Expand your understanding of book history during a Rare Book School course this summer. We are now accepting applications for our intensive courses on the history of manuscript, print, and digital materials.
Among our diverse array of online courses, we are pleased to offer several pertinent to those involved in the study of medievalism, early modernism, rare books, and manuscripts:
-H-20a: The Book in the Manuscript Era, taught by Raymond Clemens (22 hours)
-M-70a: The Handwriting and Culture of Early Modern English Manuscripts, taught by Heather Wolfe (22 hours)
-M-100a: Fragmentology, taught by Lisa Fagin Davis (22 hours)
These offerings include both adaptations of in-person RBS classes and brand-new courses. For more details, including costs and course descriptions, please explore our full schedule: https://rarebookschool.org/schedule/. Even more courses will be announced on the schedule page soon!
To be considered in the first round of admissions decisions, course applications should be submitted no later than March 8.
Applications received after March 8 will be reviewed on a rolling basis, however, please note that some classes do reach capacity during the first round of admissions. Visit our website at www.rarebookschool.org for course details, instructions for applying, and evaluations by past students. Contact us at rbsprograms@virginia.edu with questions.
Please share this information with colleagues, students, and friends.
We hope to see you in an online Rare Book School course soon!
With best regards,
The RBS Programs Team
Registration for the 96th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America is now open.
We are very pleased to announce that the inaugural Inclusivity & Diversity Research Grant has been awarded to Sourav Ghosh (University of California at Berkeley) to support his project, “Ideology, Infrastructure, and Taxonomy: Archiving and the Origin of Medieval Indian Historiography in Late Colonial India.” In his words, the project “…shows how late colonial aesthetics, archival practices, and ideologies informed and regulated historical research on medieval India. This is both the study of the medieval historiography and the archive that shapes it. By focusing on a private archive (Shree Natnagar Shodh Samsthan: The Raghubir Singh Library and Research Institute) in modern-day central India, I illustrate how infrastructure, material culture, colonial knowledge, collection practices, and categorization undergird and dictate the scholarship on medieval Indian history. Thus, my research on the development of medieval historiography in the modern era complicates our existing understating of medieval studies as a field of inquiry.” In selecting Ghosh, the Prize Committee noted that “This is a strong project on the colonial archive in India that opens up another, little explored, aspect of the uses of the Middle Ages but in a non-Western context. It is both a project of Indian historiography and the influence of global empire. Ghosh has the impressive research and language skills to do this multifaceted research at a focus locale.” More information about this program is
The 97th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place on the campus of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The meeting is jointly hosted by the Medieval Academy of America and the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Virginia, with the generous support and collaboration of colleagues from Virginia Tech, the College of William & Mary, and Washington and Lee University. The conference program will feature a diverse range of sessions highlighting innovative scholarship across the many disciplines contributing to medieval studies.
Even though we won’t be able to greet you in person this year at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, the Medieval Academy of America will have a strong presence at the virtual conference, with lectures, sessions, and roundtables focusing on the Global Middle Ages, DEI, and Anti-Racism (May 10-15).

