MAA News – 2015 Membership Renewal

shieldThe end of the year is now quickly approaching, and we encourage you to renew your membership in the Medieval Academy for 2015 as soon as possible. If you have not already paid your 2015 membership dues, please do so by 31 December 2014.

Click here to renew online for 2015. 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. As a new feature, members can now use their personal MAA homepage to indicate an interest in being considered to serve on one of our adjudication committees or to review books for Speculum. In this way we hope to engage more members in our work.

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.

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MAA News – MAA at AHA

A 14th-century manuscript image of King John hunting (London, British Library, Cotton MS Claudius D II, f. 116r)

A 14th-century manuscript image of King John hunting (London, British Library, Cotton MS Claudius D II, f. 116r)

The Medieval Academy of America invites proposals for panels at the 2016 meeting of the American Historical Association in Atlanta, Georgia, January 7-10, 2016. The theme of the 2016 Meeting is “Global Migrations: Empires, Nations, and Neighbors.” Each year the Medieval Academy co-sponsors with the AHA several sessions at this meeting that are likely to be of particular interest to MAA members and general interest to a broader audience.

There is a two-stage process. First, members of the Medieval Academy submit draft session descriptions to the MAA’s AHA Program Committee by emailing them to the committee chair, Maureen C. Miller (mcmiller@berkeley.edu) by February 6, 2015. Descriptions should include the session title, session abstract, paper titles, names and affiliations of the organizer, presenters, and (if relevant) respondent.

Individual paper abstracts are requested but not required. Guidelines for sessions and submitting proposals can be found on the AHA website here.

Second, if approved by the committee, the organizer submits the session proposal directly to the AHA (using their on-line system) by the deadline of February 15, 2015 indicating that the session has the sponsorship of the Medieval Academy of America.

Please note that only sessions approved by the AHA Program Committee will appear as sponsored by the MAA and AHA on the program and that the MAA does not independently sponsor sessions.

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MAA News – Upcoming Deadlines

Initial N: from James I of Aragon Overseeing a Court of Law: Unknown Spanish, about 1290 - 1310. MS. LUDWIG XIV 6, FOL. 72V

Initial N: from James I of Aragon Overseeing a Court of Law: Unknown Spanish, about 1290 – 1310. MS. LUDWIG XIV 6, FOL. 72V

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):
The inaugural MAA/GSC Grant 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 amongst graduate student medievalists. Click here for more information.

Olivia Remie Constable Award (deadline 15 February)
Two 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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MAA News – Graduate Student Committee Self-Nominations

Fishermen. Abbey Bible. J. Paul Getty Museum, MS 107. Italian, probably Bologna, about 1250 - 1262. Tempera and gold leaf on parchment.

Fishermen. Abbey Bible. J. Paul Getty Museum, MS 107. Italian, probably Bologna, about 1250 – 1262. Tempera and gold leaf on parchment.

The GSC was established in 2008 “to act on behalf of the graduate student members of the Academy in voicing their concerns about medieval studies and promoting their participation both within the Academy and the broader academic community.” Now is your chance to get involved in the GSC leadership by applying to serve on the GSC Committee. Click here for more information about the self-nomination process (deadline 31 January).

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MAA News – NEH Public Scholar Program

"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.

The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has announced a new grant opportunity, the Public Scholar Program, intended to support well-researched books in the humanities that have been conceived and written to reach a broad readership. Books supported through the Public Scholar Program might present a narrative history, tell the stories of important individuals, analyze significant texts, provide a synthesis of ideas, revive interest in a neglected subject, or examine the latest thinking on a topic. Most importantly, they should present significant humanities topics in a way that is accessible to general readers.

The Public Scholar Program is open to both independent scholars and individuals affiliated with scholarly institutions. It offers a stipend of $4,200 per month for a period of six to twelve months. The maximum stipend is $50,400 for a twelve-month period. Applicants must have previously published a book or monograph with a university or commercial press, or articles and essays that reach a wide readership.

Application guidelines and a list of F.A.Q.’s for the Public Scholar Program are available on the NEH’s website at http://www.neh.gov/grants/research/public-scholar-program. The application deadline for the first cycle is March 3, 2015. Recipients may begin the term of the grant as early as October 1, 2015 or as late as September 1, 2016.

The official press release for the new program is available here:
http://www.neh.gov/news/press-release/2014-12-01.

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MAA News – Holiday Office Closures

The Medieval Academy office will be closed Dec. 24 – Jan. 2. All of us in the Medieval Academy office wish you a very happy holiday season. We look forward to working with you in 2015.

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Call for Papers – Travel and Translation in the Middle Ages

A Call for Papers:
Travel and Translation in the Middle Ages
March 28, 2015 at Yale University

Abstracts from graduate students are now being accepted for the 32nd Annual New England Medieval Studies Consortium Graduate Student Conference, the theme of which will be “Travel and Translation in the Middle Ages.” In light of recent endeavors such as the Global Chaucers project, the growing interest in the multilingual cultures of England, and the upcoming anniversaries of two great medieval councils, Fourth Lateran (1215) and Constance (1415), “travel” and “translation” are immediately relevant to many branches of medieval studies.

The organizers hope that this capacious topic will elicit proposals for papers from all disciplines of Medieval Studies.  We expect to have three to five concurrent panels of three papers each, and we welcome panelists to consider topics as varied as translation theory and comparative studies, manuscript transmission and paleography, and musicology and liturgical studies.  We also welcome papers dealing with any aspect of pilgrimage, migration, trade, relics and holy objects, crusade, religious warfare, and maritime culture.  Further, we look forward to receiving proposals that take more theoretical approaches to ideas of travel and translation in the medieval period.

The conference will feature a plenary lecture by Professor Cecilia Gaposchkin (Dartmouth), as well as a prize for best graduate student paper.

Papers are to be no more than twenty minutes in length and read in English.  All proposals must be submitted by graduate students.  Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be sent by e-mail to newenglandmedievalstudies.2015@gmail.com.

The deadline for submissions is January 5, 2015.  Graduate students whose abstracts are selected for the conference will have the opportunity to submit their paper in its entirety for consideration for the Alison Goddard Elliott Award.

 

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Travel Grants Available at the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library

The David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library is accepting applications for its 2014-2015 travel grants.

TheSallie Bingham Center for Women’s History and Culture, theJohn Hope Franklin Research Center for African and African American History and Culture,  theJohn W. Hartman Center for Sales, Advertising & Marketing History, and the History of Medicine Collections will award up to $1,000 per recipient to fund travel and other expenses related to visiting the Rubenstein Library. The Rubenstein also offers the Eleanore and Harold Jantz Fellowship, a $1500 award for researchers whose work would benefit from use of the Jantz Collections.

The grants are open to undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, independent scholars, artists, and activists who live more than 100 miles from Durham, NC and whose research projects would benefit from access to collections held by one of the centers.

Please note that the Rubenstein Library will be closed to the public from July 1st, 2015 through August 23rd, 2015, while we relocate to our newly renovated space. These dates are subject to change.

More details—and the grant application—may be found on Rubenstein grants website. Recipients will be announced in April 2015.

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Jobs for Medievalists

Assistant Professor of English

Assistant professor, Medieval literature and language, with preferred background in digital humanities. Anticipated vacancy at Rhode Island College beginning fall 2015, pending budgetary approval, full-time, tenure track position. Required:  Ph.D. in English or related field with specialization in Medieval literature and language, with work and/or substantial preparation in digital humanities. The successful candidate would be expected to teach period courses, along with History of the Language, Modern Grammar, and our pre-1800 British survey; a demonstrated familiarity with and work in digital humanities relative to these areas is strongly preferred. An ongoing commitment to scholarly research, departmental and college service, and student advising is expected. Application deadline: January 23, 2015. IMPORTANT: for full job description, and application procedures, see our web site at https://employment.ric.edu. Candidates must apply on-line, using Rhode Island College’s PeopleAdmin Applicant Tracking system.  www.ric.edu

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Call for Papers – The Many Forms of the Decameron: Interpretations, Translations and Adaptations

CALL FOR PAPERS AND ARTWORKS

Italian Graduate Conference

THE MANY FORMS OF THE DECAMERON: INTERPRETATIONS, TRANSLATIONS AND ADAPTATIONS

24 / 25 / 26 APRIL 2015

Keynote speakers:
Victoria Kirkham (University of Pennsylvania)
Patrick Rumble (University of Wisconsin – Madison)
Eugenio Refini (Johns Hopkins University)

The conference seeks to explore Boccaccio’s Decameron, its translatability into different media, languages, and historical contexts. The discussion will not be limited to the Decameron and its adaptability, but will also explore the broader concept of translation as well as the relationship between media and authorship, bringing together a network of scholars from various disciplines.

The event will feature standard graduate conference panels and keynote lectures from experts of different media, but will also incorporate film screenings, theatrical performances, and other events. To that end, students and artists with original adaptations of the Decameron (films, paintings, novel, short stories, sculptures, music, comics, scripts, …) are also invited to submit their works that will be included in different ways in the conference.

Examples of topics that will be covered include, but are not limited to, the following:

– Translating the Decameron
– Boccaccio in different literary genres and literature (i.e. Chaucer, Shakespeare)
– The Decameron and film: high cinema and sexploitation (from Righelli, to Pasolini, to Lealand).
– The Decameron and theater
– The Decameron and music
– The Decameron and the visual arts
– Translation vs. adaptation
– Re-interpretations vs. misreadings
– The short novel and its adaptability
– The Decameron’s reception and fortune across Europe, USA, and Worldwide
– The Decameron as adaptation: sources, intertextuality and citations
– Remaking the Decameron: medievalism and neomedievalism
– Other adaptations: censorship, editing and the textual tradition of the Decameron

THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS FEBRUARY 15TH, 2015

Please submit an abstract of no more than 200 words together with your information (name, title, affiliation, e-mail and telephone number) and audiovisual requests to jhu.boccaccio@gmail.com for a panel presentation.Presentations should be limited to 15-20 minutes and given in Italian or English.

To submit any other creative work, contact us at jhu.boccaccio@gmail.com to arrange a suitable exposition of your work.

CONTACTS:
The Italian Graduate Conference Committee – Johns Hopkins University
Email: jhu.boccaccio@gmail.com
Website: http://grll.jhu.edu/2014/11/19/italian-graduate-conference-call-for-papers/

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