Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Notice: MAA Graduate Student Committee Webinar – Medievalists Beyond the Academy (Zoom 3/29/2023)

Crossposted from The Medieval Academy of America Blog. The original post and link to register for the session can be accessed at https://www.themedievalacademyblog.org/maa-graduate-student-committee-webinar-medievalists-beyond-the-academy/.


MAA Graduate Student Committee Webinar – Medievalists Beyond the Academy

Posted on March 8, 2023 by Chris


MAA Graduate Student Committee Webinar: Medievalists Beyond the Academy

Join the MAA Graduate Student Committee on March 29th, 2023 at 7 pm EST for a panel on employment for medievalists outside of what we traditionally envision as the “academy” (university-based research and teaching). From grant writing and archival management to secondary education and academic publishing, our participants represent a wide range of experience levels and professional opportunities. In this conversation moderated by GSC members Kersti Francis and Will Beattie, panelists will share their pathways from their PhD to their current position, followed by a live Q and A with questions submitted by our audience. We hope you can join us!

Panelists include:

Dr. Joaneath Spicer, James A. Murnaghan Curator of European Art 1400-1700 at the Walters Art Museum
Dr. Lucy Hinnie, Wikimedian-in-Residence at the British Library
Dr. Kacie Morgan, Grants Manager at HealthRIGHT360
Dr. Rebecca Straple-Sovers, Marketing Specialist at Medieval Institute Publications

CFP Frontiers, Borders, & Borderlands in the Early Global World Conference (4/10/2023; UC:A/Hybrid 6/2/2023)

Crossposted from The Medieval Academy of America blog. The original can be accessed at https://www.themedievalacademyblog.org/call-for-papers-frontiers-borders-borderlands-in-the-early-global-world/


Call for Papers – Frontiers, Borders, & Borderlands in the Early Global World

Posted on March 10, 2023 by Chris


The officers of UCLA MEMSA announce this year’s conference, “Frontiers, Borders, & Borderlands in the Early Global World,” to be held in the UCLA Humanities Seminar Room, 306 Royce Hall, on June 2, 2023, as a hybrid event. MEMSA invites submissions from graduate students in any discipline of medieval and early modern studies, at UCLA and beyond. Abstracts of 250 words are due April 10. Please email them to memsa.ucla@gmail.com. Acceptances will be sent by April 20. More information at https://cmrs.ucla.edu/memsa/cfp-frontiers-borders-borderlands-in-the-early-global-world/

Thursday, March 9, 2023

CFP UVa Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXVI (6/16/2023; Wisa, VA 9/21-23/2023)


UVa Wise Medieval-Renaissance Conference XXXVI


deadline for submissions:
June 16, 2023

full name / name of organization:
Center for Medieval-Renaissance Studies

contact email:
kjt9t@uvawise.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2023/03/02/uva-wise-medieval-renaissance-conference-xxxvi.


The Center for Medieval-Renaissance Studies at the University of Virginia's College at Wise announces the Thirty-Sixth Medieval-Renaissance Conference, September 21-23, 2023




Keynote Address

Matthew Gabriele

Virginia Tech University

Oathbreakers: The Long Shadow of Fontenoy (841 CE) in the European Middle Ages

Within a couple generations, the Franks under their Carolingian kings built the idea that they were God’s new chosen people – a new Israel. After a coup brough them to power in the middle of the 8th century, their successes seemed unmatched. Particularly under Charlemagne and his son Louis the Pious, the Franks expanded their empire to encompass much of continental Europe. But just as quickly as it was built, it tore asunder – riven by civil war, punctuated by a bloody fratricide in June 841 at the battle of Fontenoy. This keynote will revisit the importance of this battle itself for the 9th century, but more importantly focus in on the memory of the event and later medieval nostalgia for what seemed lost when brother fought brother and father fought son.”


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/departments/language-literature/mediev...

Deadline for Submissions: June 16, 2023


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 March 7, 2023

Friday, March 3, 2023

CFP Medieval Academy Annual Meeting 2024

Medieval Academy Annual Meeting 2024

The main conference site is available at this link.


Call for Papers

2024 Annual Meeting of The Medieval Academy of America

Hosted by the Medieval Institute, University of Notre Dame
MARCH 14–16, 2024



The 99th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place on the campus of the University of Notre Dame (South Bend, Indiana). The meeting is hosted by The Medieval Institute, St. Mary's College, Holy Cross College, and Indiana University, South Bend.

The Program Committee invites proposals for papers on all topics and in all disciplines and periods of medieval studies. Any member of the Medieval Academy may submit a paper proposal; others may submit proposals as well but must become members in order to present papers at the meeting. Special consideration can be given to individuals whose specialty would not normally involve membership in the Medieval Academy.



Location: 


The Medieval Institute has one of the preeminent library collections for medieval studies in North America. Notre Dame is located about two hours’ drive from Chicago, with commuter train service available. Scholars may wish to extend their visit and take advantage of opportunities for research or sightseeing.

Themes:


Mapping the Middle Ages:
Under this theme we invite explorations of how medieval people mapped their world and of how we, as modern scholars, have mapped or might map that world. For example, sessions or individual presentations could focus on medieval cartography or the distortions of modern maps of the medieval world, but also on other kinds of medieval and modern mappings: the creation of medieval cosmologies and cosmographies; the construction of boundaries, edges, peripheries, authorities, and jurisdictions; the positioning of marginal groups, of insiders and outsiders, of friends and enemies; the conjuring of frontiers between ‘civilizations’ across Eurasia; the figuring of past, present, and future, of ancient, medieval, and modern; the making of archives and libraries.

Bodies in Motion: This strand thematizes bodies (for example, animate bodies, celestial bodies, or material objects) as they move, whether through displacement or through movement within a space. Papers might consider celestial motion, mathematical models, music, and concepts of time; travel (e.g. for trade, pilgrimage, or war), migration and resettlement (voluntary or forced); the transmission of food, goods, art objects and diseases through patterns of human contact; bodies that transform or transcend categories; textual corpora, their material transmissions, and their transformations through translation and reception; habit, gesture, ritual, and the lived use of domestic, urban, political, or religious architectural spaces.

Communities of Knowledge: We invite papers exploring communities formed around the creation, dissemination, exchange, and preservation of knowledge in the medieval world. Papers might treat centers of learning and their students and teachers, including but not limited to the universities; virtual communities formed by epistolary networks, narrative traditions, dissident theologies, or political ideologies; communities defined in terms of medical knowledge; apocalyptic or prophetic or messianic communities bound by foreknowledge of things to come; the peripheries of knowledge, including the limits of literacy or belief; material supports for the transmission of knowledge, from shipping routes or urban spaces to fresco cycles or manuscript glosses; and the formation of political and legal knowledge in the Middle Ages and their impact on the constitution of authority.

The Medieval Academy welcomes innovative panels that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries or that use various disciplinary approaches to examine an individual topic. We encourage papers on Asia, Africa, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe and the networks and exchanges between East and West.


Proposals: 


Individuals may propose to offer a paper or propose a full panel of papers and speakers to fit one of the themes above. Panels usually consist of three 25-minute papers, and proposals should be geared to that length. The Program Committee may choose a different format for some panels after the proposals have been reviewed. Panel organizers may wish to propose different formats for their panels, subject to Program Committee approval.

In order to be considered, proposals must be complete and sent in via the Submittable platform at this link:

https://bit.ly/MAA2024-ND-MI

Paper proposals will need to include the proposer’s information (name; a statement of Medieval Academy membership, or statement that the individual’s specialty would not normally involve membership in the Academy; professional status; email address; postal address; home or cell and office telephone numbers) and paper information (title, abstract of no more than 250 words, session theme for which it should be considered, and audio-visual needs).

Session proposals will need to include the above proposer’s information as well as a session title, session abstract, list of proposed papers and speakers, session theme for which it should be considered, and audio-visual needs).

If the proposer will be at a different address when decisions are announced in September 2023, that address should be included.

Submissions:


The deadline is 15 June 2023.

Please do not send proposals to the Medieval Academy office or to the conference organizers. Contact MAA2024@TheMedievalAcademy.org with questions.


Selection Procedure: 

The Committee will review paper and panel proposals for their quality, the significance of their topics, and their relevance to the conference themes. The Program Committee will evaluate proposals during the summer of 2023 and the Committee will inform all successful and unsuccessful proposers and announce the program in September of 2023.

Program Committee Members

Thomas Burman, co-chair
CJ Jones, co-chair
Margaret Meserve, co-chair

Hussein Abdulsater
Christopher Abram
Alexander Beihammer
Jessalynn Bird
Jeremy Brown
Theodore Cachey
Eleonora Celora
Nina Glibetic
Robert Goulding
David Gura
Megan J. Hall
Marius Hauknes
Julio Hernando
Alexander Hsu
Peter Jeffery
Robin Jensen
Sarah Noonan
Stephen Ogden
Henry Stephan, O.P.
Wiebke Marie Stock
Alexis Torrance


Updates for 43rd Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum

See below for details on the program and registration for the 43rd Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum. The event's main page can be accessed at this link. The program includes a session on medievalism. 


43rd Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum:
Touch and Affect in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance


Keene State College
Keene, NH, USA
Friday and Saturday April 14-15, 2023
Draft Forum Schedule

We are delighted to announce that the 43rd Medieval and Renaissance Forum will take place in person on Friday, April 14 and Saturday April 15, 2023 at Keene State College in Keene, New Hampshire. The theme of this year’s conference, our fifth dedicated to the five senses, is Touch and Affect in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, focusing on the sense of touch, the sensory, and affect.

While we plan to hold the 43rd Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum in person with a limited number of virtual presentations, the entire event may have to be moved online should the safety of our participants require it.

Graduate students are eligible for consideration for the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award upon submission of their essays by April 1, 2023. The winner of the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award will win $100 to be used for registration and/or travel expenses to the 44th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum (travel expenses including but not limited to transportation to and from the conference and accommodations while in Keene). The winner of the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award will be announced at lunch on Friday, April 14, 2023.

Please email paper and contact information for consideration for the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award, to, Dr. Meriem Pages, mpages@keene.edu

Registration is now open Register Here.

Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2023

This year’s keynote speaker is Lauren Mancia, Associate Professor of History at Brooklyn College, who will speak on “(Reach Out and) Touch Medieval Monastic Devotion.”

Dr. Mancia focuses her research on the devotional and material culture of medieval European monasteries in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. More recently, Professor Mancia has turned to the field of performance studies both to better understand medieval European monastic devotion and to innovate ways to perform that understanding for contemporary audiences. Professor Mancia’s first book, Emotional Monasticism: Affective Piety in the Eleventh-Century Monastery of John of Fécamp (2019/paper 2021), sheds light on medieval monastic practices of affective piety. Her second book, Meditation and Prayer in the Eleventh- and Twelfth-Century Monastery: Struggling Toward God is forthcoming in Spring 2023 from ARC Humanities/Amsterdam University Press.

As always, we look forward to greeting returning and first-time participants to Keene in April!

Contact the Medieval and Renaissance Forum

Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions or concerns:

Meriem Pagès
Professor
English Department
mpages@keene.edu

Thursday, March 2, 2023

Mass Mediævalisms at NeMLA 2023

If you are attending this year's NeMLA conference, please consider supporting the work of our advisory board members.




Northeast Modern Language Association 54th Annual Convention

Niagara Falls Convention Center (Niagara Falls, NY)

23-26 March 2023

(full schedule at this link)


Friday, 3/24: 

Track 7 (10:00-11:30 AM): 7.15 King Arthur's Coconuts: Towards an Understanding of Animals and the Medieval Mind (Olmstead / NCC) - Karen Casebier (University of Tennessee-Chattanooga) presents 1st on "Men and Monsters in the Old French Werewolf Lays and Merlin, the Graphic Novel".


Track 9 (1:15-2:45 PM): 9.15 Tolkien’s Medievalism in Ruins: The Function of Relics and Ruins in Middle-earth (Part 1) (Olmstead / NCC), organized by Nick Katsiadas (Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania) and Carl Sell (University of Pittsburgh) - Carl presents 4th on "The Blade of the King: Tolkien, Arthur, and the Remnants of Kingship".


Track 10 (3-4:30 PM): 10.15 Tolkien’s Medievalism in Ruins: The Function of Relics and Ruins in Middle-earth (Part 2) (Olmstead / NCC), organized by Nick Katsiadas and Carl Sell - Nick presents 4th on "Romantic Nostalgia in Tolkien's Relics and Ruins: Longing for Aman, Gondolin, and Númenor".



Sunday, 3/26: 

Track 21 (10:30 AM -12:15 PM): 21.18 Discrimination in Comic Books (Part 2) (Whitney / NCC) - Rachael Warmington (Seton Hall University) presents 3rd on "Oppressive Isms in Comic and Graphic Novel Adaptations of Arthurian Legend".