Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto’s Summer Latin Program

In 2016, the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Toronto will offer the following courses in Medieval Latin:

Beginning Latin (8 hours of instruction weekly, 24 May to 15 July 2016, with an optional three-week reading course thereafter).  Textbook: Moreland and Fleischer, Latin: an Intensive Course.

Level One Medieval Latin (7.5 hours weekly, 30 May to 8 July 2016, with an optional two-week grammar review before the course).

Level Two Medieval Latin (7.5 hours weekly, 11 July to 19 August 2016).

Enrolment in the Level One and Level Two courses will be restricted and will depend on performance in the April Level One Latin examination.  Information on the examinations and the summer program is available on line (medieval.utoronto.ca).

The fee for each course is $1,200 (Can) for Canadian residents, or its equivalent in US dollars for non-Canadian residents.  The deadline to apply for all courses is 1 May 2016.  Enrolment in each course is limited.

A limited number of stipends are available for graduate students participating in summer courses in medieval languages or manuscript studies, and Level One and Level Two Latin at the Centre for Medieval Studies. The stipend will be paid directly to the program to offset a portion of the tuition cost and is contingent on acceptance into the program. Applicants must be members of the Medieval Academy in good standing with at least one year of graduate school remaining and must demonstrate both the importance of the summer course to their program of study and their home institution’s inability to offer analogous coursework.

To apply, please submit a statement of purpose, CV, and two letters of recommendation, to:

MAA/CARA Summer Scholarships
Medieval Academy of America
17 Dunster St., Suite 202
Cambridge, Mass. 02138
USA

Applications must be received by 6 May and will be judged by the Committee for Professional Development and the Chair of the CARA Committee. There will be between four and eight awards yearly, depending upon the number of worthy applicants and the cost of the summer programs.

 

ASSESSMENT IN MEDIEVAL LATIN

The Centre for Medieval Studies in Toronto continues to offer its Level One and Level Two Medieval Latin examinations to external students.  Examinations will be as follows: Level One, 18 April 2016 and 7 September 2016; Level Two, 20 April 2016 and 9 September 2016.  Fee for examinations: $50 (US) for non-Canadians, $50 (Can.) for Canadians.  For details and application forms, please visit the Centre’s website: medieval.utoronto.ca.  Note that admission into the Summer Medieval Latin Level One and Level Two courses will be decided on the basis of the April Level One Latin examination.

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Registration for the MAA’s Annual Meeting is Now Open

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:
http://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/events/event_details.asp?id=649605#

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

https://medievalacademy.site-ym.com/?page=Current_Meeting

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

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Jobs for Medievalists

Position Opening: Rare Books and Manuscripts Librarian at Bridwell Library Special Collections

Job Summary:

The Rare Books and Manuscripts Librarian is responsible for interpreting Bridwell Library’s rare books, manuscripts, ephemera and artifacts through public service, instruction, outreach and exhibitions.

The position curates exhibitions utilizing materials found in the library’s special collections including early manuscripts, incunabula, Bible and other sacred texts, church history and theology, and the history of the book.

The position also ensures access to the special collections through enhancing catalog records, collection management, and security.

Essential Functions:

* Provide effective and strong public service to faculty, students, and other researchers through reference and consultation services, classroom presentations, and exhibition tours.

* Prepare exhibitions including formulating exhibit themes, selecting items, researching, writing and editing texts, and drafting appropriate publicity. Work collaboratively with other staff regarding exhibition items, content, installation timelines and website presentation.

* Update records for the library’s special collections holdings including enhanced bibliographic descriptions of early manuscripts and printed works. Produce effective finding aids for specific collections as needed.

* Responsible for security in Special Collections areas and the proper handling and orderly storage of collections in his/her care. Consult with other library staff on the physical condition of special collections materials, including possible treatments and/or enclosures for specific items.

* Provide input to the Head of Special Collections on evaluating possible new acquisitions and/or donations.

* Train and supervise student assistants who provide support in services related to rare books and manuscripts.

* Responsible for collecting and reporting statistical data related to special collections.

* Collaborate with other Bridwell Library staff on areas related to public service and collection access.

* Keep abreast of national trends related to special collections by actively participating in professional development.

Education and Experience:
Master’s degree in library/information science from an ALA-accredited program is required. Subject expertise in an area relevant to the collection is preferred.

A minimum of three years professional library experience, with at least two years working in special collections, is required. Experience in public service is also required.

Experience in preparing exhibitions is preferred. Experience in cataloging rare books is desirable.

Knowledge, Skills & Abilities:

Candidate must demonstrate a working knowledge of bibliography, book history and the book arts. Must also possess a working knowledge of at least one the following languages: German, French, Spanish, Latin, Hebrew or Greek.

Experience with OCLC and an online cataloging system is desirable.

Working knowledge of MARC, DCRM, RDA and rare book cataloging principles is a plus.

Candidate must demonstrate strong verbal and interpersonal communication skills to effectively communicate with a wide range of constituencies.

Must also demonstrate the ability to communicate effectively in writing.

A strong customer service orientation is essential.

Candidate must possess strong problem-solving skills with the ability to think collaboratively, strategically and creatively. Must also possess a commitment to professional development.

Candidate must possess strong time management, organizational and planning skills. Must also possess a strong focus on attention to detail. Strong project management skills are essential.

Candidate must demonstrate strong presentation skills with the ability to present clear and accurate information to small and large groups.

Must also demonstrate the ability to work independently, as well as part of a team.

Physical/Environmental Demands:

The position includes the ability to bend, reach above shoulders, handle objects (dexterity), push/pull, carry/lift 25-50 lbs. and sit for long periods of time.

Priority Consideration Date:

Priority consideration may be given to submissions received by December 14, 2015.

Deadline to Apply:

The position is open until filled.

To Apply: Please visit our website www.smu.jobs to access the online application. Click on Staff Career Opportunities and apply to Job ID#: 900883.

For full consideration a cover letter, a curriculum vitae, and contact information for three current professional references is required.  All documents should be combined into one document and uploaded as the applicant’s resume on the online application for this position.

Southern Methodist University is a nationally ranked private university in Dallas with seven degree-granting schools and approximately 11,000 students. SMU is a distinguished center for teaching and research located in a culturally rich city with a diverse population.

EEO Statement:  SMU will not discriminate in any program or activity on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, disability, genetic information, veteran status, sexual orientation, or gender identity and expression. The Executive Director for Access and Equity/Title IX Coordinator is designated to handle inquiries regarding nondiscrimination policies and may be reached at the Perkins Administration Building, Room 204, 6425 Boaz Lane, Dallas, TX 75205, 214-768-3601, accessequity@smu.edu.

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The Camargo Foundation Fellowships

The Camargo Foundation, located in Cassis, founded by artist and philanthropist Jerome Hill more than 40 years ago, is a residential center offering programming in the arts and humanities.

It offers a contemplative environment to think, create, and connect. The Fellowship program proposes a 6, 8, and 11 week residential fellowships to scholars and leading thinkers in the arts and humanities working in French and Francophone cultures, including the Mediterranean region; as well as artists of all disciplines.

The Camargo Foundation welcomes applications for Fellowships in Fall 2016 (8 weeks) and Spring 2017 (6, 8 or 11 weeks). A monthly stipend of $ 800 US is available, as is coverage of basic travel expenses. Spouses, and children over six are welcome.

More information about the application: www.camargofoundation.org/toapply.asp

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2016 NEH Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers on Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales

A four-week NEH Seminar on Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales will be held this summer, 18 July to 13 August 2016, at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio. The Seminar will be directed by Susanna Fein and David Raybin, with guest faculty Ardis Butterfield, Richard Firth Green, Robert Meyer-Lee, and Stephen Fliegel (Curator of Medieval Art, Cleveland Museum of Art). Selected participants will receive a stipend from the NEH. The deadline for applications is March 1, 2016. For NEH eligibility criteria and further details about the program, please consult the Seminar website: http://www.kent.edu/english/neh-chaucer.

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MAA News – Speculum and The University of Chicago Press

speculumSpeculum‘s partnership with The University of Chicago Press begins with issue 91/1 (January 2016). The transition is well underway: the first Chicago issue is now in production, and members can expect to have access to print and on-line versions early in the new year.  From the editorial standpoint, the change-over has been seamless. The sharp-eyed reader will notice a few differences in the page layout, but, overall, the editorial team has been amazed at the apparent ease with which Chicago has produced a journal that looks and reads like any recent Speculum.

The transition to The University of Chicago Press will bring several positive changes. Readers can expect one or two color images in each print issue (as well as the full-color issue online).  In addition to print copies, online access to the full run of the Journal, and issues in downloadable e-Book formats, MAA members will receive discounts on Chicago Press publications as a benefit of their MAA membership, including 30% off all books (print or e-Book) published and distributed by the Press and 20% discounts on the online edition of The Chicago Manual of Style and selected journal subscriptions. In terms of authors’ rights, The University of Chicago Press supports and encourages authors’ own efforts to promote and disseminate their works.  There is no embargo for social media sites like Academia.edu or the author’s home page, or any deposit that supports peer-to-peer sharing of information. Further information about these benefits can be found on Chicago’s Speculum page, and details about the discounts will be available there early in January.

All aspects of submitting to Speculum, as reviewer or author, remain the same. Because Chicago uses Editorial Manager, the online submission program Speculum has been using for years, there will be no changes whatsoever to the submission process. Proof of this lies in the fact that Chicago has been overseeing submissions since August, and my guess is that few contributors have even noticed the change.

And the same is true for member access. When the January issue of Speculum appears online during the week of January 4, members will be able to access it through the Medieval Academy portal via their member login, exactly as before, and all back content will be available online.

We are excited about our collaboration with Chicago and look forward to a long-lasting and productive partnership.

Sarah Spence
Editor, Speculum

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MAA News – 2016 Election of Officers and Councilors

"Dante and Virgil in Conversation," from Oxford: Bodleian Library, MS. Holkham Misc. 48, p. 67. © Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.

“Dante and Virgil in Conversation,” from Oxford: Bodleian Library, MS. Holkham Misc. 48, p. 67. © Bodleian Library, University of Oxford.

Voting in the MAA elections is now open. This is one of the most important means that members have to impact both the MAA and the future of medieval studies in North America, as the Council and Officers of the Academy are responsible for establishing Academy policies and guidelines, overseeing the annual budget, and determining the direction of the organization, among other responsibilities. We have a very strong roster of candidates this year, including:

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

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

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

Council (four seats available):
Rick Barton (History, Univ. of North Carolina at Greensboro)
María Bullón-Fernández (English, Seattle Univ.)
Emily C. Francomano (Spanish, Georgetown Univ.)
Matthew Gabriele (History, Virginia Tech.)
Matthew Giancarlo (English, Univ. of Kentucky)
Sharon Kinoshita (French, Univ. of California, Santa Cruz)
Amy Livingstone (History, Wittenberg Univ.)
Jerry Singerman (Comparative Literature, Univ. of Pennsylvania Press)

Nominating Committee (two seats available):
Roland Betancourt (Art History, Univ. of California, Irvine)
Joyce Coleman (English, Univ. of Oklahoma)
Sean L. Field (History, Univ. of Vermont)
Fiona Griffiths (History, Stanford Univ.)

Biographies of all the candidates are available online. The deadline for receipt of your vote is 15 December 2015.

It is important to note that your ballot will be invalid if you vote for more than the allowable number of candidates indicated on the electronic ballot.

If you wish to cast a paper ballot instead, please contact me at LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org. Thank you for participating in the election.

-Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director

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MAA News – Renew Your Membership for 2016

shieldThe end of the year is now quickly approaching, and we encourage you to renew your membership in the Medieval Academy for 2016 as soon as possible. If you have not already renewed for 2016, please do so by 31 December 2015.

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. We are particularly pleased to announce that, as of January 1, Speculum will be published in partnership with the University of Chicago Press.

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

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MAA News – 2016 Annual Meeting

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

The 91st Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place on February 25-27 in Boston. The meeting will be hosted by the Medieval Academy of America, Boston College, Boston University, Brandeis University, Harvard University, Lesley University, The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Massachusetts, Boston, and Wellesley College.

The program will feature three plenary speakers: Barbara Newman (President of the Medieval Academy of America, John Evans Professor of Latin and Professor of English, Religious Studies, and Classics, Northwestern University); William Noel (Director, Kislak Center for Special Collections, University of Pennsylvania); and Robin Fleming (Professor of History, Boston College, and a 2013 MacArthur Fellow). In addition, the program will include fifty concurrent sessions in a wide variety of formats and covering a broad array of disciplines. Threads include Digital Humanities, Carolingian Studies, the Eleventh Century, Unfinished Works, Lyric Transformations, Medieval Ecologies, and Monasticisms. The Digital Humanities thread will include a special session in which participants will be able to interact with several different DH projects.

The Annual Meeting will take place at the Hyatt Regency Boston in the downtown Theater District. For the closing reception – certain to be an unforgettable evening – we will gather at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, one of Boston’s greatest treasures.

The Program for the Annual Meeting is now available online, linked from the meeting website. The website includes a link to the Hyatt Regency Hotel, where you may reserve rooms at a discounted rate.

As a new feature this year, you can use Sched.org to access the Annual Meeting program. If you wish, you may set up a free Sched.org account that will allow you to plan your Annual Meeting schedule, bookmark sessions and events, and download them into your mobile calendar. Click here to start: https://maa2016annualmeeting.sched.org/

Meeting registration will open in mid-December. We hope you will join us for what is sure to be an excellent (and snow-free) Annual Meeting.

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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.

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