Call for Papers – Beyond Borders: Mutual Imaginings of Europe and the Middle East (800-1700)

Beyond Borders: 

Mutual Imaginings of Europe and the Middle East (800-1700)

Barnard College’s 25th Biannual Medieval and Renaissance Studies Conference

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Call For Papers

Recent scholarship is challenging the stark border between Europe and the Middle East during the long period between 800-1700.  Rather than thinking of these areas in isolation, scholars are revealing the depth of their mutual influence. Trade, war, migration, and scholarly exchange connected Europe and the Middle East in ways both cooperative and adversarial. The distant world was not only an object of aggression, but also, inextricably, of fantasy and longing. Jewish, Muslim, and Christian thinkers looked to each other to understand their own cultural histories and to imagine their futures.  Bringing together art historians, literary scholars, historians, scholars of the history of science, and scholars of religious thought, this interdisciplinary conference will explore the real and imaginary cultural interchanges between Europe and the Middle East during their formative periods. The conference will feature plenary lectures by Professors Nancy Bisaha of Vassar College, and Nabil Matar of the University of Minnesota.

This conference is being organized by Professors Rachel Eisendrath, Najam Haider, and Laurie Postlewate of Barnard College.

Please send an abstract (with title) of approximately 200 words and CV to lpostlew@barnard.edu. Presentations should be 20 minutes. Deadline: April 10, 2016.

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

London International Palaeography Summer School

Applications are open for the London International Palaeography Summer School (LIPSS), running 13 – 17 June 2016.

The London Palaeography Summer School is a series of intensive courses in palaeography and manuscript studies, held at the Institute of English Studies, Senate House, University of London. Courses  are given by experts in their respective fields, from a wide variety of institutions.

Full-day course fee: £95 | Half-day course fee: £55

Block bookings discounts and discounts for full-time MA/PhD students are available.

Monday 13 June

Pre-Norman British and Irish Psalters (Dr Carol Farr)

History of Latin Scripts I: Antiquity to Caroline Minuscule (Dr James Willoughby)

English Palaeography, 1500-1900 (Christopher Whittick)

How Medieval Manuscripts Were Made (Patricia Lovett)

Introduction to Greek Palaeography I (Dr Laura Franco)

 

Tuesday 14 June

Introduction to Anglo-Saxon Palaeography (Dr Debby Banham)

History of Latin Scripts II: Protogothic to Humanist (Dr James Willoughby)

Introduction to Visigothic Script (Dr Ainoa Castro Correa)

Codicology: An Introduction for Beginners (Dr James Freeman)

Introduction to Greek Palaeography II (Dr Laura Franco)

 

Wednesday 15 June

The Insular System of Scripts to AD 900 (Professor Julia Crick)

Introduction to Latin Palaeography (Dr Marigold Norbye)

Reading & Editing Renaissance English Manuscripts I (Dr Chris Stamatakis)

Codicology: An Introduction to Cataloguing (Peter Kidd)

 

Thursday 16 June

Introduction to Welsh Palaeography (Dr Helen McKee)

Intermediate Latin Palaeography (Dr Marigold Norbye)

Reading & Editing Renaissance English Manuscripts II (Dr Chris Stamatakis)

Codicology & Cataloguing: A Hands-On Workshop (Dr James Freeman & Peter Kidd)

Vernacular Editing: Chaucer and his Contemporaries (Professor Anthony Edwards)

 

Friday 17 June

Approaches to the Art of Insular Manuscripts (Dr Carol Farr)

The Transitional Script of the Long Twelfth Century (Dr Erik Kwakkel)

Writing and Reading Medieval Manuscripts: Folio Layouts in Context (Dr Anna Somfai)

Painting a Medieval Miniature (Patricia Lovett)

German Palaeography (Dr Dorothea McEwan & Dr Claudia Wedepohl)

 

Questions? Contact the Institute of English Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London at IESEvents@sas.ac.uk or +44 020 7862 8679

Posted in Summer Programs | Leave a comment

Call for Papers – Horizontal Learning within High Medieval Religious Communities

Steven Vanderputten, Tjamke Snijders and Micol Long (UGent, Belgium), present Horizontal Learning within High Medieval Religious Communities, an interdisciplinary conference on medieval educational practices taking place in Brussels on September 1-2, 2016.

This conference will center on the medieval practices of learning within a community, understood as a body of people who practice communal living and share an understanding of what binds them together, even though this understanding is constantly being renegotiated. Our aim is to focus on the ways in which co-habiting peers learned from one another. This “horizontal learning” has received much less attention than the vertical master/student approach, and yet it emerges as an important part of the learning experience, especially as we are interested in “learning” in a broad sense: not only acquiring factual knowledge or skills, but also developing ideas and beliefs and adapting to behavioral patterns. In short, everything that could make a monk a better and more efficient member of the community. Whereas other projects thematize the institutional history of learning, the transmission of propositional knowledge in formalized educational contexts, or the importance of networks of learning, this project distinguishes itself through its focus on day-to-day interactions by community members.
Our starting point is the investigation of communal learning in the practices of high medieval religious communities. Progressing beyond the old view that they were closed, homogeneous, and fairly stable social groups, we intend to approach these communities as the product of a continuous process of education and integration of new members. Contributions will investigate the way in which inter-personal exchanges of knowledge between peers concretely functioned, and what this teaches us about medieval learning within the context of a community.

The organizers invite proposals for both case studies and theoretical reflections on the subject. Proposals should be submitted to horizontal.learning@UGent.be by February 1th, 2016, and should consist of a title, a 400-word abstract and a CV.

More information about the organizing committee, the scientific committee and the confirmed participants can be found at http://www.horizontallearning.ugent.be/home/call-for-papers/

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

MAA News – Medieval Academy of America 2016 Election Results

We are very pleased to report the results of the 2016 Medieval Academy of America elections:

President: Carmela Vircillo Franklin (Classics, Columbia Univ.)

1st Vice-President:
Margot Fassler (Music History and Liturgy, Univ. of Notre Dame)

2nd Vice-President:
David Wallace (English and Comparative Literature, Univ. of Pennsylvania)

Councillors:
Matthew Gabriele (History, Virginia Tech.)
Sharon Kinoshita (French, Univ. of California, Santa Cruz)
Amy Livingstone (History, Wittenberg Univ.)
Jerry Singerman (Comparative Literature, Univ. of Pennsylvania Press)

Nominating Committee:
Sean L. Field (History, Univ. of Vermont)
Fiona Griffiths (History, Stanford Univ.)

Our congratulations to all who were elected, and our thanks to all who stood for election.

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – 2016 Annual Meeting Registration Reminder

Boston Public Library, MS f. Med. 101, f. 1r detail, Christine de Pizan, Le livre des trois vertus

Boston Public Library, MS f. Med. 101, f. 1r detail, Christine de Pizan, Le livre des trois vertus

Registration for the 2016 Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America is now open here.

Register now to take advantage of

discounted hotel rooms and registration!

Early registration closes on 24 January.

The Program, hotel information, and additional details are available on the Annual Meeting website.

Please contact the Medieval Academy of America with any questions about the Annual Meeting: info@themedievalacademy.org

We look forward to seeing you in Boston!
@MedievalAcademy

#MAA2016

Posted in Annual Meeting, MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – Renew Your Membership for 2016

shield2016 has begun and we encourage you to renew your membership as soon as possible.

Click here to renew online. You will need to sign in with your username and password; if you have forgotten either, please contact us at info@themedievalacademy.org.

While you’re online, don’t forget to take advantage of the reduced subscriptions to several online bibliographies and the ACLS Humanities E-Book Library that are available to Medieval Academy members. We invite you to take this opportunity to explore our website and, after signing in with your username and password, update your personal homepage so that you can connect with other members with similar interests. Members can now use their personal MAA homepage to indicate an interest in being considered to serve on one of our committees or to review books for Speculum. In this way we hope to engage more members in our work.

Since the Medieval Academy is a membership organization not affiliated with any other institution, we rely on the income received annually from member dues to maintain our program of publications, awards, grants, and conferences.

We are pleased to report that in 2015, with your contribution, the Academy increased its support of members, especially graduate students, through the numerous awards and fellowships offered annually, while continuing to streamline administrative functions and increase digital offerings. Funds awarded to graduate students topped $100,000 this year, including the new Olivia Remie Constable Awards, GSC/MAA Grant for Innovation, and the broadened MAA/CARA Summer Language Stipends program. These and other programs are made possible thanks to the efforts of our numerous volunteer committees, from the Speculum boards to the many awards committees, from the Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA) to the Graduate Student Committee.

You can easily pay your dues through the MAA website. The dues and donations categories are outlined on the website with links you can follow for further explanation. If you have already renewed, thank you. If you are a Corresponding Fellow, an Honorary Life Member, or a Life Member, no dues are payable, but we hope that you will consider making a gift to the Academy here. We encourage all members to consider supplementing their membership by becoming a Sustaining or Contributing member or by remembering the Academy with a bequest as part of our Legacy Society. In addition, you may want to give a gift membership to a colleague or student; please contact us at info@themedievalacademy.org for more information.

If you prefer to renew by mail, our traditional paper membership form can be printed here.

With a healthy fiscal outlook, increased digital offerings, and expanded services, the Medieval Academy has more to offer members than ever before. We sincerely hope that you will renew soon and continue your valued membership in the Academy. We look forward to working with you in developing the future of the Medieval Academy of America and of medieval studies in North America and beyond. Click here to renew.

Barbara Newman, President
Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – 2016 Medieval Academy of America Publication Prizes

Photo: The Haskins Medal.   The Medieval Academy of America

Photo: The Haskins Medal. The Medieval Academy of America

The Medieval Academy of America is proud to announce the recipients of its 2016 publication prizes:

The Haskins Medal

The 2016 Haskins Medal is awarded to Francis Oakley (Williams College) for his trilogy, The Emergence of Western Political Thought in the Latin Middle Ages (Yale University Press, 2010-2015). Of this three-volume work, the Haskins Medal Committee writes: “The culmination of a stellar academic career, the trilogy dazzlingly substantiates a simple thesis:  the secular nature of modern political thought emerged not from ancient Greece and Rome but from the Latin Middle Ages….Deeply learned, engagingly written, encyclopedic, and wise, The Emergence of Western Political Thought is already regarded as a monument in the history of ideas, a masterful explication of the interplay among religion, politics, and education in the West. It richly deserves this honor.” The complete citation is available here.

The Haskins Medal is awarded annually by the Medieval Academy of America for a distinguished book in the field of medieval studies. First presented in 1940, the award honors Charles Homer Haskins, the noted medieval historian, who was a founder of the Medieval Academy and its second President. The selection committee consisted of Robert E. Bjork (Arizona State Univ.) (Chair), Annemarie Weyl Carr (Emerita, Southern Methodist University), and Richard Kaeuper (Univ. of Rochester).

The John Nicholas Brown Prize

Two Brown Prizes are being awarded in 2016, to Marisa Galvez (Stanford University) for  Songbook: How Lyrics became Poetry in Medieval Europe (University of Chicago Press, 2012) and to Nicholas L. Paul (Fordham University) for To Follow in their Footsteps: The Crusades and Family Memory in the High Middle Ages (Cornell University Press, 2012).

According to the Brown Committee, “Marisa Galvez has offered a fresh and ambitious interpretation of the medieval songbook…Drawing upon a wide range of primary manuscript materials in Latin, German, Old French, Occitan, and Castilian,  Galvez explores the concept of authorship in an emerging literary genre across more than 200 years of medieval culture.” In commending Nicholas Paul, the Committee writes that he “… offers an original investigation into collective memory in the first crusading century….His conclusion about the failure of Henry II of England and Alfonso II of Aragon ‘to take the cross’ brings the study to a well-defined and compelling conclusion.” The complete citations are available here.

The John Nicholas Brown Prize, established by the Medieval Academy of America in 1978, is awarded annually for a first book or monograph on a medieval subject judged by the selection committee to be of outstanding quality. John Nicholas Brown was one of the founders of the Medieval Academy and for fifty years served as its Treasurer. The selection committee consisted of Barbara Shailor (Yale Univ.) (Chair), Meredith Lillich (Univ. of Syracuse), and David Nirenberg (Univ. of Chicago).

The Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize

The 2016 Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize is awarded to David Shyovitz (Northwestern University) for his article, “Christian and Jews in the Twelfth-Century Werewolf Renaissance,” Journal of the History of Ideas 75/4 (2014), 521-43.

Of this article, the Elliott Prize Committee writes that “the essay, at its broadest level, echoes many cultural and intellectual historians in its emphasis on medieval alterity…For the elegance of its prose, its synthesis of a range of primary and secondary sources, and the significant breadth of its claims, David Shyovitz’s essay is an outstanding model of how much can be accomplished in a scholar’s first medieval article.” The complete citation is available here.

The Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize, established by the Medieval Academy of America in 1971, is awarded annually for a first article in the field of medieval studies, published in a scholarly journal, judged by the selection committee to be of outstanding quality. Van Courtlandt Elliott was Executive Secretary of the Academy and Editor of Speculum from 1965 to 1970. The selection committee consisted of Tim William Machan (Univ. of Notre Dame) (Chair), David Hult (UC Berkeley), and Caroline Walker Bynum (Institute for Advanced Study).

The 2016 publication prizes will be presented at the upcoming Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America in Boston. The presentation of prizes and the reading of citations will take place preceding the Presidential Address on Saturday, 27 February, at 10:45 AM in the Grand Ballroom, Hyatt Regency Boston.

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – January 2016 Issue of Speculum

SpeculumThe January issue of Speculum is on its way to your mailbox and includes the following articles:

Anthony Bale, “God’s Cell: Christ as Prisoner and Pilgrimage to the Prison of Christ”

Gur Zak, “The Ethics and Poetics of Consolation in Petrarch’s Bucolicum carmen”

William J. Courtenay, “Magisterial Authority, Philosophical Identity, and the Growth of Marian Devotion: The Seals of Parisian Masters, 1190-1308”

David Malkiel, “The Rabbi and the Crocodile: Interrogating Nature in the Late Quattrocento”

Tiffany D. Vann Sprecher, “The Marketplace of the Ministry: The Impact of Sacerdotal Piecework on the Care of Souls in Paris, 1483 -1505”

Online access to Speculum is a perquisite of membership in the Medieval Academy. To access Speculum online, you must first sign in to your account on the Medieval Academy website, http://www.medievalacademy.org. After signing in, follow the link on the “Speculum Online” page to access the journal through the University of Chicago Press site.

As part of our partnership with the University of Chicago Press, members now receive a 30% discount on the publications of the University of Chicago Press and a 20% discount to the online Chicago Manual of Style. For more information about Speculum and the new University of Chicago Press member benefits, click here.

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – Upcoming Deadlines: MAA Grants and Awards

Der Schulmeister von Eßlingen, from Heidelberg, Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 292v.

Der Schulmeister von Eßlingen, from Heidelberg, Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 292v.

MAA Dissertation Grants (deadline 15 February):
The nine annual Medieval Academy Dissertation Grants support advanced graduate students who are writing Ph.D. dissertations on medieval topics. The $2,000 grants help defray research expenses.  Click here for more information.

Schallek Awards (deadline 15 February):
The five annual Schallek awards support graduate students conducting doctoral research in any relevant discipline dealing with late-medieval Britain (ca. 1350-1500). The $2,000 awards help defray research expenses.  Click here for more information.

MAA/GSC Grant for Innovation in Community-Building and Professionalization (deadline 15 February):
MAA/GSC Grants will be awarded to an individual or graduate student group from one or more universities. The purpose of this grant is to stimulate new and innovative efforts that support pre-professionalization, encourage communication and collaboration across diverse groups of graduate students, and build communities among graduate student medievalists. Click here for more information.

Olivia Remie Constable Award (deadline 15 February):
Four Olivia Remie Constable Awards of $1,500 each will be granted to emerging junior faculty, adjunct, or unaffiliated scholars (broadly understood: post-doctoral, pre-tenure) for research and travel.  Click here for more information.

Applicants for these and other MAA programs must be members in good standing of the Medieval Academy. Please contact the Executive Director for more information about these and other MAA programs.

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

MAA News – Medieval Academy Fellowships Awarded

The Medieval Academy of America is proud to announce the winners of the 2016 Baldwin and Schallek Fellowships.

Cuenca

Esther Cuenca

The 2016 Schallek Fellowship has been awarded to Esther Cuenca (History, Fordham University). About her thesis, “The Making of Borough Customary Law in Medieval Britain,” Cuenca writes: “My project examines the development of local borough laws, or customs, from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries. Borough customs were practices or traditions that over time acquired the force of law within a town. Borough customary law was ubiquitous in the arbitration of civil and mercantile disputes, critical to urban governance, and fundamental to the concerns of both civic rulers and their subjects. The study of borough custom, however, has been virtually ignored in medieval legal historiography despite its importance to the rise of merchant capitalism and urbanization in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. For this project I have developed two databases to explore the content, evolution, and meanings of borough custom. One of the databases tracks the chronological and geographic spread of borough custumals, which are collections of customs, and the other categorizes the content of such custumals. My analytical goals for this project are twofold: to contribute to a deeper understanding of the place of urban customary law within the British legal system, and to reveal custom’s role in the emergence of a distinct bourgeois identity in medieval Britain.”

Claire Jenson

Claire Jenson

The 2016 Baldwin Fellowship has been awarded to Claire Jenson (Art History, University of Chicago). Her thesis is titled “Power and Politics in the Liturgical Manuscripts of Renaud de Bar.” In summarizing her project, Jenson writes: “Although it was common for medieval bishops to commission liturgical manuscripts for their own use, the survival of a single bishop’s ‘set’ of books for the liturgy is unusual. More exceptional are the innovative, and at times enigmatic paintings in the manuscripts illuminated for Renaud de Bar – and the elaborate fictions about Renaud’s position that they represent. My dissertation examines the corpus of illuminated liturgical books owned by the bishop of Metz Renaud de Bar (1303-1316) – a collection once encompassing a two-volume breviary, a missal, a ritual, and a two-volume pontifical – in relation to the historical spaces, rituals, ideas, and visual cultures that together formed a contested landscape of power. Renaud assumed episcopal office in a politically unstable context, after communal leaders had been actively working to reduce the economic and juridical sovereignty of the bishop in Metz for two centuries and finally seized the city from the bishop’s control in 1234. Following the decline of the Metz episcopate, Renaud’s episcopal reign defined a crucial moment in the history of the diocese and provides an opportunity for a critical analysis of the role played by art and performance in the representation and exercise of a bishop’s authority. By investigating how art and liturgy were mobilized to sustain episcopal power as one prince-bishop faced grave challenges to his sovereignty, my aim in this project is to offer a new perspective on how visual art and ritual – mediated by liturgical manuscripts – intervened in political debate and conflict in the Gothic period.”

The Medieval Academy, in collaboration with the Richard III Society-American Branch, offers the one-year Schallek Fellowship of $30,000 to support Ph.D. dissertation research in any relevant discipline dealing with late-medieval Britain (ca. 1350-1500). The Birgit Baldwin Fellowship in French Medieval History was established in 2004 by John W. Baldwin and Jenny Jochens in memory of their daughter Birgit. The Baldwin Fellowship provides a grant of $20,000 to support a graduate student in a North American university who is researching and writing a significant dissertation for the Ph.D. on any subject in French medieval history that can be realized only by sustained research in the archives and libraries of France.

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment