MAA News – From the President: Race, Racism, and Medieval Studies

As I write this letter, many colleagues are taking vacation time; some may even be travelling abroad for field research postponed by the pandemic. I wish you all safe travels and hope you will have both productive time for research and downtime for reflection and replenishment.

On a daily basis, we continue to hear news of grave concern to our community of medievalists. A millennium after the launching of the Crusades by Christian rulers of Europe to recapture the Holy Land after more than four centuries of Muslim rule, inhabitants of present-day Israel–Jews, Muslims and Christians alike–continue to suffer from a tragic loss of life from military actions rooted in the rival claims on the sacred space of Jerusalem and centuries of religious prejudice. In North America too, anti-Semitic attacks are on the rise, and in the city where I grew up, London, Ontario, 200 km to the west of Toronto, a horrific act of anti-Muslim violence was perpetrated recently when a white youth used his pickup truck to slaughter four members of a revered local Muslim family out for an evening stroll. We are also learning of horrific discoveries of hundreds of unmarked graves that are shedding new light on the shameful practices of Catholic residential schools designed to “re-educate” indigenous children in the Christian faith and Western learning. This may seem to have no medieval connection, but I am reminded of how the non-Christian “monstrous races” that were associated with the wondrous East and with Africa on medieval mappaemundi were relocated to the Americas in the age of discovery and used to justify settler colonialism and the erasure of indigenous cultures. At the University of Wisconsin where I teach, we are only beginning to give proper recognition to the “medieval” effigy and burial mounds on and around campus, dating back to the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, and we are learning to acknowledge that the university itself was built on the ancestral lands of the Ho-Chunk Nation forcibly seized in the 19th century.

There are also events that hit much closer to home as professional medievalists. Many of our members signed an open letter of support for Mary Rambaran-Olm, currently Provost’s Post-doctoral Fellow at the University of Toronto, and a scholar of race in early medieval English literature and culture as well as whiteness in medieval studies. Dr. Rambaran-Olm has repeatedly faced despicable personal attacks online for taking courageous anti-racist stances in her research and public scholarship. It is particularly dispiriting to learn that the letter circulated to express support for Dr. Rambaran-Olm was high-jacked to orchestrate personal attacks against her and several signatories by certain individuals who identify themselves as medievalists. On behalf of the Academy, I want to condemn in no uncertain terms these personal and demeaning attacks and express my strongest support for the groundbreaking research Dr. Rambaran-Olm and others who work on race within medieval cultures as well as the historiography of medieval studies and its supporting institutions. I also want to recall the Academy’s Statement on Diversity and Inclusion, which affirms that “we aim to foster an environment of diversity, inclusion, and academic freedom for all medievalists,” and in particular for students and junior faculty that we affirm their right “to receive supportive, professional mentoring that respects their intellectual freedom and personal integrity.”

It is perhaps not surprising that attacks on medievalists of color are becoming ever more frequent, particularly in an increasingly polarized political atmosphere in North America and Europe. An alarming development within the United States is the proposal or passing of legislation that seeks to ban the teaching of Critical Race Theory (hereafter, “CRT”). Without ever having read the primary scholarship of CRT and its applications, proponents of these new state laws are weaponizing the term to critique the teaching of the history of race and racism in America, which they believe teaches students to “hate America” and see white Americans as “inherently racist.” Such politicians and their supporters thus misunderstand or deliberately obfuscate the primary aims of critical race scholarship to expose prejudicial laws and practices in American society and its institutions that continue to reinforce racial discrimination in contemporary society. In medieval studies CRT has proven to be a very crucial and helpful tool for exploring aspects of systemic racism that have deep medieval roots —e.g., casting religious and ethnic Others as “monstrous races”; associating skin color and physiognomy with climate, geography and character, or dictating how and where ethnic and religious minorities can live, or who can be legally enslaved. There is healthy debate about how to characterize pre-modern race and racism and distinguish modern from medieval concepts in responsible and thoughtful ways that are attentive to cultural differences in distinct times and places, but there is now broad consensus that race and racism need to be considered as central questions in teaching and research of medieval cultures and the historiography of medieval studies. CRT offers frameworks that demonstrate the value of studying the medieval past in order to understand the complexity of race and diversity today.

These ruminations on recent events prompt me to conclude with a consideration of the role of advocacy in the Medieval Academy’s programs and public statements. While the primary role of the Academy is to promote scholarship in medieval studies and awareness among the general public of medieval cultures, we are increasingly called upon to take actions which stray into the realm of politics. The Council has recently had many provocative and challenging discussions about how and when the Academy should respond to current events and actions in the public sphere. Over the past year, we have been adhering to a policy that requires a unanimous vote from Council to sign on to or approve any public statement issued on behalf of the Medieval Academy of America. This is a high bar, which has broad support among Council members, but when there are disagreements over the kind of concrete actions we should advocate our organization and our members to take, we often risk not commenting on matters that demand our response as medievalists. The Council decided at the Annual Meeting in April to revisit our Advocacy Policy and explore alternate structures for addressing advocacy, including the possibility of establishing an Advocacy Committee that could advise Council on strategic priorities and help us go beyond statements of solidarity and approbation to translate words into concrete programs. I am grateful to council member Hussein Fancy for agreeing to take the lead on this crucial council priority in the fall. In the meantime, we have put on temporary hiatus our practice of having the Council compose or support advocacy statements of other organizations, and I will respond as President to pressing issues with the guidance of the two Vice-Presidents and our Executive Director. As always, I welcome your input on these questions and thank you for your support.

Thomas Dale, President, Medieval Academy of America
tedale@wisc.edu

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MAA News – Speculum, Volume 96, Issue 3 (July 2021)

The latest issue of Speculum is now available on the University of Chicago Press Journals website.

To access your members-only journal subscription, use the username and password associated with your MAA membership to log in on the MAA website (contact us at info@themedievalacademy.org if you have forgotten your credentials). Then, choose “Speculum Online” from the “Speculum” menu. As a reminder, your MAA membership provides exclusive online access to all issues of Speculum in full text, PDF, and e-Book editions—at no additional charge.

Speculum 96, no. 3 (July 2021)

Articles

Macro/Microcosm at Vézelay: The Narthex Portal and Non-elite Participation in Elite Spirituality
Conrad Rudolph

“To Embrace a Sack of Excrement”: Odo of Cluny and the History of an Image
Christopher A. Jones

Passing the Time: The Role of the Dice in Late Medieval Pardon Letters
Andrew Brown

Moustaches, Mantles, and Saffron Shirts: What Motivated Sumptuary Law in Medieval English Ireland?
Sparky Booker

Book Reviews
This issue of Speculum features more than 80 book reviews, including:

Alice-Mary Talbot, Varieties of Monastic Experience in Byzantium, 800–1453
Reviewed by Derek Krueger

D. L. d’Avray, Papal Jurisprudence c. 400: Sources of the Canon Law Tradition
Reviewed by Kenneth Pennington

Sarah McNamer, Meditations on the Life of Christ: The Short Italian Text
Reviewed by Shannon McHugh

Marina Rustow, The Lost Archive: Traces of a Caliphate in a Cairo Synagogue
Reviewed by Julia Bray

Thelma Fenster and Carolyn P. Collette, eds., The French of Medieval England: Essays in Honour of Jocelyn Wogan-Browne
Reviewed by Ardis Butterfield

Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales, Jill Mann, ed.; David Lawton, ed., The Norton Chaucer: “The Canterbury Tales, with Jennifer Arch and Kathryn Lynch
Reviewed by James Simpson

W. Mark Ormrod, Bart Lambert, and Jonathan Mackman, Immigrant England, 1300–1500
Reviewed by Milan Pajic

Eugenio Refini, The Vernacular Aristotle: Translation as Reception in Medieval and Renaissance Italy
Reviewed by Brenda Deen Schildgen

Celia Chazelle, The Codex Amiatinus and Its “Sister” Bibles: Scripture, Liturgy, and Art in the Milieu of the Venerable Bede
Reviewed by Carol Neuman de Vegvar

Alison I. Beach and Isabelle Cochelin, eds., The Cambridge History of Medieval Monasticism in the Latin West. Vol. 1, Origins to the Eleventh Century. Vol. 2, The High and Late Middle Ages
Reviewed by Walter Simons

Colmán Etchingham, Jón Viðar Sigurðsson, Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, and Elizabeth Ashman Rowe, Norse-Gaelic Contacts in a Viking World
Reviewed by Sarah Künzler

G. Geltner, Roads to Health: Infrastructure and Urban Wellbeing in Later Medieval Italy
Reviewed by Nükhet Varlık

MAA members also receive a 30% discount on all books and e-Books published by the University of Chicago Press, and a 20% discount on individual subscriptions to The Chicago Manual of Style Online. To access your discount code, log in to your MAA account, and click here. Please include this code while checking out from the University of Chicago Press website.

Sincerely,
The Medieval Academy of America

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MAA News – MAA @ vIMC

Join us on Monday, 5 July, 20:30 BST/15:30 EDT/12:30 PDT for a special off-program event, a conversation with MAA President Thomas Dale, Speculum Editor Katherine Jansen, and MAA Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis. The panelists will give brief updates about MAA programming and activities for 2022 and beyond, and attendees will have an opportunity to ask questions and engage in conversation and discussion. Click here to register for this event. You do not need to be registered for the IMC to attend, but you must pre-register for this event by Sunday, 4 July whether you are attending the IMC or not.

The MAA Graduate Student Committee is sponsoring Session 821 (Tuesday, 6 July, 16.30-18.00 BST): Public Medievalism: Responsibility and Cultural Heritage Management.

The MAA’s Annual IMC Lecture has been postponed until 2022, when it will be delivered by Carol Symes.

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MAA News – Upcoming Deadlines

The Medieval Academy of America invites applications for the following grants. Please note that applicants must be members in good standing as of September 15 in order to be eligible for Medieval Academy awards.

Baldwin Fellowship
The Baldwin Fellowship provides a one-year grant of $20,000 (with the possibility of a second year of funding) to support a graduate student in a North American university who is researching and writing a significant dissertation for the Ph.D. on any subject in French medieval history that can be realized only by sustained research in the archives and libraries of France. (Deadline 15 October 2021)

Schallek Fellowship
The Schallek Fellowship provides a one-year grant of $30,000 to support Ph.D. dissertation research in any relevant discipline dealing with late-medieval Britain (ca. 1350-1500). (Deadline 15 October 2021)

Travel Grants
The Medieval Academy provides travel grants to help Academy members who hold doctorates but are not in full-time faculty positions, or are contingent faculty without access to institutional funding, attend conferences to present their work. (Deadline 1 November 2021 for meetings to be held between 16 February and 31 August 2022)

MAA/CARA Conference Grant
The MAA/CARA Conference Grant for Regional Associations and Programs awards $1,000 to help support a regional or consortial conference taking place in 2022. (Deadline 15 October 2021)

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MAA News – Call for Prize Submissions

The Medieval Academy of America invites submissions for the following prizes to be awarded at the 2022 MAA Annual Meeting (University of Virginia 10-13 March). Submission instructions vary, but all dossiers must complete by 15 October 2021.

PLEASE NOTE: because of the ongoing MAA office closure, PDF review copies of nominated books may be submitted instead of hardcopies (PDFs should be emailed to the Executive Director). In addition, the residency restrictions limiting eligibility for some book prizes to residents of North America have been lifted.

Haskins Medal
Awarded to a distinguished monograph in the field of medieval studies.

Digital Humanities Prize
Awarded to an outstanding digital research project or resource in the field of medieval studies.

Karen Gould Prize
Awarded to a monograph of outstanding quality in medieval art history.

John Nicholas Brown Prize
Awarded to a first monograph of outstanding quality in the field of medieval studies.

Article Prize in Critical Race Studies
Awarded annually to an article in the field of medieval studies, published in a scholarly journal, that explores questions of race and the medieval world, and which is judged by the selection committee to be of outstanding quality.

Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize
Awarded to a first article of outstanding quality in the field of medieval studies.

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MAA News – MAA Office and Staff

We are very pleased to report that the COVID situation in Boston is improving, with more and more residents vaccinated each week and new infections, hospitalizations, and deaths decreasing. The Medieval Academy staff is beginning to return to the office with increasing regularity, although we will be primarily working remotely for at least the next few months. Email continues to be the best way to reach us: info@themedievalacademy.org. We wish you all a safe, healthy, and relaxing summer.

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MAA@IMC

If you’re attending next week’s virtual International Medieval Congress (and even if you aren’t), please join us on Monday, 5 July, 12:30 PDT/15:30 EDT/20:30 BST for a special off-program event, a conversation with MAA President Thomas Dale, Speculum Editor Katherine Jansen, and MAA Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis. The panelists will give brief updates about MAA programming and activities for 2022 and beyond, and attendees will have an opportunity to ask questions and engage in conversation and discussion. Click here to register for this event. You do not need to be registered for the IMC to attend, but you must pre-register for this event by Sunday, 4 July whether you are attending the IMC or not.

At the Congress, the MAA Graduate Student Committee is sponsoring Session 821 (Tuesday, 6 July, 16.30-18.00 BST): “Public Medievalism: Responsibility and Cultural Heritage Management”

The MAA’s Annual IMC Lecture has been postponed until 2022 and will be delivered by Carol Symes.

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The BSA Fellowship Program – Deadline October 1, 2021

The BSA Fellowship Program – Deadline October 1, 2021

In keeping with the central value the Bibliographical Society of America places on bibliography as a critical framework, the Society funds a number of fellowships to promote inquiry and research in books and other textual artifacts in both traditional and emerging formats.

Bibliographical projects may range chronologically from the study of clay tablets and papyrus rolls to contemporary literary texts and born-digital materials. Topics relating to books and manuscripts and material texts of all kinds in any field and of any period are eligible for consideration as long as they include analysis of the physical object – that is, the handwritten, printed, or other textual artifact – as historical evidence.

Full details on fellowship opportunities offered, eligibility requirements, and the application process are available on the BSA website at https://bibsocamer.org/awards/fellowships/.

Awards range from $2,500 to $6,000. A list of past Fellowship winners and their projects is also available on the BSA website at https://bibsocamer.org/awards/fellowships/previous-recipients/.

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Call for Papers – MAM 2021: “Beneficence in the Medieval World”

MAM 2021
Ball State University: Virtual
October 29-30, 2021

“Beneficence in the Medieval World”

Plenary Speaker: Dr. Dorsey Armstrong, Purdue University, “Dubious Gifts: Studying the Black Death in the age of COVID”

We invite submissions of abstracts (c. 250 words) for the 2021 Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM) Conference, to be hosted virtually by Ball State University on October 29-30, 2021.

All topics pertaining to medieval studies are welcome. We are particularly interested in proposals related to this year’s theme, “Beneficence in the Medieval World,” that explore such topics related to mercy, kindness, charity, friendship, reciprocity, gift giving, love, humanity, and altruism in the medieval world.

In keeping with MAM’s philosophy of inclusiveness, we encourage the submission of proposals from all branches of medieval studies, including but not limited to archaeology, art, bibliography, gender, history, law, language, literature, media, music, philosophy, race, religion, and science.

We invite abstract proposals for individual papers as well as fully formed sessions of papers or roundtables. 250-word abstracts are due by August 1, 2021. Please send all abstracts, questions, or queries to Alexander L. Kaufman: alkaufman@bsu.edu.

Conference attendees must be members of MAM at the time of the meeting; there will be no additional cost to attend or present at the conference.

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Call for Papers – Delaware Valley Medieval Association (DVMA) Graduate Workshop

Delaware Valley Medieval Association Graduate Workshop
October 17, 2021
Villanova University 
Villanova, Pennsylvania 
Location TBD
10am-3pm  

The DVMA invites 250-word abstracts for 20-minute talks or 5-minute flash presentations by graduate students in any discipline and on any topic that pertains to medieval studies. Global medieval submissions are welcome and encouraged!  

The purpose of this event is to provide graduate students with an opportunity to connect with an interdisciplinary community of graduate students and professors who specialize in the Middle Ages from other universities in the region, to gain experience presenting in a conference setting, and to receive feedback on their work in a casual environment.  Hence, this call for papers is intentionally open-ended: the work you present at this event could include a developing chapter in your dissertation, a completed seminar paper, a work in progress, or simply a new line of inquiry that you would like to pursue.  

This year’s event will be held in conjunction with the 46th annual Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Conference at Villanova University.  

To submit a proposal or request more information please contact Ailie Posillico and Margo Weitzman at APosill3@villanova.edu. The deadline to submit an abstract is July 19.  

To join or for more information about the DVMA visit http://dvmamedieval.com.  

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