Jobs for Medievalists

Curatorial Intern (Books and Manuscripts)

Royal Collection Trust

Fine Art and Library

Windsor Castle

Internship

October 2018

June 2019

£17,062.50 per annum (pro rata)

37.5 per week, over 5 days, Monday to Friday

It’s being in the perfect place to learn how to care for and curate a world-class collection

It’s being encouraged to gain new skills. And it’s the opportunity to develop your knowledge of one of the world’s most impressive art collections. This is what makes an internship with Royal Collection Trust so different.

The Royal Library is responsible for over 200,000 items, including some of the finest and most important books and manuscripts in the world.

As part of the Royal Library curatorial team, you’ll gain first-hand experience in a wide range of curatorial activities, including researching the collections, assisting with their presentation through a range of media, and helping to display books and manuscripts within the galleries and royal residences.

You’ll develop an understanding of our curatorial management systems and have the opportunity to gain an insight into a specific area of curatorial responsibility through individual project work. For this, you’ll work particularly closely with our outstanding collection of fine and historic bindings.

You’ll also assist in the administration of loans and exhibitions and help with the cataloguing of additions to the Library.

With the chance to benefit from the expertise of Curators within our Books and Manuscripts team, you’ll be able to enhance your skills in an exciting environment where development and training is encouraged.

Click here for more information and to apply.

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An Open Letter from the Medieval Academy of America to the College Board

Trevor Packer
Senior Vice President, AP and Instruction
The College Board
250 Vesey Street
New York, NY 10281
TPacker@collegeboard.org

Dear Mr. Packer,

The Medieval Academy of America (MAA) and especially its K-12 Committee urges the College Board to reconsider its recent decision to revise the Advanced Placement (AP) World History exam to “assess content only from c. 1450 to the present.”

As the largest organization in the world dedicated to the study of the Middle Ages, we have noted with alarm a clear decline in representation of this important epoch in core standards at the secondary school level. This trend has reached a tipping point with the College Board’s decision to begin its AP World History curriculum at the year 1450 while recommending that schools develop their own pre-1450 coursework. To assume that schools will do so and that students will take these courses, especially at a time of limited resources and even more limited faculty, is highly speculative at best. In addition, relegating the premodern world to “pre-AP” certainly diminishes its standing. Because pre-AP courses are required to be made available to all students enrolled in a school, and do not carry weighted grades or the distinction of an AP examination for college credit, students do not typically view them with the same level of respect or afford them the same level of importance that they assign to AP courses, unless a school offers them in combination with Honors or some other academic distinction.

There are several further problems with this strategy. By beginning “world history” in 1450, the College Board is essentially sending the message that premodern culture and events are unimportant. It is impossible to make sense out of the political and historical climate of the mid-fifteenth century without a grounding in what came before. It is especially unfortunate to suggest, with the 1450 start date, that “world history” effectively begins with the arrival of white Europeans in North America, coupled with the mass extinction (chiefly through disease) of substantial segments of native populations. A pre-1450 start date would facilitate study of a global Middle Ages, a period when regions such as China, Mali, Ethiopia, Armenia, and Egypt had great achievements, in conditions of relative parity, before the oceanic dominance of a few western powers (Portugal, Spain, Holland, England, France). We have all seen how misappropriation of medieval history leads to the advancement of dangerous, racist narratives. Only education can counter such misuse of history. Teaching the reality rather than the fictionalized fantasy of the Middle Ages has never been more important than it is today.

A few alternative suggestions to this decision might be:

● Split the World History AP course into two courses with two exams: “AP World History to 1450” and “AP World History after 1450” (this configuration corresponds more clearly with the World History offerings at most universities and reinstates the importance of the premodern world in the curriculum);
● Rethink the designation of the medieval as “The Postclassical Period,” which again privileges Europe while simultaneously ignoring the vital impact of a thousand-year period on today’s world;
● Consider thematic strands that cover the crucial historical timelines (for example, “race,” “gender,” “governance,” etc.).

The Medieval Academy of America K-12 Committee is focused on improving representation of the medieval period in K-12 curricula, and we would be very happy to partner with the College Board in thinking through these issues.

Sincerely,

Medieval Academy of America – Council
(https://www.medievalacademy.org/page/Governance?)

Medieval Academy of America – K-12 Committee
(https://www.medievalacademy.org/page/K12_Cmte)

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History of Medicine fellowships at The New York Academy of Medicine Library

Applications are currently being accepted for the 2019 cycle of The New York Academy of Medicine Library’s two history of medicine fellowships: the Paul Klemperer Fellowship in the History of Medicine and the Audrey and William H. Helfand Fellowship in the History of Medicine and Public Health.  Information about the two residential fellowships, along with application materials and instructions for applying, can be found here:  https://www.nyam.org/awards-grants/library-fellowships/

Questions about the fellowships or the application process may be directed to me.

Arlene Shaner, MA MLS
Historical Collections Librarian
212.822.7313 office

The New York Academy of Medicine
LIBRARY
1216 Fifth Avenue | New York, NY 10029

NYAM.org

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CARA News – Medieval Institute at Western Michigan University

Western Michigan University’s Medieval Institute and the medievalist community enjoyed in 2017-2018 a year of activities, accomplishments, and accolades.

The Institute sponsored lectures by Scott Magelssen (University of Washington School of Drama) and Jyotsna Singh (Michigan State University) in its distinguished lecture series and co-sponsored a lecture by English Department faculty member Eve Salisbury in the Department of English’s Anthony Ellis Scholarly Speaker Series.

The Institute hosted the 53rd International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 10-13, 2018), which attracted 2,623 medievalists to the campus. Marjorie Currie Woods was the inaugural speaker for the annual “Lecture in the Reception of the Classics in the Middle Ages,” endowed in memory of Archibald Cason Edwards, Senior, and Sarah Stanley Gordon Edwards.

The inaugural Paul E. Szarmach Prize, established by the Richard Rawlinson Center’s Board in 2017, was awarded in 2018 to Erica Weaver.  The Prize is awarded to the author of a first article in the field of Anglo-Saxon studies published in a peer-reviewed scholarly journal that is judged by the selection committee to be of outstanding quality.

Four students completed the M.A. in medieval studies in April, and two more M.A. candidates are expected to finish their degrees by the end of the year.

Guthrie Beyer won the Galway conference exchange grant for his paper “Building Bridges and the Ideologies of Kingship in Medieval Ireland, 900-1200.”

Laurie Atkinson, a Ph.D. student in the Department of English Studies at Durham University, received a Northern Bridge Doctorial Training Partnership Award from the Northern Bridge Placement Scheme to intern at Medieval Institute Publications and the Institute for two months.

Theresa Whitaker, Co-Editor-in-Chief and Managing Editor of MIP, was awarded the WMU Administrative Professional Association’s Outstanding Professional Award for 2017-18.

Jana K. Schulman, Director of the Medieval Institute was reappointed to a second 3-year term.

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uggling the Middle Ages, October 15, 2018-February 28, 2019

From October 15, 2018 through February 28, 2019, Dumbarton Oaks will host an exhibition on the medieval story The Juggler of Notre Dame, its reception from 1873 to the present day, and the broader context of medieval revivalism. The exhibit will display video material, sound materials, interactive screens, and tablets, but the focus will be on medieval objects and modern ones relating to medievalism. The exhibit will be flanked by appearances by authors of graphic novels and children’s books, concerts of musical versions, scholarly lectures, juggling performances, and more. The museum shop will also have a range of unique items for everyone from medievalist scholars to children.

Information about the exhibition and related programming can be found online at jugglingthemiddleages.com.

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British Library Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms exhibition and conference

Booking is now open for the British Library exhibition, ‘Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War’, which opens on 19 October 2018 and runs until 19 February 2019. Further details about the exhibition and how to book can be found here.

Registration is also now open for the international conference, ‘Manuscripts in the Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms’ (13-14 December 2018) and early career symposium (15 December 2018). Details of the conference and how to register can be found here.

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CARA News – Indiana University Medieval Studies Institute (MEST)

The Medieval Studies Institute (MEST) at Indiana University in Bloomington, an interdisciplinary program offering minors and certificates for both graduate and undergraduate students, saw a productive 2017-2018 academic year.

The Institute’s lecture series opened with our annual alumni lecture, which featured Ellen Muehlberger (University of Michigan) speaking on “Perpetual Adjustment: Untangling Tradition, Cult, and the Passio Perpetuae et Felicitatis,” and Gina Brandolino (University of Michigan), who led a workshop on publishing about pedagogical issues.

In October, MEST and the Department of French and Italian were delighted to have E.R. Truitt (Bryn Mawr) on campus to deliver a lecture entitled: “Making Time: The Codex and the Mechanical Clock in Late Antiquity and the Latin Middle Ages.” Dr. Truitt’s talk was preceded by an interdisciplinary roundtable on “Premodern Technologies” featuring local and regional faculty in medieval and early modern studies: Alison Calhoun (French), Nahyan Fancy (History, Depauw), Patricia Clare Ingham (English), Domenico Bertoloni Meli (History and Philosophy of Science), William Newman (History and Philosophy of Science), and Dr. Truitt.

In November, MEST sponsored a two-day symposium offering a series of perspectives on violence in the global Middle Ages, “Representing Violence in Premodern Cultures,” with visiting speakers, Warren C. Brown (History, Caltech) and Mitchell Merback (Art History, Johns Hopkins) and local participants, Asma Afsaruddin  (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures), Asaad Alsaleh (Near Eastern Languages and Cultures),  Michael Ing (Religious Studies), Morten Oxenboell (East Asian Languages and Cultures), and Nick Vogt (East Asian Languages and Cultures).

Our spring was focused on workshops and symposia, beginning with a roundtable conversation of local faculty on “Medieval Translation: Then and Now.”  In February, this year’s annual manuscript event, “Mediaevalia at the Lilly,” brought John Glasenapp (Columbia), Susan Boynton (Columbia), and Alison Altstatt (Northern Iowa) to campus for a day-long workshop on “Liturgical Manuscripts in Person.” They were joined by IU presenters Diane Reilly (Art History) and Elizabeth Hebbard (French).  The workshop concluded with a performance of some of the chants in the manuscripts discussed by the symposium.

This spring also marked the thirtieth annual MEST symposium. This year’s two-day conference on “Force and Resistance: Medieval Violence and Nonviolence” brought approximately twenty speakers from around the world to IU. Our keynote speaker, Dr. Elizabeth Allen (University of California, Irvine), delivered a stimulating lecture on “Cuthbert’s Stag: Sanctuary, Kingship, and Sacrifice.”  Enjoyed by visiting scholars, graduate students, and faculty alike, the symposium banquet included a Readers’ Circle, during which Indiana University faculty and students read aloud original language excerpts related to the theme of our symposium. Languages read this year included Old Persian, Old Arabic, Old Irish, Old Irish, Old Norse, Old English, Middle Dutch, Middle Welsh, and Middle English. The symposium concluded with a performance of medieval music by one of IU’s early music ensembles, La Luna La Mia.

In addition to these scholarly events, the Institute also focused on outreach during the past academic year. In the fall, we ran a film series on “Heretics, Revolutionaries, and Reformers” at the IU Cinema and we hosted a booth on “How to Make a Medieval Book” at a local arts and humanities festival that offered a hands-on introduction to parchment making, inks, medieval scripts, and bindings. In the spring, we sponsored a roundtable on “How Medieval is Game of Thrones?” that filled a lecture hall with curious undergraduates.

We also continued the tradition of regular reading groups in medieval languages, including groups for Middle English, Medieval Latin, Old English, Old Norse and Old French. Our lively Medieval Studies Graduate Student association, chaired by Emerson Richards (Ph.D. Candidate in Comparative Literature) hosted several workshops for students throughout the year, including a “Transcribathon” in October in which graduate students from a range of disciplines worked together to transcribe portions of a fifteenth-century manuscript including the Disticha catonis and the Historia de preliis in Middle English and Latin.

For more information about MEST, to sign up for our listserv, or to see our recent newsletters, visit us at https://medieval.indiana.edu/.

Shannon Gayk
Director, Medieval Studies Institute
Associate Professor of English
Indiana University, Bloomington

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Call for Papers – Eclecticism at the Edges: Medieval Art and Architecture at the Crossroads of the Latin, Greek, and Slavic Cultural Spheres (c.1300-c.1550)

SYMPOSIUM

Eclecticism at the Edges: Medieval Art and Architecture at the Crossroads of the Latin, Greek, and Slavic Cultural Spheres (c.1300-c.1550)

Date: April 5-6, 2019

Location: Princeton University

Organizers:
Alice Isabella Sullivan, Ph.D. (University of Michigan)

Maria Alessia Rossi, Ph.D. (The Index of Medieval Art, Princeton University)

Description:
In response to the global turn in art history, this two-day symposium explores the temporal and geographic parameters of the study of medieval art, seeking to challenge the ways we think about the artistic production of Eastern Europe. Serbia, Bulgaria, and the Romanian principalities of Wallachia, Moldavia, and Transylvania, among other centers, took on prominent roles in the transmission and appropriation of western medieval, byzantine, and Slavic artistic traditions, as well as the continuation of the cultural legacy of Byzantium in the later centuries of the empire, and especially in the decades after the fall of Constantinople in 1453.

This symposium will be the first such initiative to explore, discuss, and focus on the art, architecture, and visual culture of regions of the Balkans and the Carpathians (c.1300-c.1550). We aim to raise issues of cultural contact, transmission, and appropriation of western medieval, byzantine, and Slavic artistic and cultural traditions in eastern European centers, and consider how this heritage was deployed to shape notions of identity and visual rhetoric in these regions from the fourteenth through the sixteenth centuries. This event will offer a comparative and multi-disciplinary framework, ranging from art history to archeology and from material culture to architectural history. We aim to create a platform where scholars at various stages of their careers can discuss their research and engage in dialogue regarding the specificities but also the shared cultural heritage of these regions of Eastern Europe that developed eclectic visual vocabularies and formed a cultural landscape beyond medieval, byzantine, and modern borders.

Papers could address topics that include, but are not limited to:

  • How cross-cultural contact facilitated the transfer, appropriation, and transmission of ideas and artistic traditions across geographical and temporal boundaries in Eastern Europe (c.1300-c.1550)
  • Artistic and iconographic developments as expressions of particular social, political, and ecclesiastical circumstances and dialogues in the Balkans and the Carpathians
  • The intentions and consequences of diplomatic missions and dynastic marriages in the visual agenda of eastern European centers
  • Workshop practices and traveling artists beyond medieval political and religious borders
  • Patronage and new constructs of identity before and after 1453

Interested scholars should submit a paper title, a 500-word abstract, and a CV by August 15, 2018 to the organizers at: eclecticism.symposium@gmail.com

Funds will be available to defray the cost of travel and accommodations for participants whose papers are accepted in the Symposium. So far, this event is supported in part by the International Center of Medieval Art (www.medievalart.org), the Society of Historians of East European, Eurasian, and Russian Art and Architecture (www.shera-art.org), the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (piirs.princeton.edu), and The Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University (ima.princeton.edu).

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Call for Papers – Ritual and Religion in the Medieval World

Ritual and Religion in the Medieval World
39TH Annual Conference of the Center for Medieval Studies
Fordham University

Saturday March 30-Sunday March 31, 2019

Long regarded as among the most esoteric and static aspects of premodern civilizations, religious ritual is now the focus of probing and evocative studies of medieval governmental, social, intellectual, spiritual, and domestic life. Rituals of purification and petition, birth and death, friendship and war are now seen as essential to our understanding of everything from the drama of high politics to the rhythms of quotidian life. Moreover, scholars recognize that practitioners and participants in such rituals were not exclusively members of closed communities of specialist performers preserving ossified rites, but also creative and subversive agents who often sought to effect change in public and private spheres. This conference seeks to continue widening the conversation about ritual and religion in the medieval world by bringing into dialogue contributions from across several religious traditions, including Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. The organizers welcome papers that explore a wide range of themes, including:

  • devotional practices
  • music
  • art and architecture
  • textual production and transmission
  • inter-cultural contacts in a religious context
  • history and archaeology
  • pilgrimage
  • rituals and practical ethics
  • gender and ritual
  • ritual performance, and the senses
  • rites of passage
  • sacrifice
  • ritual and affect theory
  • ritual and poetics
  • pedagogy
  • ascetic practices and disciplines

This conference is organized in honor of Professor Richard F. Gyug, in recognition of his many contributions to the field of religious history and to the vibrancy of the medieval studies community at Fordham University.

Deadline for Abstracts September 15

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Call for Papers –  Midwest Medieval History Conference

Midwest Medieval History Conference
October 19 & 20
Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI

Call for Papers

Globalizing the Middle Ages

Keynote speaker: Carol Symes, Ph.D.

The Midwest Medieval History Conference seeks papers on all aspects of medieval history, especially those related to this year’s theme: Globalizing the Middle Ages. We welcome papers by graduate students, as well as senior scholars. The programming committee is also happy to receive papers addressing teaching, pedagogy, and digital humanities.

Submission deadline: June 30.

Submit abstracts for paper proposals to Bobbi Sutherland at

bsutherland1@udayton.edu

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