CARA News: Northern Illinois University

The Northern Illinois University Medieval Studies Concentration was recently the beneficiary of a generous endowment to support undergraduate programs related to Medieval Studies—the David L. Wagner Medieval Studies Fund. David L. Wagner is an emeritus professor of history and medieval studies at NIU, and students and faculty alike are grateful for his generosity. In 2016, we brought Professor Robert Berkhofer of Western Michigan University to campus to give the inaugural Wagner Lecture in Medieval Culture on “Forgery and Faith in the Liber Traditionum of St. Peter’s Ghent” and to meet with undergraduate students. In 2017, we co-sponsored two public lectures with the Department of History given by Professor Richard Payne of the University of Chicago (“Religion and Empire in Iran”) and Professor Jamie Kreiner of the University of Georgia (“Domesticating Pigs and People in the Early Middle Ages”). Since receiving the endowment we have been able to provide six undergraduate scholarships, to begin funding undergraduate travel for research and conferences, and to start an annual prize for the best Medieval Studies capstone project. You can find us on Facebook at:

https://www.facebook.com/NIU-Concentration-in-Medieval-Studies-1687272954879835/

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: Western Michigan University

The Medieval Institute and the medievalist community at Western Michigan University enjoyed in 2016-2017 a year of activities, accomplishments, and accolades.

In June/July 2016, our Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research, in collaboration with the Department of English, hosted “Teaching <em>Beowulf</em> in the Context of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature,” a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute for College and University Faculty.

Melissa Mayus joined us for the year as a post-doctoral fellow/instructor, teaching the introduction to Old English and a seminar on religion and Old English literature.

The Institute sponsored a lecture by Andrew Scheil (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities) in its distinguished lecture series (wmich.edu/medieval/research/loew-lectures) and co-sponsored a lecture by David M. Perry (Dominican University) in the Department of History’s Burnham-Macmillan Lecture Series.

The Institute hosted the 52nd International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 11-14, 2017), which attracted 2,842 medievalists to the campus (wmich.edu/medievalcongress). The Institute’s two research centers, the Richard Rawlinson Center for Anglo-Saxon Studies and Manuscript Research (wmich.edu/medieval/research/anglo-saxon) and the Center for Cistercian and Monastic Studies (wmich.edu/medieval/research/cistercian), both sponsored sessions at the Congress.

Nine students completed the M.A. in medieval studies in April (wmich.edu/medieval/alumni), and three more M.A. candidates are expected to finish their degrees before the end of the summer.

Medieval Institute Publications (MIP) is in the middle of negotiating an ambitious ten-year growth plan. Already MIP has signed up over 100 new titles in 2016 and is due to publish 24 titles in 2017 alongside its existing three journals. MIP has expanded its coverage to include both the late antique and early modern periods, partly thanks to recruiting several experienced acquisitions editors who had formerly worked for Ashgate. Meanwhile, the new “Past Imperfect” series of short-form publications, available for $14.95 and as e-books, seems to have captured the imagination of authors and reviewers alike. The volumes support medievalists’ attempts to engage with a broader public (https://mip-archumanitiespress.org/blog/2017/02/05/3newpi/).

The press has welcomed a new staff member, Nicole Eddy, a recent PhD from Notre Dame who manages peer-reviewing and oversees the press’s accounts. Nicole received an award to attend the recent annual meeting of finance officers of the Association of American University Presses in St. Petersburg, FL. Long-standing managing editor, Theresa Whitaker, represented the press in Wellington, New Zealand in February at the biennial ANZAMEMS meeting. Director, Simon Forde, delivered a plenary at the annual meeting of the Taiwanese medievalists and attended meetings in China and Argentina last fall.

MIP continues to work closely in a consortium partnership with Amsterdam University Press and Arc Humanities Press, the publishing arm of the CARMEN Worldwide Medieval Network, of which the Medieval Academy is a member.

Medieval Institute affiliated faculty member Jeffrey Angles (World Languages and Literatures) won the prestigious Yomiuri Prize for Literature in poetry (wmich.edu/news/2017/02/38292), and Lofton Durham (Theatre) won a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend (wmich.edu/news/2017/04/39426).

M.A. candidate Erin S. Lynch won an All-University Graduate Student Teaching Effectiveness Award.

Affiliated faculty members Robert Felkel (Spanish), Natalio Ohanna (Spanish), Pablo Pastrana-Pérez (Spanish) won College of Arts and Sciences faculty achievement awards (wmich.edu/arts-sciences/2017-faculty-staff-awards) , and Anise Strong (History) won the college’s Gender Scholar Award.

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University of Missouri

The Medieval and Renaissance Studies (MARS) program at the University of Missouri oversees interdisciplinary minors at the undergraduate and graduate levels, and sponsors/cosponsors several MARS events during the academic year, including lectures, abstract workshops, reading groups, and social events. Our website is at http://medren.missouri.edu.

Program events:  Our medieval and early modern community enjoyed several campus events in the past year, including the annual MARS lecture by Prof. Robin Fleming (History, Boston College) on “Rethinking Early Medieval Migration with Women and Isotopes” in November 2016. In December, medievalists benefitted from the Archaeological Institute of America’s lecture series, which sponsored Prof. Dennis Trout (Classical Studies, MU), on “Pictures with Words: Reading the Apse Mosaic at S. Agnese f.l.m. (Rome).” In March 2017, Prof. Susan Phillips (English, Northwestern University), spoke on “Mercantile Mischief and Popular Pedagogy in Premodern England.” Our MARS Seminar in April 2017 brought dozens of scholars from the region together to discuss works in progress by Jonathan Lamb (English, University of Kansas), Sheila Blair (Fine Arts, Boston College), and Sheeta Chaganti (English, University of California, Davis), on the topic of aesthetics in medieval and early modern culture. The MARS-sponsored session at the 52nd International Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo continued the discussion on “The Aesthetics of Form,” with Prof. Lee Manion (English) presiding. Members of the MARS community thank Prof. Emma Lipton (English) for her three years of hard work as MARS chair, and welcome the incoming chair Prof. Megan Moore (Romance Languages).

Faculty and student news:  Work by five MARS scholars won prizes and fellowships. Prof. Johanna Kramer’s monograph Between Earth and Heaven: Liminality and the Ascension of Christ in Anglo-Saxon Literature (Manchester University Press, 2014) won the 2016 Award for Best First Book from the Southeastern Medieval Association (SEMA).  Christopher Paolella (PhD candidate, History) was awarded the Sherry L. Reames Graduate Student Travel award from the Hagiography Society, and Colby Turberville (PhD student, History) won two awards: the Jim Falls Prize for Best Paper by a Graduate Student at the Mid-America Medieval Association Meeting in September 2016, and the Best Student Paper prize at the Missouri Conference on History in March 2017. Fellowship holders included Prof. Anne Rudloff Stanton (Art History and Archaeology) who held the 2016-17 Bonnie Wheeler Fellowship from the Dallas Foundation, and Stephanie Chapman (ABD, Art History) who held the Herbert L. Schooling Fellowship from MU.

The Department of History welcomed Prof. Kristy Wilson Bowers, and bade farewell to Prof. Russ Zguta, who retired after fifty years at the University and was awarded the 2016 Presidential Award of the Central Slavic Conference for a “lifetime of support” for the Conference and “untiring promotion of Slavic Studies.”

Looking forward:  Students are invited to save the date for an innovative summer experience in 2018! Monastic Worlds (co-taught by Prof. Rabia Gregory (Religious Studies, MU) and Prof. Virginia Blanton (English, UMKC), and other faculty) is an experiential learning course that introduces students to the religious history and culture of premodern Europe and the contemporary American Midwest. The four-week class begins with two weeks of online learning, then moves to two weeks of face-to-face classes held at the Benedictine communities of Conception Abbey in Conception, MO and Mount St Scholastica in Atchison, KS. Onsite, students will observe and participate in communal life, work with manuscripts and early printed books, and visit the largest reliquary collection in North America, housed at a Benedictine convent in Clyde, MO. More information can be found at http://cas2.umkc.edu/mems/monastic-worlds.asp.

Prof. Rabia Gregory (Religious Studies) is pleased to announce a new book series, Christianities Before Modernity, which will be published by ARC Humanities Press and Medieval Institute Publications. More about the series, which will be co-edited by Prof. Gregory, Prof. Kathleen E. Kennedy (Pennsylvania State University, Brandywine), Prof. Susanna A. Throop (Ursinis College), and Charlene Villaseñor Black (UCLA), is available here [https://mip-archumanitiespress.org/series/mip/christianities-before-modernity/].

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: Germantown Friends School

A special report from Germantown Friends School, an independent K-12 school in Philadelphia. The report was submitted by Latin teacher James Barron.

“Our Medieval studies unit caps off a year of coordinated work in two courses.  At our school, sophomores who study Latin have the option of taking their Ancient and Medieval History course in conjunction with Latin III.  Students opting for this program then study the history of Rome from its origins through to the collapse of the Western empire and the transition to Medieval societies and cultures (we call this course Latin History).  I teach both the Latin III and Latin History courses, so I have these students twice daily in class.  The fourth quarter of the year is focused on bringing students to an awareness and appreciation of the complex process of preservation, transformation, and loss by which late antiquity became the “middle ages.”  Starting with Lactantius’ De Mortibus Persecutorum (Bk 7, the administrative and economic programs of Diocletian), students then read Orosius’ Historiarum Adversum Paganos (Bk 7, the Visigoth Athaulfus’ desire to restore Roman law), Jordanes’ De Origine Actibusque Getarum (Bk 42, Attila and Pope Leo I), Gregory of Tours’ Historiae Francorum (Bk 2, the conversion of Clovis), Einhard’s Vita Karoli Magni (Bk 1, Childeric III the last Merovingian king; Bks 22, 24, and 25, descriptions of Charlemagne and his educational renaissance), and finally, Fulcher of Chartres’ Historia Hierosolymitana (851-853a, the fall of Jerusalem).  Finally, students spend the month of May working on individual translation and research projects in which they select a text from Harrington’s Medieval Latin (2nd edition).  They research the author to provide a brief biography and then locate him or her with respect to time period, society, culture, audience, etc.  In addition to their translation of their chosen author’s text, they also comment upon changes and departures from Classical Latin grammar, vocabulary, and orthography.  The students really get excited about their projects.  For example, two girls this year chose Hildegard of Bingen and presented her from a feminist perspective.  They found recordings of Hildegard’s carmina that they had translated and wrote an alto part for one of the songs so that they, a soprano and an alto, could perform the hymn for the class.  They also made cookies for us, following a recipe of Hildegard.  Among other authors selected this year were Boethius, Pope Gregory I, Isidore of Seville, and Paul the Deacon.  During the last class, the students explain their author and work to their classmates, and as they do so, the rich textures of Western Medieval culture become palpable and amplified.  This exercise makes each student an “expert” to his or her classmates around a Medieval person and text.  It also allows me to ask questions better answered by students than delivered in a lecture, for example, “Why are all of these authors associated with the church,” or “What shared worldviews exist between these writers and their audiences and what is required of us to understand and appreciate that connection on its own terms?” “

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University College London

Medieval and Renaissance Studies at UCL

# Masters training and and past student views about it:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/mars

# The Graduate Students’ Seminar:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/mars/seminars-lectures/imars

# Seminars at the Institute of Historical Research:
http://www.history.ac.uk/events/seminars

  • Earlier Middle Ages
  • Crusades and the Latin East
  • European History 1150-1550
  • Late Medieval and Early Modern Italy
  • Late Medieval Seminar
Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University of Vermont

Medieval Studies at the University of Vermont

In 2016-2017 an interdisciplinary group of medievalists at the University of Vermont, with the support of the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, the Department of History, the Department of Romance Languages, and Bailey-Howe Library Special Collections, inaugurated the “UVM College of Arts and Sciences Medieval Studies Lecture Series,” which included:

October 18, 2016:  Alfred J. Andrea (Professor Emeritus, UVM),  “The Crusades in the Context of World History.”

January 19, 2017:  Tracy Adams (University of Auckland), “The French Royal Mistress and the Politics of Representation.”

February 8, 2017:  Ray Clemens (Yale University, Beinecke Library): “The World’s Most Mysterious Manuscript: Theories on Its Origin and Use.”

February 13, 2017:  Jacques Dalarun (IRHT/CNRS, Paris), “The ‘Rediscovered Francis of Assisi’ in the Rediscovered Life by Thomas of Celano.”

Looking ahead:  On July 14, 2017 we are pleased to be hosting the 5th Annual “Vermont Midsummer Medieval Summit,” with pre-circulated papers from Cecilia Gaposchkin (Dartmouth College) and Charles-Louis Morand-Métivier (UVM), supported by the UVM Humanities Center (if you’ll be in the area and would like to attend, contact sean.field@uvm.edu).

The lineup for the 2017-2018 “Medieval Studies Lecture Series” is still being developed, but will include a public lecture by Miri Rubin (Queen Mary, University of London), November 9 (with the support of the Carolyn and Leonard Miller Center for Holocaust Studies), on “The Child Murder Accusation against the Jews of Norwich:  Meaning, Memory and Legacy.”

Finally, we are proud to note that our own Dr. Charles F. Briggs is the winner of the inaugural UVM President’s Distinguished Senior Lecturer Award.  Well done, Charlie!

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University of Toronto

Click here for CARA news from the University of Toronto.

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University of California, Berkeley

Program in Medieval Studies, University of California, Berkeley

In the Fall 2016 we were fortunate to have two distinguished visiting professors.  Latinist and paleographer Felix Heinzer, emeritus professor at the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, co-taught Medieval Studies 200 (Paleography and Codicology) with Professor Frank Bezner in the Bancroft Library.  He gave an inaugural lecture on Wednesday September 7, 2016 on “Ambiguous Mediality: Liturgical Books of the Latin Church and their Changing Status in the Medieval Tradition.”  Also in residence, through the UC Berkeley-Ludwig-Maximillians-Universität Munich exchange program, was Middle High German specialist Professor Beate Kellner.  She gave a lecture November 30, 2016 on “the Power of Imagination in Medieval Courtly Love Poems.”  She also very generously organized an interdisciplinary workshop on “The Poetics and Politics of Nature in the Middle Ages: Rethinking Alan of Lille and his Readers” (December 9-10, 2016) with graduate students and faculty from both institutions.

In the Spring 2017 semester we hosted to speakers in conjunction with our pro-seminar, Medieval Studies 200.  The pro-seminar’s theme was Migrations: People, Objects, Texts, and Ideas. On Monday 27 February, 2017 Elizabeth Tyler, Professor of English at the University of York, delivered a lecture on the movement of women among medieval courts (“England in Europe: Elite Social Mobility and the Literary Culture of 11th-century England”) and on Monday 13 March, 2017 Avinoam Shalem, Riggio Professor of the Arts of Islam at Columbia University,” treated migrating objects (between the Islamic and Christian worlds) in his lecture “Treasuring Histories: Writing Histories with Objects in Medieval Treasuries.” Both visitors also had lunch with students to discuss their current research and views on issues in the profession.  Professor Michelle Karnes (University of Notre Dame) also joined Program faculty for a special professionalization event for graduate students on “Being a Medievalist in 21st-Century Academic Institutions” (March 15, 2017).

Collaborating with UC Davis and UC Santa Barbara, the Program also won a UC Multi-campus Research Projects Initiative grant for The Middle Ages in the Wider World (project description at http://www.middleagesinthewiderworld.org). The project kick-off conference took place on March 4, 2017 at the Townsend Center for the Humanities.  It featured presentations by UC Berkeley faculty (Asad Ahmed, Geoff Koziol, Nicolas Tackett, Ignacio Navarrete) as well as invited guests (Riccardo Strobino, Tufts University; Joaneath Spicer, The Walters Art Museum) and concluded with an outstanding keynote address by Professor Carol Symes, founding editor of The Medieval Globe.  In May we awarded our first round of summer research grants to UC graduate students and faculty.

Maureen C Miller
Director, Program in Medieval Studies
University of California
3229 Dwinelle Hall
Berkeley, CA  94720-2550
mcmiller@berkeley.edu

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: Florida State Univ.

Medieval Studies at Florida State University is a dynamic and growing area of teaching and research. Faculty in the Colleges of Fine Arts, Arts & Sciences, and Communications contribute to the promotion of interdisciplinary research into the Middle Ages (c. 400-1500), teaching a wide variety of courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels, and supervising masters’ and doctoral dissertations in all areas of the field. Subjects taught in the classroom and in the field include Archaeology, Art and Architectural History (Western, Byzantine, and medieval Islamic), Book History, History (social, economic, political, ecclesiastical, intellectual and gender), Language and Literature (including Old and Middle English, Old Norse, Medieval Welsh, Middle Dutch, Classical and Medieval Greek and Latin, Church Slavic/Old Russian, Spanish, Italian, Insular French and French), Manuscript Studies (including British and Continental illumination), and Musicology.

Webpage:  http://arthistory.fsu.edu/medieval-studies-fsu/

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment

CARA News: University of Nottingham, UK

The School of English at the University of Nottingham runs a wide range of undergraduate courses in Old English, Middle English, Older Scots, Old Norse and Viking Studies, and Place-Names http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/english/. A number of students go on to join our MA and PhD programmes to develop their interests further. An indicator of the interest and enthusiasm of current students in the area is that we run regular, well attended, optional Old English (undergraduate and postgraduate) and Old Norse reading groups; another group for medievalists is the ‘Latin over lunch’ group—all informal groups aiming to develop reading proficiency in the target languages.

The MA in Viking and Anglo-Saxon Studies (MAVASS) http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/pgstudy/courses/english/viking-and-anglo-saxon-studies-ma.aspx has particular strengths in Old English and Old Norse language and literature, the Viking World, Runology and Place-Names. Our expertise-led teaching is supported by practical work on field trips.

Every year this MA recruits an outstanding international cohort of students, which builds a vibrant and engaged scholarly community. We also offer students the chance to present their knowledge in local schools, where we hope to encourage the next generations of medievalists among the children http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/csva/public-engagement/vikings-for-schools.aspx.

PhD research and staff expertise:

Among ground-breaking research projects pursued by PhD students in the School are: work on metaphors of disease; manuscript runes and rune sticks; cognitive and literary linguistic approaches to Old English poetry and prose; place-names; sagas and material culture.

Staff are engaged in collaborative projects and exhibitions in the Institute for Name-Studies:

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/ins/index.aspx and the Centre for the Study of the Viking Age http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/csva/. The international peer-reviewed journals, Nottingham Medieval Studies http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/medieval/resources/nottingham-medieval-studies.aspx and Journal of the English Place-Name Society http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/groups/epns/journal.aspx are edited by Nottingham medievalists.

Late medieval research contributes significantly to the School’s strengths in text-editing and book history, including courses which contribute to MAVASS and other MA programmes. Older Scots is also a distinctive research strand, including two members of staff who are executive members of Council of the Scottish Text Society http://www.scottishtextsociety.org/. Further research interests include canonical writers such as Langland, Gower and Chaucer, and the reception and transmission of late medieval material in early modern literary circles.

We welcome enquiries concerning research and teaching in any of the areas mentioned above. Contact:

Prof Jesch Judith, Director of CSVA (runes, Old Norse):
judith.jesch@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Jayne Carroll, Director of Institute for Name-Studies (names, Old English): jayne.carroll@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Joanna Martin, Editor of Nottingham Medieval Studies (MIddle English, Older Scots): joanna.martin@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Paul Cavill, Editor of Journal of the English Place-Name Society (Old English, names): paul.cavill@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr John Baker, Convenor of MAVASS (names):
john.baker@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Christian Lee, Director of Internationalisation (Old Norse, Old English): christina.lee@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Mike Rodman Jones, Director of Teaching (Middle and Early Modern English): mike.jones@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Nicola Royan (MIddle English, Older Scots):
nicola.royan@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Martin Findell (runes, historical linguistics):
martin.findell@nottingham.ac.uk

Posted in CARA | Leave a comment