Friday, December 2, 2022

CFP Bodies and Borders: PKMS 2023 CFP (1/31/2023; online event 5/5/2023)


Bodies and Borders: PKMS 2023 CFP


source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2022/09/14/bodies-and-borders-pkms-2023-cfp

deadline for submissions:
January 31, 2023

full name / name of organization:
Pearl Kibre Medieval Study

contact email:
medieval.study@gmail.com



What: Pearl Kibre Medieval Study 17th Annual Conference
Where: Online, hosted through The Graduate Center, CUNY
When: Friday 5 May 2023
Submission Form: https://forms.gle/4cUBLj9oXepsvwsV7

Jeffery Jerome Cohen argues in his introduction to Medieval Identity Machines that these systems of meaning making pull the “human outside of itself, breaking its self-contained organization to disaggregate the body into pieces more intimate with stars and planets than with each other” with a “pancosmic fluidity that mingles the human, animal, vegetal, and inorganic” (xvi). Recognizable medieval images like the zodiac man, the knight riding his horse, and the lovesick lovers are all identity machines, disrupting the stable borders of the body and giving medieval people the language and the models to imagine their bodies as extending beyond their physical form alone. The barber surgeon with his scalpel; the farrier and his horses; the woman in labor wrapped in a prayer scroll to St. Margaret - all of these people learned that their bodies were not limited by the boundary of their skin. What happens to the category of “the human” when these medieval systems of meaning-making decentralize the anthropocene and disrupt definitions of bodily integrity?

This conference is interested in exploring the limits, borders, and boundaries of the medieval body, broadly understood as both the physical body and larger structural understandings of medieval societies as bodies that rely on their component parts to survive. The concept of a “body” itself in a medieval context is a flexible one, encompassing not only an individual’s body but metaphors for social concepts and institutions, in which every member of society is associated with part of a larger whole. Concepts like the social body, the body of the nation, and the king’s two bodies are both comprehensive and limited, encompassing entire societies but also frequently excluding those outside their boundaries. We are interested in projects that explore these wider systems as well as the more granular system of natural bodies, both in their normal operations and in the ways they break down, confuse, and conflict.

Papers might address the following topics:
  • Boundaries and limits of the human body
  • Symbolic categories of “bodies”, both human and non-human
  • Posthumanism, bestiaries, and the borders of the anthropocene
  • Speculative fictions, both premodern (history plays, medieval political imaginaries) and modern (cyberpunk, afrofuturism, etc.) that imagine a social body
  • Disability and prosthesis
  • The body as imagined in medievalism vs. the medieval conception of the body
  • Medical humanities and the history of medieval emotions (the borders of the body/mind)

Abstract Deadline: Jan 31 2023
Registration Deadline: April 5 2023


categories
gender studies and sexuality
graduate conferences
interdisciplinary
medieval
theory

Last updated November 7, 2022

CFP 2023 International Conference for the Study of Medievalism (8/15/2023; online 10/26-28/2023)

2023 International Conference for the Study of Medievalism

October 26-28, 2023
The UNICORN Castle
Submission Deadline: August 15, 2023

cfp at https://medievalisms.org/cfp-2023-international-conference-for-the-study-of-medievalism/

The 2023 conference will be hosted by The UNICORN Castle, a haunted museum, currently in the process of evolving into an online virtual environment. Most scholarly presentations will be conducted via Zoom technology; some of the entertainment and scholarly presentations (by request) will be conducted in a 3D environment created with Mozilla Hub.
 

Theme: The Medieval in Cyberspace


From Beowulf on Steorarume to contemporary novels (in e-text form), films, and video games: the medieval has been represented in digital form on the World Wide Web since the late 1990s. This conference invites proposals for papers, paper sessions, round tables, panels, and workshops that celebrate, rebuke, categorize, visualize, analyze, and/or prophesize all items that contain elements of the medieval to be found on the Internet. However, we invite papers and presentations on all topics of medievalism, not limited to this year’s conference theme. We particularly welcome proposals from presenters in (or addressing topics related to) regions outside North America, Western Europe, and the Anglophone world.

Topic Suggestions:
  • Medieval Studies Online
  • Medieval Pedagogy Online
  • Medievalism and Online Politics
  • Medievalism and Propaganda
  • Medievalism and Religion Online
  • Digital Facsimiles of the Medieval
  • The Business Philosophy of Medievalism
  • The Video Game Industry and Medievalism
  • The Film Industry and Medievalism
  • Fan Fiction and Medievalism
  • Art and Medievalism
  • Global Medievalism Online
  • Cyberpunk Medievalism
  • Medievalism and Racism Online
  • Medievalism and Misogyny Online
  • Medievalism and Ablism Online
  • Medievalism and Homophobia/Transphobia Online
  • Lost Provinces, or Lost and Found Medievalisms Online

Send proposals (abstracts of 250-300 words each) by August 15, 2023 to Carol L. Robinson at clrobins@kent.edu.

*This conference will be 100% online.