, or Lost and Found Medievalisms


deadline for submissions:
June 1, 2022

full name / name of organization:
International Society for the Study of Medievalism

contact email:
gulleyea@appstate.edu



October 20-22, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC*

Plenary Speakers: Kristen Carella (Assumption University), “Crossing Every Border: Transgender Identity from Merlin to Laura Jane Grace;” and Orville Hicks, renowned Appalachian storyteller

Southern Appalachia has long been perceived as a region in the American margins, both materially and metaphorically. In colonial times it formed part of the frontier; in the modern era, it continues to lie at the edges of regional, political, cultural, and even historical consciousness. Within the Appalachian mountains in North Carolina, one discrete region in the northwest part of the state was even more marginalized prior to the 20th century: the Lost Provinces, separated from the rest of the state by the Eastern Continental Divide—with mountains towering up to 4,700 feet above sea level—which forms their eastern and southern borders. As Flatlanders liked to say, “the only way to get there was to be born there.”

In the public imaginary, the Middle Ages is similarly “lost” to us, bordered by the glories of Rome on one side and the European Renaissance on the other. Such perception is particularly apparent in popular medievalism which depicts a Dark Ages fraught with violence—particularly sexual violence—plague, superstition, and filth, features, incidentally, often associated with the Appalachian people.

In this spirit, ISSM 2022 asks participants to examine how the “lost Middle Ages” has been found through various medievalisms past and present. We particularly welcome those that explore the following areas:
  • Medievalisms that purport to rediscover the lost relics of the Middle Ages (e. g., the Holy Grail in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusader or The Davinci Code); medievalism and material culture
  • Medievalisms that return to the “lost” past (e. g., A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, Timeline, or Fuqua’s King Arthur—aka “the Untold True Story that Inspired the Legend”); medievalism and politics or political movements
  • Medievalisms that recover “lost” peoples or identities (e. g., representations of people of color in Legendborn or the queering of the Robin Hood legend in the Greenwode series); medievalism and issues of race, gender, sexuality, and gender identity; medievalism and games across media

However, we invite papers and presentations on all topics of medievalism, not limited to these suggested themes. We particularly welcome proposals from presenters in (or addressing topics related to) regions outside North America, Western Europe, and the Anglophone world.

Send paper and/or panel proposals (abstracts of 250-300 words each) by June 1, 2022 to Alexandra Sterling-Hellenbrand (hellenbranda@appstate.edu). Other members of the organizing committee include Alison Gulley, English (gulleyea@appstate.edu) and Mary Valante, History (valantema@appstate.edu)

*The conference will be hybrid, with some dedicated Zoom sessions. The plenary sessions will be in-person and streamed.




Last updated April 8, 2022