Jobs for Medievalists

The Yale University Department of English seeks to appoint an outstanding scholar at the rank of assistant professor specializing in medieval literature.  Scholarship may focus on any area of Medieval Studies, with particular attention to work that expands the reach and engagement of the field.

We are primarily interested in scholars who specialize in later Middle English, though applications from scholars of early Middle English are also welcome.  We seek applicants with research interests that might include (though are not confined to) the following areas: the theory and history of sexuality; ecocriticism and environmental studies; the global Middle Ages; digital humanities and media studies; contemporary and historical approaches to literary criticism and theory; Latin intellectual culture; Piers Plowman; manuscript studies; and/or topics addressing diversity in race/ethnicity, gender, and other categories of identity.

Candidates should demonstrate an exceptional capacity for original scholarship, a strong commitment to energetic and innovative teaching, and a willingness to work collaboratively to help promote research in medieval studies within and beyond Yale. The Ph.D. or equivalent degree at time of hire is required.

All applicants should submit a letter of application, a CV, a statement of research interests, at least three letters of reference, and a 20-page writing sample prepared for anonymous reading at http://apply.interfolio.com/67884. Review of applications will begin on 1 Nov. Please contact search committee chair, Prof. Ardis Butterfield (ardis.butterfield@yale.edu), or chair’s assistant, Sarah Harford (sarah.harford@yale.edu) with any questions.

Medievalists at Yale are members not only of their appointing departments, but also of the PhD-granting Program in Medieval Studies, which brings together scholars from across the humanistic disciplines for events such as an annual lecture series and a work-in-progress lunch.  Research in medieval studies is also well-supported by university collections, including the Yale University Art Gallery, the Yale Center for British Art, and the especially rich holdings of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, including the Takamiya deposit of late medieval English manuscripts.  Yale University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity employer. Yale values diversity among its students, staff, and faculty and strongly welcomes applications from women, persons with disabilities, protected veterans, and underrepresented minorities.

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Jobs for Medievalists

Haverford College invites applications for a tenure-track position in the Department of Classics at the rank of Assistant Professor. The position will start in Fall 2020 and qualified candidates should have completed the PhD at the time of the appointment. The field of scholarly expertise is open but the successful candidate is expected to establish a vigorous research agenda in their area of scholarship and contribute to Haverford’s Classics curriculum, which is taught in collaboration with colleagues at Bryn Mawr College. The candidate will be expected to offer courses in Greek and/or Latin at all levels and courses in classical literature, history, and culture in translation. Applicants are encouraged to indicate their ability to expand Haverford’s Classics curriculum by (for example) offering courses in other historical languages or contributing to one or more of our interdisciplinary minors or concentrations (https://www.haverford.edu/academics/majors-minors-and-concentrations). The candidate should also be able to offer courses that can be cross-listed with the Haverford-Bryn Mawr program in Comparative Literature (https://www.haverford.edu/comparative-literature).

Applicants should submit the following materials via Interfolio (https://apply.interfolio.com/67303): a cover letter, CV, three confidential letters of recommendation, a writing sample of approximately 20–40 pages, and a 2–4 page teaching statement that highlights strategies for effective engagement with students from diverse backgrounds, use of varied pedagogies, and other experiences as a teacher and mentor. All application materials must be submitted by 11:59 pm EDT on October 13, 2019.

Preliminary interviews will be conducted at the Society for Classical Studies Annual Meeting in Washington, DC, January 2-5, 2020 or by video conference.

Questions about the position may be directed to Bret Mulligan, Chair, Department of Classics (bmulliga@haverford.edu). Questions about the application process should be directed to hc-classicssearch@haverford.edu. For technical questions, please contact Interfolio directly at 1-877-997-8807 or help@interfolio.com.

Haverford College is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer that does not discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, age, marital status, disability or veteran status.  Haverford has a longstanding commitment to diversity rooted in values of inclusion and social justice, a commitment reflected in the curriculum, classrooms, and communal composition of the College.  Haverford welcomes applications from candidates who share these values and who will foster their contribution to the College’s mission.

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Call for Papers – Thematic issue: Bestiary

CALL FOR PAPERS | Thematic issue
BESTIARY

MEDIEVALISTA Journal
Instituto de Estudos Medievais
Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, NOVA Lisbon (Portugal)

Deadline: until December of 2019In the Middle Ages, the world was conceived as a book of divine origin which needed to be read and decoded according to its Demiurge and Creator. This cosmological vision had great impact upon the development of a thinking that looked at nature as a set of divine symbols and manifestations. Properly framed by the clerics’ oratory, animals were symbols of a unique efficacy. The critical observation and a reading of the works produced be medieval authors requires, for contemporary scholars, study and knowledge of the animal symbologies then used, in order to provide a more complete and effective understanding of the texts and images that Middle Ages bequeathed to us.

BESTIARY is the topic of this call for papers and the Institute of Medieval Studies (IEM), a research center of FCSH / NOVA, invites scholars from Medieval Studies to submit their articles to Medievalista Journal until December of 2019.
Texts must respect the Editorial Policy and Autor’s Instructions: http://www2.fcsh.unl.pt/iem/medievalista/MEDIA/author-instructions-PDF.pdf, and can be written in Portuguese, English, French, Spanish, Italian, German and sent to medievalista@fcsh.unl.pt, following the template available at http://www2.fcsh.unl.pt/iem/medievalista/MEDIA/author-instructions-PDF.pdf

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Call for Papers – 55th International Congress on Medieval Studies

Paper proposals are sought for General Sessions of the 55th International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 7-10, 2020). Papers on topics in any and all areas of medieval studies (defined about as broadly as you can imagine) are welcome. The deadline is September 15.

wmich.edu/medievalcongress/submissions

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Call for Papers – Digital Medievalists

Digital methods are by definition at the border of Medieval Studies. This bold statement is primarily justified by the observation that the application of digital methods is triggered by a research community outside Medieval Studies, i.e. Computer Science and New Media Studies. Therefore, in its interdisciplinary nature digital medieval studies is a border-crossing discipline and breaks up traditionally developed scholarly silos and institutional borders. The experimentation with and application of new methods and technologies challenges traditional perceptions and research approaches. Another kind of digital boarders are “metadata borders”. For example, digital cataloging standards create unintended, and sometimes intended borders and boundaries, that prevent data-sharing and linking.  

In the light of this proposition the Digital Medievalist will take the opportunity of next years’ general IMC theme (“Borders”) to discuss cutting edge and “border-crossing” digital methods and technologies and/or borders and boundaries caused by digital methods. Topics may include current research in machine learning, computer vision, 3D modeling, IIIF, multispectral imaging, Handwritten Text Recognition, Linked Data and distant reading, etc. Machine learning, for instance, poses specific problems for Medieval Studies, as its success depends on the availability, findability, reusability, and accessibility of large amounts of data. Similar issues exist with the application of other digital methods to medieval material and the session(s) “Digital Borders of Medieval Studies” will be the place to present and discuss them.

The Digital Medievalist community invites the submission of proposals for 20-minutes papers covering a topic relating to the session title and focusing on the application of digital methods and technologies for current and future research in the field of Medieval Studies.

Please send your proposal (300 Words incl. a short CV) to dm.imc2020@gmail.com by Sept. 15th.

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Jobs for Medievalists

Haverford College invites applications for a tenure-track position in the Department of Classics at the rank of Assistant Professor. The position will start in Fall 2020 and qualified candidates should have completed the PhD at the time of the appointment. The field of scholarly expertise is open but the successful candidate is expected to establish a vigorous research agenda in their area of scholarship and contribute to Haverford’s Classics curriculum, which is taught in collaboration with colleagues at Bryn Mawr College. The candidate will be expected to offer courses in Greek and/or Latin at all levels and courses in classical literature, history, and culture in translation. Applicants are encouraged to indicate their ability to expand Haverford’s Classics curriculum by (for example) offering courses in other historical languages or contributing to one or more of our interdisciplinary minors or concentrations (https://www.haverford.edu/academics/majors-minors-and-concentrations). The candidate should also be able to offer courses that can be cross-listed with the Haverford-Bryn Mawr program in Comparative Literature (https://www.haverford.edu/comparative-literature).

Applicants should submit the following materials via Interfolio (https://apply.interfolio.com/67303): a cover letter, CV, three confidential letters of recommendation, a writing sample of approximately 20–40 pages, and a 2–4 page teaching statement that highlights strategies for effective engagement with students from diverse backgrounds, use of varied pedagogies, and other experiences as a teacher and mentor. All application materials must be submitted by 11:59 pm EDT on October 13, 2019.

Preliminary interviews will be conducted at the Society for Classical Studies Annual Meeting in Washington, DC, January 9–12, 2020 or by video conference.

Questions about the position may be directed to Bret Mulligan, Chair, Department of Classics (bmulliga@haverford.edu). Questions about the application process should be directed to hc-classicssearch@haverford.edu. For technical questions, please contact Interfolio directly at 1-877-997-8807 or help@interfolio.com.

Haverford College is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer that does not discriminate on the basis of race, ethnicity, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, age, marital status, disability or veteran status.  Haverford has a longstanding commitment to diversity rooted in values of inclusion and social justice, a commitment reflected in the curriculum, classrooms, and communal composition of the College.  Haverford welcomes applications from candidates who share these values and who will foster their contribution to the College’s mission.

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2019-2020 Franklin Research Grant competition

Franklin Research Grants

The American Philosophical Society’s Franklin Research Grants support the cost of research leading to publication in all areas of knowledge. Applicants are expected to have a doctorate or to have published work of doctoral character and quality. The Society is particularly interested in supporting the work of young scholars who have recently received the Ph.D.

Deadlines: October 1, 2019, and December 2, 2019

Award: up to $6,000

Contact: Linda Musumeci, Director of Grants and Fellowships, American Philosophical Society, 104 S. 5th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106

E-mailLMusumeci@amphilsoc.org

Phone: (215) 440-3429

Webhttps://www.amphilsoc.org/grants/franklin-research-grants (for information and access to application portal)

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Jobs for Medievalists

The American Academy in Rome invites applications from artists, scholars, and institutional leaders for the position of its Rome-based Director, beginning in summer 2020, for an initial term of three years (2020-2023), with the potential for two one-year renewals.  The candidate should have a distinguished record of achievement in one of the disciplines represented at the Academy as well as significant experience in management and administration.  For more information, visit the Academy’s website: https://www.aarome.org/jobs   or job application portal: https://aarome.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=17

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Call for Applications

Call for Applications
DIGITAL EDITING AND THE MEDIEVAL MANUSCRIPT
Harvard University
October 19th and 20th, 2019

Houghton Library, Latin 159, f.173

This graduate training workshop will cover topics in:

  •              Paleography and Cataloging of Medieval Manuscripts
  •              Manuscript Transcription and Scholarly Editing
  •              Introduction to the Digital Edition: Challenges and Best Practices
  •              Collaborative Editing
  •              XML, Text Encoding Fundamentals and the TEI Schema

No prior paleography or encoding experience is required.

The workshop covers the fundamentals of digital editing while tackling the codicological challenges posed by medieval manuscripts. Practical sessions inform collective editorial decision-making: participants will undertake the work of transcription and commentary, and encode (according to TEI P5 protocols) the text and images of a medieval manuscript. The workshop will result in a collaborative digital edition. The manuscript selected for this workshop is Houghton Lat. 159, a late medieval Book of Hours written in Latin; we will focus on a selection of suffrages. No language proficiencies are required for participation in this course.

The workshop will run from Saturday, October 19th to Sunday, October 20th, 2019, from 9.30am to 4.30pm. This graduate-run workshop is free of charge, and lunch will be provided for participants. A limited number of small need-based travel bursaries are available for participants traveling to Cambridge. The workshop will be limited to twelve places – preference will be given to graduate students with demonstrated need for training in manuscript study and text encoding.

More information about the upcoming workshop and previous workshops can be found on the website—please read this information before applying, and apply online by September 20th at

tinyurl.com/digitalmanuscriptediting.

Applicants will be notified whether they can be offered a place by September 23rd. For more information, see the project website:

digitalrollsandfragments.com/workshops,

or email organizers at

digitalmanuscriptediting@gmail.com.

This workshop is funded by an S.T. Lee grant and co-sponsored by the Committee for Medieval Studies and the Classics Department at Harvard University.

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Call for Papers – Bending the Knee: Proskynesis, Genuflection, and Bowing Rituals in the Medieval World (Sessions I and II)

Call For Papers

The 55th International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo, May 7–10, 2020
Bending the Knee: Proskynesis, Genuflection, and Bowing Rituals
in the Medieval World (Sessions I and II)

Various pre-modern cultural traditions managed interactions between members of different social strata by prescribing performative displays of supplication and humility. Perceptible and formalized movements of the body, often performed publicly in courtly and religious settings, provided a symbolic visual vocabulary for interaction. They consisted of different extensions and contractions of joints and muscles, and often took the form of proskynesis, kowtow, genuflection, and bowing, as well as other gestures. These widely persistent social rituals represented the nature of the polarized relationship between master and slave, ruler and ruled, or superior and inferior in medieval cultures. They also served as forms of social currency; those acknowledging their superior’s authority and power were rewarded with social recognition. Paradoxically, bowing rituals could also result in one’s own exaltation through an elevation to a higher societal or spiritual ranking. Depictions and acts of genuflection or proskynesis were not limited to imperial contexts. Lowering the body as a means of elevating the soul was fundamental to monastic practice in Christian, Islamic, and many other cultures.

These two panels call for papers that discuss, explicate, and contextualize the rituals, histories, imagery, and cultural significance associated with different forms of bowing and bending throughout the medieval world. We particularly invite comparative cross-cultural studies pertaining to rituals of supplication within medieval Islam, Christianity (Latin and Byzantine), and other faiths, cultures, and traditions. Furthermore, papers can also discuss how these performative gestures delineated the relationships between ruler and ruled, master and slave, and upper and lower classes in various pre-modern contexts. Our goal with these panels is to begin an interdisciplinary dialogue spurring new lines of inquiry currently absent from existing studies that focus solely on individual cultural contexts.

Please submit a single-page abstract to Ali Asgar Hussamuddin Alibhai (PhD Harvard University) and Erika Loic (PhD Harvard University) at the following address by September 18, 2019BendingTheKneeKalamazoo@gmail.com. All accepted paper presenters will be expected to register for and attend the Medieval Congress in Kalamazoo, Michigan (May 2020). If you have any questions, feel free to contact us in the meantime.

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