University of Michigan Medieval and Early Modern Studies
1029 Tisch, 435 S. State St., Univ. of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1003 Phone: 734-763-2066 // Fax: 734-647-4881
Program Associate: Terre Fisher (telf@umich.edu)
Faculty Contact, 2017-2019: Christian de Pee (cdepee@umich.edu) Department of History, University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI 48109-1003 Phone: 734-763-6968
For further information about programs, degrees, and affiliated faculty, please visit our website: www.lsa.umich.edu/mems/
Lectures and Events:
In 2017-2018, guest lecturers included Jean Campbell (Emory University), Geraldine Heng (University of Texas at Austin), Michael Flier (Harvard University), Massimo Montanari (University of Bologna), Marina Brownlee (Princeton University), Carla Della Gatta (University of Southern California); Kathryn Schwarz (Vanderbilt); Christa Patton (Queens College), Lyndal Roper (University of Oxford).
Conferences, special lectures, and ongoing colloquia included “Non-Human Materials before Modernity” (Oct); “Exhibiting the Reformation” (Sep) introductory lecture to the exhibit “ Reforming the Word: Martin Luther in Context” (Oct); Pisanello, Adrian Stokes, and the Image of the Threshold” (Oct); “Reading the World in Deep Time” (Oct); “Rus’ in Celluloid: Takes on Andrei Tarkovsky’s Andrei Rublev” (Oct); “ AMfecanerica, or AmericanMfecane, 1650-1850: What Can Historians of Eastern Native America Learn from Southern Africanists?” (Oct); “Eating Italy: A History of Italian Food and Italian Identity” (Nov); “Exploring Resistance through Medieval and Early Modern Culture” Early Modern Colloquium (Mar); “ Baroque Harp Master Class and Early Music Lecture (Mar); “Portraits of Martin Luther, From Lucas Cranach to Today” (Apr); Komonjo Workshop on the History of Medieval Japanese Commoners (July-Aug); Medieval Lunch Series (run by Forum on Research in Medieval Studies; roughly monthly); FoRMS Reading Group (once per term); and the Premodern Colloquium (monthly).
As always, the Medieval Academy of America will have a strong presence at the 2018 International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 10-13).
The 94th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place in Philadelphia on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania, from 7-9 March 2019. The meeting is jointly hosted by the Medieval Academy of America, Bryn Mawr College, Delaware Valley Medieval Association, Haverford College, St. Joseph’s University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Villanova University.
We are now accepting applications for this digital humanities workshop co-sponsored by The Medieval Academy of America and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Co-taught by Benjamin Albritton (Computing Info Systems Analyst, Stanford University Libraries) and Lisa Fagin Davis (Executive Director, Medieval Academy of America), the workshop will take place at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University from 10-12 July 2018.
The Medieval Academy of America seeks to appoint an Editor for Speculum. The position is configured as part-time, requiring around 25 hours per week. The Editor is appointed for an expected five-year term, subject to acceptable yearly performance reviews, with the possibility of a second five-year term by mutual agreement. The editor should be an established scholar with academic credentials in some field(s) of medieval studies, broadly defined, with good organizational and decision-making skills. Experience in journal or book editing will be helpful but not necessary. The new editor should plan on taking office in the late Spring of 2019, and at the latest by July 1, 2019. Terms and conditions are to be negotiated, as is the physical location of the Editor.
The Medieval Academy of America is very pleased to announce the establishment of the Belle Da Costa Greene Fund.

