MAA News – Upcoming MAA Application Deadlines

The Medieval Academy of America has long provided a variety of benefits of membership, including numerous fellowships, prizes and grants for travel, research and publications. Please see the list below for prizes and fellowships with looming deadlines, then follow the links for complete descriptions and application information. We encourage all eligible members to apply for these grants.

We are pleased to announce that as of August 2014 most applications for Medieval Academy prizes, awards and fellowships can be submitted using our online application system. Links to each form can be found on the Awards section of our website.

Graduate Student Fellowships and Awards
Schallek Fellowship
(Deadline 15 October 2014)   

MAA/GSC Grant [NEW for 2015]
(deadline 15 February 2015)

Service Award
Kindrick-CARA Award for Outstanding Service
(Deadline 15 November 2014)

Teaching Award
CARA Award for Excellence in Teaching
(Deadline 15 November 2014)

Independent/Junior Scholars
Olivia Remie Constable Award [NEW for 2015]
(Deadline 15 February 2015)   

Travel Grants
(Deadline 1 November 2014 for meetings to be held between 1 March and 31 August 2015)

Book Prizes
Haskins Medal

(Deadline 15 October 2014)   

John Nicholas Brown Prize
(Deadline 15 October 2014) 

Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize
(Deadline 15 October 2014)

Please see the  MAA website for other grants and prizes offered by the Academy.

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MAA News – Call for Fellows Nominations

Members are invited to submit nominations to the Fellows and Corresponding Fellows of the Medieval Academy. Fellows will cast ballots in January for the 2015 election, which will operate under by-laws and procedures adopted in 2013. Under the established rules, the number of slots available in 2015 for new Fellows is nine, for which there must be at least eighteen nominations. There is no established minimum number of nominations for Corresponding Fellows, although there are eleven openings.

Nominations for the 2015 elections must be received by 15 October 2014.   Instructions for nominations are available here:

http://www.medievalacademy.org/?page=Election_Procedure

Lists of Fellows, Corresponding Fellows and Emeriti/ae Fellows are available here:

http://www.medievalacademy.org/?page=Fellows 

Nominations should be submitted to the Executive Director at LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org or mailed to:

Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director
Medieval Academy of America
17 Dunster St., Suite 202
Cambridge, MA 02138

Please note that nominations are to be kept in strictest confidence, from the nominee as well as from others.

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Call for Papers – SIEPM Colloquium Proposal 2015: Tolerance and Concepts of Otherness in Medieval Philosophy

September 9-12 2015, Maynooth University, Ireland
Organized by Dr Michael W. Dunne & Dr Susan Gottlöber

Keynote Speakers

Professor David Luscombe (Sheffield)
Professor Roberto Hofmeister Pich (Porto Alegre)

Description

Tolerance (and of course intolerance) and identity play key roles in our interaction with the world and the other. In fact, due to recent social and political developments, the focus of Philosophy has shifted more and more towards the problem of both inter-religious and inter–cultural dialogue and its limitations. An extremely fruitful source in order to gain a more precise understanding of the questions and problems that arise in the encounter with otherness are the reflections developed by philosophers in the Middle Ages within their respective religious and cultural contexts. This colloquium aims to examine the development of the perception of the other within the different philosophical, religious and cultural traditions by considering not only the theological background but also the philosophical presuppositions of the concepts which then were used to develop various apologetic writings and theological treatises in the late Middle Ages and Early Modern era that dealt with the questions of cultural and religious difference.

The organisers invite papers exploring (but not restricted to) the following topics:

  1. The Christian perspective on the other which includes both perceptions of otherness as well as dealings with otherness (e.g. tolerance and intolerance). In the Early Middle Ages this includes the dealings with and perception of paganism and the Christian “other”, while later there is the additional focus on the relationship with Islam. This is a huge topic and would thus need to be divided into subsections as it includes topic such as: the works of Latin writers dealing the Greeks and Armenians and vice versa, philosophical and theological approaches to the schism in both the Byzantine and Latin context, Integration and Disintegration in the Spanish Context until 1492, the importance of translations such as the relevance and the consequences of the translation of the Qu’ran by Robert of Ketton, the writings of thinkers such as Petrus Venerabilis, Raimundus Lullus, Aquinas, Ricoldus de Monte Crucis, Dionysius Cartusianus and Nicholas of Cusa. Of interest will also be writings ffrom the Arabic context such as the Arabic original of the ‘Doctrina Mahumet’ or the ‘Risālat ʿAbdallāh ibn Ismāʿīl al-Hāshimī ilā ʿAbd al-Masīḥ ibn Isḥāq al-Kindī yadʿūhu bihā ilā l-Islām wa-risālat al-Kindī ilā l-Hāshimī’ and other writings of the corpus Toletanum, Christian missionaries in the Islamic world of the Middle Ages, war or dialogue as practical solutions of dealings with otherness and the Christian Reading of Islamic Philosophers.
  2. Islamic perspectives on otherness and tolerance (and intolerance): This does not only include the perception of the Christian other (by thinkers such as al-Tabari) but also dealings with Ancient philosophy (e.g. Al-Ghazali, Al-Farabi, Ibn-Rush, Ibn-Sina etc).
  3. Public otherness in the different religious contexts: dealing with heretics, pagans and unbelievers and the marginalised (lepers/prostitutes/homosexuals).
  4. Nationalisms and the other, e.g., Richard FitzRalph’s doctrine of dominium in response to the Gaelic/English divide in Ireland; its use by John Wyclif and its rejection by Francisco de Vitoria in regard to the rights of the people of the ‘New World’.
  5. Theoretical underpinnings and consequences of the Conquista. This does not only include the perspective of the conquerors regarding their subjects but also resulting philosophies that lead into the Renaissance and Early Modern period such as mercantilism or the discussion of human rights such as developed by Bartolomé de las Casas.

Further topics include the relevance of mysticism on the perception of otherness and tolerance, the refusal to acknowledge otherness (such as theological inclusivism) or the Jewish perspective (e.g. the thought of R. Menachem ha-Meiri, Judaa Halevi) in which e.g. the living together of Jews in non-Jewish communities plays an essential role.

Paper Submission

Conference papers may be presented in English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese or German. Discussions of papers at the conference may also occur in English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese or German (translators will be provided for the papers and questions during sessions in these languages, if required).

Please send the title of the proposed topic and an abstract of 300 to 500 words to

philosophy@nuim.ie

Deadline for submission: February 1, 2015
Notifications of acceptance may be expected no earlier than March 1, 2015.
Presentations should be 30 – 40 minutes, followed by 10-15 minutes discussion.

Brepols-SIEPM Stipend

To facilitate attendance at the Annual Colloquium, Brepols-SIEPM stipends are available for researchers under the age of 35 or from low-currency countries. The stipends are 500 €, or 750 €, if the journey is transcontinental. One need not be a current SIEPM member to apply for these stipends. Applications should be submitted via the online stipend form. The deadline for all applications is May 15 for the corresponding Colloquium in the same year.

For more information and conditions see

http://www.siepm.uni-freiburg.de/index.php/siepm-stipends/brepols-siepm-stipends.html

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“Inhabited Inhabited Architecture: A Pervasive Motif in Medieval Art and Modern Theory.”

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is pleased to announce
the first lecture in its 2014-2015 lecture series.

On September 29, 2014, at 6:15 pm at the Harvard Faculty Club, Dr. Anthony Cutler (Evan Pugh Professor of Art History, Pennsylvania State University) will present “Inhabited Inhabited Architecture: A Pervasive Motif in Medieval Art and Modern Theory.” Dr. Cutler will explore the meaning of peripheral figures in Late Antique, Byzantine, and Western Medieval art. The lecture is part of the International Center of Medieval Art’s Forsyth Lectureship on Medieval Art. It is co-sponsored by the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, ICMA, and Harvard University Standing Committee on Medieval Studies.

Please join us for a reception following the lecture.

Monday, September 29, 2014, at 6:15 pm
Harvard Faculty Club
20 Quincy Street
Cambridge, MA 02138

The lecture is free and open to the public.

Please visit www.maryjahariscenter.org or contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, for additional information.​

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MAA News – CARMEN

Many Medieval Academy members may not be aware of CARMEN (Co-operative for the Advancement of Research through a Medieval European Network), an international initiative modeled on CARA that seeks to bring medievalists together from all over the world to discuss administrative and programmatic issues and successes. All are welcome at CARMEN’s annual meeting, taking place this year in Stirling, Scotland, 12-13 September 2014. Editor of Speculum Sarah Spence and CARA Chair James Murray will be there representing the Medieval Academy. CARMEN’s formal announcement follows:

***********************

The Centre for Environmental History and Policy at the University of Stirling has generously offered to host the CARMEN Annual Meeting in 2014. CARMEN looks forward to welcoming you to the meeting which will be held in a special venue in Stirling below the castle – Forth Valley College
(http://www.forthvalley.ac.uk/about/investing_in_your_future/stirling)

To register your attendance at the meeting and for information please contact Claire McIlroy (claire.mcilroy@uwa.edu.au), ideally before mid-August 2014. You can also write to carmen.medieval@googlemail.com (in a separate email, please, do not answer directly to this email).

Please note that you are responsible for booking and paying for your own travel and accommodation in Stirling. To assist with the organisation of your visit to Stirling the host institution has prepared a practical document, which includes travel information and accommodation recommendations (see CARMEN website http://www.carmen-medieval.net/cz/download/1404041574/, http://www.carmen-medieval.net/cz/download/1404041575/). This information will also be available through a dedicated University of Stirling web page
(http://www.stir.ac.uk/cehp/newsandevents/carmen-2014/)

The overall topic of this year’s meeting is “Heritages”, with a particular focus on the digital ones. We will also be holding Market Place for projects in a usual format.

Useful links and contacts:
http://www.forthvalley.ac.uk/about/investing_in_your_future/stirling)


Katerina Hornickova
General Secretary
CARMEN
The Worldwide Medieval Network
carmen.medieval@googlemail.com

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MAA News – Funding Opportunities for Medievalists

The Academy encourages its members to apply for grants and residential fellowships in these and other programs:

The American Academy in Rome

The American Philosophical Society 

Getty Research Fellowships

Guggenheim Foundation

Institute for Advanced Studies

Mellon Foundation

National Endowment for the Humanities

National Humanities Center

Additional funding opportunities for medievalists are posted on our blog. Please contact us at  info@TheMedievalAcademy.org with additional programs and awards.

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MAA News – MAA Application Deadlines

The Medieval Academy of America has long provided a variety of benefits of membership, including numerous fellowships, prizes and grants for travel, research and publications. Please see the list below for prizes and fellowships with looming deadlines, then follow the links for complete descriptions and application information. We encourage all eligible members to apply for these grants.

We are pleased to announce that as of August 2014 most applications for Medieval Academy prizes, awards and fellowships can be submitted using our online application system. Links to each form can be found on the Awards section of our website.

Graduate Student Fellowships and Awards

Schallek Fellowship
(Deadline 15 October 2014)

MAA/GSC Grant [NEW for 2015]
(deadline 15 February 2015)

Service Award

Kindrick-CARA Award for Outstanding Service
(Deadline 15 November 2014)

Teaching Award

CARA Award for Excellence in Teaching
(Deadline 15 November 2014)

Independent/Junior Scholars 

Olivia Remie Constable Award [NEW for 2015]
(Deadline 15 February 2015)

Travel Grants
(Deadline 1 November 2014 for meetings to be held between 1 March and 31 August 2015)

Book Prizes

Haskins Medal
(Deadline 15 October 2014)

John Nicholas Brown Prize
(Deadline 15 October 2014)

Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize
(Deadline 15 October 2014)

Please see the MAA website for other grants and prizes offered by the Academy.

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MAA News – Call for Fellows Nominations

Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 82v.

Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 82v.

Members are invited to submit nominations to the Fellows and Corresponding Fellows of the Medieval Academy. Fellows will cast ballots in January for the 2015 election, which will operate under by-laws and procedures adopted in 2013. Under the established rules, the number of slots available in 2015 for new Fellows is nine, for which there must be at least eighteen nominations. There is no established minimum number of nominations for Corresponding Fellows, although there are eleven openings.

Nominations for the 2015 elections must be received by 15 October 2014.

Instructions for nominations are available here:
http://www.medievalacademy.org/?page=Election_Procedure

Lists of Fellows, Corresponding Fellows and Emeriti/ae Fellows are available here:
http://www.medievalacademy.org/?page=Fellows

Nominations should be submitted to the Executive Director at LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org or mailed to:

Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director
Medieval Academy of America
17 Dunster St., Suite 202
Cambridge, Mass., 02138

Please note that nominations are to be kept in strictest confidence, from the nominee as well as from others.

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Call for Submissions – Digital Philology

Call for Submissions

Digital Philology: A Journal of Medieval Cultures

/Digital Philology/ is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to the study of medieval vernacular texts and cultures. Founded by Stephen G. Nichols and Nadia R. Altschul, the journal aims to foster scholarship that crosses disciplines upsetting traditional fields of study, national boundaries, and periodizations. /Digital Philology/ also encourages both applied and theoretical research that engages with the digital humanities and shows why and how digital resources require new questions, new approaches, and yield radical results.

You may browse the journal’s contents here: <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/digital_philology/

/Digital Philology/ is welcoming submissions. Inquiries and articles may be sent to dph@jhu.edu, to the attention of the Managing Editor. Correspondence regarding manuscript studies may be addressed to Jeanette Patterson at jpatterson09@gmail.com. For reviews of digital projects and publications, please contact Timothy Stinson at tlstinson@gmail.com.

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MAA News – Speculum News

Spec14The July 2014 issue of Speculum is now available online here along with the entire Speculum archive. This issue includes five articles (below) and seventy-five reviews:

Maryanne Kowaleski, “Medieval People in Town and Country: New Perspectives from Demography and Bioarchaeology” (pp. 573-600)

Michael Lower, “The Papacy and Christian Mercenaries of Thirteenth-Century North Africa” (pp. 601-631)

Laura Saetveit Miles, “The Origins and Development of the Virgin Mary’s Book at the Annunciation” (pp. 632-669)

William D. Paden, “An Occitan Prayer against the Plague and Its Tradition in Italy, France, and Catalonia” (pp. 670-692)

Kathleen E. Kennedy, “Reintroducing the English Books of Hours, or “English Primers” (pp. 693-723)

Members can access Speculum online free of charge as a perquisite of membership. The easiest way to do so is through the Medieval Academy website; click here for instructions. You will need to sign into the Academy’s website using your member name and password, after which no further sign-ins will be necessary. Once you make your way to the Cambridge University Press Speculum site, you can sign up for Speculum-related notifications if you wish.

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