Thursday, February 29, 2024

CFP Books and Transgressions: New England Medieval Consortium Conference (6/15/2024; Boston 11/9/2024)

New England Medieval Consortium conference Nov 9: Books and Transgressions


deadline for submissions: June 15, 2024

full name / name of organization: New England Medieval Consortium

contact email: weiskott@bc.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/01/22/new-england-medieval-consortium-conference-nov-9-books-and-transgressions


This conference will provide an opportunity for medievalists working across a range of disciplines and geographic areas to join in conversation about premodern cultures of the book, boundary- crossing, and the law and other normative cultural expressions. Given this year’s conference location at a Jesuit, Catholic university, and our keynote speakers, we particularly (but not exclusively) invite submissions focused on regions other than England, including the Middle East; language traditions other than English; and religious cultures.

We interpret “transgressions” broadly, including the notions of access, trespass, and desire. Accordingly, we welcome papers from medievalists in any discipline, concerned with any region or polity of Europe, Asia, or Africa. Papers might consider any of the following subtopics, or others:

  • bookswhoseform,content,orprovenanceistransgressive;
  • textual cultures: books, authors, texts, audience expectations;
  • the codification of law and law-books;
  • transgression and sin in medieval philosophy and theology;
  • etiquette, diplomacy, or cultural norms, or remediations or contestations of these in written texts;
  • stylistic norms (e.g., poetic and rhetorical precepts) and their transgressions in writing or the visual arts;
  • modern theoretical or methodological approaches to medieval texts;
  • vernacularity in literature, religion, or the visual arts as a mediation of cultural transgression;
  • the transgressive potential of medieval studies in the present day;
  • heterodoxy, heresy, or the function of the written word in regulating the boundaries of orthodoxy.

We invite abstracts for 20-minute papers. Please send abstracts of 300 words to medieval2024@gmail.com by 15 June 2024.

Our keynote speakers are Dr. Ariane Bottex-Ferragne and Dr. Ahmed El Shamsy. Professor Bottex-Ferragne is Assistant Professor of French at New York University. Her presentation is provisionally entitled “Rules of Transgression in Medieval Poetry: Lessons from a Forgotten Bestseller.” Professor El Shamsy is Professor of Islamic Thought at the University of Chicago. His presentation is provisionally entitled “Authors and their Audiences in Medieval Arabic Book Culture.”

The 2024 conference marks the quinquagenary (fiftieth anniversary) of the founding of the NEMC. As the conference returns to Boston College for the first time since 1981, we hope to make it an especially festive occasion. With our theme of “Books and Transgressions” and with our two invited keynotes, we also propose to expand, geographically, disciplinarily, linguistically, and conceptually, what “the Middle Ages” has signified to our colleagues and students.

Boston College is located in Chestnut Hill, MA, and is easily accessible by car, plane, or bus. To learn more about the campus and its environs, see https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/about/maps-and-directions/directions.html.



Last updated January 24, 2024
This CFP has been viewed 303 times.

CFP Wooden O Symposium 2024 (4/20/2024; Cedar City, Utah 8/5-7/2024)

Wooden O Symposium


deadline for submissions: April 20, 2024

full name / name of organization: Southern Utah University - Utah Shakespeare Festival

contact email: tvordi@suu.edu

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/02/23/wooden-o-symposium


The 2024 Wooden O Symposium will be held in conjunction with the Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association’s annual conference in Cedar City, UT.

We are also pleased to announce our keynote speaker is Vanessa I. Corredera (Andrews University), author of Reanimating Shakespeare's Othello in Post-Racial America (Edinburgh University Press, 2022).

The Wooden O Symposium invites panel and paper proposals on any topic relating to Shakespeare and his plays:

  • Literary Analysis & Theoretical Approaches
  • Shakespeare and Adaptation
  • Shakespeare on Screen
  • Shakespeare in Performance
  • Shakespeare and History, Culture, and Society
  • Shakespeare and Rhetoric
  • Shakespeare and the Arts


We encourage papers and presentations that speak to the Utah Shakespeare Festival’s 2024 summer season: Henry VIII, The Winter’s Tale, The Taming of the Shrew, and Much Ado About Nothing.



The deadline for proposals is April 20, 2024.



Please include a 100-200-word abstract or session proposal (including individual abstracts) and the following information:
  • name of presenter(s)
  • participant category (faculty, graduate student, undergraduate, or independent scholar)
  • college/university affiliation
  • mailing address
  • email address
  • audio/visual requirements and any other special requests.

All abstracts should be submitted through the following link: www.memberplanet.com/s/rmmra/rmmra2024application



For more information, please contact the conference co-organizers, Scott Knowles at scottknowles@suu.edu or Jessica Tvordi at tvordi@suu.edu



Last updated February 26, 2024
This CFP has been viewed 119 times.

Wednesday, February 21, 2024

UPDATE - CFP Games of Medievalism - International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference (3/08/2024; New Jersey 07/09-11/2024)

Call for Papers: The Games of Medievalism

International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference


Montclair and South Orange, NJ, July 9-11, 2024


Abstracts are welcomed for the thirty-seventh annual conference of the International Society for the Study of Medievalism, co-sponsored by Montclair State and Seton Hall Universities, located in northern New Jersey, 14 miles from New York City (accessible by public transit). Abstracts for in-person and virtual papers and panels are welcome. To propose a panel, please include all abstracts in a single file submitted by the organizer. This file should also include the names and contact information for all participants.  


Celebrating games and sport in this Olympic summer and considering the various kinds of play inherent in Medievalism, the conference will consider the discipline’s many layers. We will arrange local visits (as interest permits) for those participating in person: to the New Jersey branch of Medieval Times, the Yogi Berra Museum, the Montclair Art Museum, and/or The Cloisters branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 


Housing options will include low-cost single or double accommodations on the campus of Montclair State University (circa $50-60/night) and room blocks in local hotels. 


We welcome papers and presentations on all topics of Medievalism, not limited to the conference theme.  We enthusiastically welcome proposals from presenters in (or addressing topics related to) regions outside North American, Western Europe, and the Anglophone World.  



Keynote

“A ‘Carnival of Architecture’: Race, Place, and Play in Oblivion and the Elder Scrolls Franchise," Kevin and Brent Moberly, Old Dominion University and Indiana University



Suggested Topics

  • Medievalism in Video Games
  • Gaming the System (Medievalism in Geo-Politics, Economics)
  • Medievalism in Sports and Sports Culture
  • Games in Medieval Film
  • The Interplay of Medieval and Modern
  • Games in Medievalist Narratives
  • Jousts, Tournaments, Bohorts
  • Disguise, Cosplay, and Cross-Dressing
  • Games of Chance, Gambling, and Tavern Pursuits
  • Medievalism in Tabletop Games
  • Poetry Competitions or Challenges
  • The Play(s) of Medievalism
  • Playing with Medieval Medicine and other Techniques in the Modern World
  • Medievalist Musicals: Spamalot, Six, Pippin, Camelot, etc.
  • Games in the Construction of Medievalism
  • Medieval games in medievalist art or generative AI
  • Medievalism as Game
  • Chivalry, Courtesy, and other codes in Medievalism


Submission Instructions

Please submit your 200 to 250-word abstracts on the following Google Form by March 8 (date extended):

https://forms.gle/KCmquR8VungYzEoz9



Questions

Please contact conference organizers Elizabeth Emery and Angela Weisl:

gamesissm@gmail.com


Friday, February 16, 2024

CFP The Games of Medievalism (2/20/2024; ISSM 7/9-11/2024)

Source: https://sites.google.com/view/thegamesofmedievalism/home

Call for Papers: The Games of Medievalism


International Society for the Study of Medievalism Annual Conference

Montclair and South Orange, NJ, July 9-11, 2024


Abstracts are welcomed for the thirty-seventh annual conference of the International Society for the Study of Medievalism, co-sponsored by Montclair State and Seton Hall Universities, located in northern New Jersey, 14 miles from New York City (accessible by public transit). Abstracts for in-person and virtual papers and panels are welcome. To propose a panel, please include all abstracts in a single file submitted by the organizer. This file should also include the names and contact information for all participants.


Celebrating games and sport in this Olympic summer and considering the various kinds of play inherent in Medievalism, the conference will consider the discipline’s many layers. We will arrange local visits (as interest permits) for those participating in person: to the New Jersey branch of Medieval Times, the Yogi Berra Museum, the Montclair Art Museum, and/or The Cloisters branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.


Housing options will include low-cost single or double accommodations on the campus of Montclair State University (circa $50-60/night) and room blocks in local hotels.


We welcome papers and presentations on all topics of Medievalism, not limited to the conference theme. We enthusiastically welcome proposals from presenters in (or addressing topics related to) regions outside North American, Western Europe, and the Anglophone World.


Keynote

“A ‘Carnival of Architecture’: Race, Place, and Play in Oblivion and the Elder Scrolls Franchise," Kevin and Brent Moberly, Old Dominion University and Indiana University


Suggested Topics

  • Medievalism in Video Games
  • Gaming the System (Medievalism in Geo-Politics, Economics)
  • Medievalism in Sports and Sports Culture
  • Games in Medieval Film
  • The Interplay of Medieval and Modern
  • Games in Medievalist Narratives
  • Jousts, Tournaments, Bohorts
  • Disguise, Cosplay, and Cross-Dressing
  • Games of Chance, Gambling, and Tavern Pursuits
  • Medievalism in Tabletop Games
  • Poetry Competitions or Challenges
  • The Play(s) of Medievalism
  • Playing with Medieval Medicine and other Techniques in the Modern World
  • Medievalist Musicals: Spamalot, Six, Pippin, Camelot, etc.
  • Games in the Construction of Medievalism
  • Medieval games in medievalist art or generative AI
  • Medievalism as Game
  • Chivalry, Courtesy, and other codes in Medievalism




Submission Instructions

Please submit your 200 to 250-word abstracts on the following Google Form by February 20:

https://forms.gle/KCmquR8VungYzEoz9


Questions

Please contact conference organizers Elizabeth Emery and Angela Weisl:

gamesissm@gmail.com