Symposium: Envisioning the Eucharist—Transcending the Literal in Medieval and Byzantine Art

This daylong symposium will examine the assertion that Medieval and Byzantine art functioned not as a mere supplement to or reduction of advanced theological concepts, but as theology in its own right.

Featured will be new scholarship that explores how developing Eucharistic doctrine was translated—and transformed—visually. Special consideration will be given to how artists envisioned the Eucharist theologically and transcended the literal representation of the Last Supper to convey other dimensions of the Eucharistic mystery.

To register, please email James Romaine at drjamesromaine@gmail.com

Registration is required for this program.

Click here for more information.

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NEH Summer Seminars for Medievalists

Medievalists should note that seven of the 2014 National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminars and Institutes for College and University Teachers focus on the Middle Ages. Four offer opportunities to conduct research in Europe (Rome, Florence, Oxford, York) while the two in the United States offer access to specialized research libraries and collections. While most participants will hold faculty positions, directors may admit up to two graduate students in each seminar. Below are brief descriptions of these medieval Seminars and Institutes with links to their websites where further information and applications are available (the application for all NEH Summer Seminars and Institutes is March 4, 2014).

Summer Seminars

Arts, Architecture, and Devotional Interaction in England, 1200-1600
The NEH Summer Seminar on Arts, Architecture, and Devotional
Interaction, 1200-1600 will be held in York, England from June 8
to July 4, 2014. The seminar is designed to provide college and
university teachers with an extraordinary opportunity to explore
how and why artwork and architecture produced between 1200-1600
engaged devotees in dramatic new forms of physical and emotional
interaction. Building on the work of scholars over the past
decade, we will examine the role of performativity, sensual
engagement, dynamic kinetic action as well as emotional and
imaginative interaction within the arts.
The seminar will take full advantage of its spectacular locale.
Most seminar meetings will be held in churches or museums and we
will be accompanied by visiting scholars who are specialists in
the daily topics. The seminar is designed for all kinds of
teachers in the humanities, not just art historians. You do not
need a specialist’s knowledge of English Gothic art and
architecture, but we expect that participants will have some
scholarly engagement with European history, art history,
theology, theater, music, or some other appropriate field.
For further details, visit http://www.usu.edu/NEHseminar2014/

Reform and Renewal in Medieval Rome
In this seminar held at the American Academy in Rome, project
directors Maureen C. Miller (University of California, Berkeley)
and William L. North (Carleton College) use the rich history of
the city and its surviving medieval monuments as a laboratory
for reconsidering central concepts in European history that
continue to be powerful elements of our public discourse.
Indeed, “reform” and “renewal” seem to be almost passwords for
legitimate and positive transformation. With its repeated
movements for religious and political reform and renewal, the
Middle Ages offers a particularly rich historical landscape in
which to investigate these processes. Through readings, site
visits, and discussions, the seminar seeks to foster
participants’ individual research and pedagogical projects and
to build a supportive interdisciplinary community of inquiry
that will continue to share ideas, work, and teaching materials
after the summer ends. Theoretical readings on the dynamics of
conceptual and institutional change will be paired with three
richly documented, interdisciplinary case studies: the
Carolingian political, religious, and intellectual
transformations of the ninth century; ecclesiastical reform in
the eleventh and twelfth centuries; and the efforts to revive
the Roman republic in both the twelfth and the fourteenth
centuries. Readings include theoretical discussions of the
conceptual and institutional dynamics of reform, core primary
sources for each of the cases studies, as well as a range of
classic and revisionist scholarship. Site visits in and around
Rome – for example, to S. Clemente, S. Prassede, SS. Quattro
Coronati, S. Angelo in Formis, the Lateran, and the Campidoglio
– are designed to put texts into conversation with visual and
material evidence.
Readings include essential primary sources such as the Liber
pontificalis, the Donation of Constantine, Bonizo of Sutri’s
Liber ad amicum, and the Life of Cola di Rienzo, as well as a
range of classic and recent revisionary interpretive essays. The
directors encourage applications from scholars engaged in
research and teaching on reform and renewal throughout medieval
Europe, but also welcome those in Renaissance studies, for which
the medieval movements of reform and renewal are an essential
foundation, and those pursuing comparative projects on these
themes. In addition to the unparalleled resources of Rome’s
numerous archives, libraries, sites, and museums, participants
may also be aided by the American Academy’s own library and
research facilities. For further information visit,
https://apps.carleton.edu/neh2014/

NEH Summer Seminar for School Teachers
David Raybin and Susanna Fein welcome applications for a
four-week NEH Summer Seminar for School Teachers on Chaucer’s
Canterbury Tales. The seminar will be located in London, July
6-August 2, 2014. The seminar is open to school teachers (K-12),
with up to two spots reserved for graduate students who plan to
become school teachers. Please tell any teachers and graduate
students who might be interested in receiving information about
the seminar to contact us at draybin@eiu.edu, or to consult the
seminar website: www.eiu.edu/~neh. The deadline for receipt of
applications is March 4, 2014.

Summer Institutes

Dante’s Divine Comedy: Poetry, Philosophy, and the City of Florence
This four-week NEH Summer Institute for College and University
Teachers will take place in Florence in summer 2014. Situating
the study of the Comedy in Florence offers an intellectually
expansive view of the poem and of how Dante parlayed Florence’s
emerging power into a critique of civic disorder,
acquisitiveness, and corruption. At the same time that Dante
was formed as a poet in his turbulent but brilliant city, he was
inspired by the intellectual, spiritual, and theological
currents and cross-currents represented so pervasively in its
built environment. The Institute is designed for those who want
to teach Dante, who would like to expand their knowledge of the
place and time that inspired the poem, or who want to increase
their knowledge of medieval literature, history and art.
The director of the Institute, Professor Brenda Deen Schildgen,
will join a number of leading scholars of Dante, medieval
history, art history, and philosophy, to lead the NEH scholars
through a close reading of Dante’s Comedy. These institute
leaders include Peter Hawkins, Professor of Religion and
Literature at Yale University; Giuseppe Mazzotta, Sterling
Professor in the Humanities for Italian and chair of the Italian
Studies Department at Yale University; Professor William Franke
at Vanderbilt University; Lino Pertile, Carl A. Pescosolido
Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures at Harvard
University and director of the Villa I Tatti. The focussed
discussions of Dante’s poem will be supported through lectures
on Medieval Ethics and Politics by Professor David Ardagh; the
history and importance of Benedictine monasticism to the
development of Florence, and more particularly, to Dante’s
formation, by the Rector of San Miniato al Monte; and the role
of St. Francis, Franciscanism, and Giotto in Dante by Professor
Chiara Frugoni.
For more information, see
http://nehinstitutedantesdivinecomedy.ucdavis.edu

Medieval Political Philosophy: Islamic, Jewish, and Christian
Ths Institute will be held at Gonzaga University in Spokane,
Washington and is co-directed by Douglas Kries, Joseph
Macfarland, and Joshua Parens. It will begin with a week of
discussion of Islamic medieval political philosophy, for even
though Islam emerged after Judaism and Christianity, political
philosophy flourished within Islam first. The towering figure of
Alfarabi will be emphasized, but alternative thinkers such as
Alghazali and Ibn Tufayl will also receive attention. The week
will conclude with a discussion of how to approach teaching
Islamic political philosophy in an undergraduate classroom.
The second week will treat Jewish political philosophy during
the medieval period. The principal figure for this second week
will be Moses Maimonides, with Saadya Gaon, Judah Halevi, and
Isaac Abravanel being considered as alternatives. As with the
first week, the second week will conclude with a curricular
discussion, but this time on teaching Jewish political thinkers
of the Middle Ages.
For the third week, Thomas Aquinas will be considered as the
dominant Christian thinker, with Marsilius of Padua and Dante
Alighieri being studied as alternatives. This week ends with the
Fourth of July holiday.
The final week of the seminar will turn from developing a deeper
understanding of these three traditions of political philosophy
to a comparative discussion of the three. Participants will
discuss not only historical lines of influence, but also the
similarities and differences of the authors discussed in the
first three weeks. Topics to be discussed in this week will
include the relative importance of Plato or Aristotle in the
three traditions, how the notion of religious law is understood
in each of the three traditions, and the very status of
political philosophy itself within the three. The final day of
the Institute will return to the question of curriculum.
The focus throughout the Institute will be on understanding the
three traditions of medieval political philosophy, not on
advocating for one or another over the others. The directors
anticipate that the participants are likely to hold religious
commitments to one of the three religious communities, but
participants selected will need to display genuine interest in
and respect for all three. For further information visit
http://medievalpoliticalphilosophy.gonzaga.edu/

The Mongols and the Eurasian Nexus Global History
Held at the East-West Center in Honolulu, Hawaii, this Institute
will provide participants with five weeks of
enthusiastically-delivered and intellectually-absorbing
lectures, discussions, museum visits, and films focused on
investigating the Mongol period of the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries—an era of extraordinary interactions among the peoples
and civilizations of Asia and Europe that in many ways marked a
turn toward greater multiculturalism and more concertedly
pursued globalization. Funded by the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH), this program will enable undergraduate
educators to develop new curricula on this crucial moment in
world history. While focusing on the Mongol era, its historical
contexts and subsequent impacts, the program will also offer
resources for enhancing engagement with multiculturalism, its
challenges, and creative possibilities. For further information
visit
http://www.eastwestcenter.org/education/asian-studies-development-program/upcoming-programs/neh-the-mongols-and-the-eurasian-nexus

Representations of the ‘Other’: Jews in Medieval England
The five-week program, directed by Professor Irven M. Resnick,
will meet from 12 July through 16 August 2014 at the Oxford
Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies (England), to study the
legal status, economic conditions, theological stereotypes, and
cultural depictions of Jews as the most visible ‘other’ in
medieval Christendom. Since in 1290 medieval England was the
first to expel its entire Jewish community, it will serve as a
case study for the institute. Oxford hosted a significant
thirteenth-century Jewish community and also was a site of
medieval anti-Jewish violence. We will explore the history of
its Jewish community with a walking tour of medieval Jewish
Oxford and with visits to local museums. In addition, Oxford
offers access to the Bodleian library, which possesses one of
the world’s great collections of medieval Hebrew and Latin
manuscripts. Visiting faculty for this summer institute include
Jeremy Cohen, Sheila Delany, Daniel J. Lasker, Sara Lipton, and
Robert Stacey. For additional information, please consult
www.utc.edu/NEH or email Irven-Resnick@utc.edu.

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Call for Papers – Power and Identity in the Pre-Modern Mediterranean

The Mediterranean Seminar is seeking proposals for panels on “Culture, Power and Identity in the Pre-Modern Mediterranean,” organized by Brian Catlos [Religious Studies CU Boulder/Humanities UC Santa Cruz] and Sergio La Porta (Armenian Studies, CSU Fresno)  to be submitted for consideration for the annual meeting of the American Historical Association to be held January 2-5, 2015 in New York City.

Mediterranean Studies represents an approach that is transforming our view of the history of Pre-Modern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East by taking an inter-disciplinary and comparative approach to the history of the Medieval West (ie.: the area west of the Indus), by “provincializing” Europe, eschewing grand teleological narratives, and by interrogating essentializing categories that have dominated historical analysis when deployed uncritically and universally (e.g.: Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Europe, Byzantium, the Near East…).

We are seeking proposals that focus on the intersection of culture, power and religious and ethnic identity, on communal relations, and/or on processes of acculturation, translatio, and conflict in the broader Mediterranean.

In principle we will propose two panels: “Ideals” and “Action” — the former focusing on the ideology of pre-Modern identity politics and its expression, and the latter on the outcomes of  policy and practice in this regard.

Papers focusing on social, political and economic history are welcome, but we are particularly interested in papers that are interdisciplinary in nature and/or that focus on art history, musicology, architecture, philosophy, history of science and medicine, the construction of class and/or gender identity, material culture or literature, and/or that focus on traditionally understudied groups (e.g.: Berbers, Copts, Armenians) and/or that combine approaches or take a chronologically or regionally comparative approach.

Please submit a proposals for 20-minute papers to be presented in person to Brian Catlos (bcatlos@ucsc.edu) and Sergio La Porta (slaporta@csufresno.edu) on or before Thursday, February 6 for consideration. Include a 150-200 word abstract and a 2-page CV, and indicate whether you will need to request AV equipment, and put “AHA Proposal” in the subject line.

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Medieval and Modern Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age

Medieval and Modern Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age (MMSDA) - 
DiXiT Camp 1
28 April – 2 May 2014, Cambridge & London

We are very pleased to announce the fifth year of this course, funded 
by the Digital Scholarly Editions Initial Training Network (DiXiT),  and 
run by DiXiT with the Institute of English Studies (London), the 
University of Cambridge, the Warburg Institute, and King’s College 
London. For the first time, the course will run in two parallel 
strands: one on medieval and the other on modern manuscripts.

The course is open to any arts and humanities doctoral students  working 
with manuscripts. It involves five days of intensive training  on the 
analysis, description and editing of medieval or modern  manuscripts to 
be held jointly in Cambridge and London. Participants  will receive a 
solid theoretical foundation and hands-on experience in  cataloguing and 
editing manuscripts for both print and digital formats.

The first half of the course involves morning classes and then 
afternoon visits to libraries in Cambridge and London. Participants 
will view original manuscripts and gain practical experience in 
applying the morning’s themes to concrete examples. In the second half 
we will address the cataloguing and description of manuscripts in a 
digital format with particular emphasis on the Text Encoding  Initiative 
(TEI). These sessions will also combine theoretical  principles and 
practical experience and include supervised work on  computers.

The course is free of charge but is open only to doctoral students  (PhD 
or equivalent). It is aimed at those writing dissertations  relating to 
medieval or modern manuscripts, especially those working  on literature, 
art or history. Some bursaries will be available for  travel and 
accommodation. There are eighteen vacancies across the  medieval and 
modern strands, and preference will be given to those  considered by the 
selection panel likely to benefit most from the  course. Applications 
close on 14 February 2014 but early registration  is strongly
recommended.

For further details see http://dixit.uni-koeln.de/mmsda.html
or contact dixit-mmsda@uni-koeln.de
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Postdocs: Hebrew and Arabic Literature

The Maison des Science de l’Homme Lorraine is offering 6 month post-doctoral contracts in Medieval Hebrew and Medieval Arabic Literature at €2400 per month.

Deadline for Application: a June 2014
Start of Contract: 1 September 2014
All nationalities are welcome to apply.

For more information, see: http://www.msh-lorraine.fr/actualites/details/article/deux-offres-de-contrat-post-doctoral.html

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Call for Papers – 2015 Medieval Academy Annual Meeting

CALL FOR PAPERS

2015 ANNUAL MEETING OF

THE MEDIEVAL ACADEMY OF AMERICA

HOSTED BY

  THE MEDIEVAL INSTITUTE 

of the 

UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME

MARCH 12-14, 2015

The Program Committee invites proposals for papers on all topics and in all disciplines and periods of medieval studies. Any member of the Medieval Academy may submit a paper proposal, excepting those who presented papers at the annual meetings of the Medieval Academy in 2013 or 2014; others may submit proposals as well but must become members in order to present papers at the meeting. Special consideration can be given to individuals whose specialty would not normally involve membership in the Medieval Academy.

Location: The Medieval Institute has one of the preeminent library collections for medieval studies in North America, and the University of Notre Dame’s Snite Museum of Art will showcase an exhibit on the reconstruction of a 15th-century Breton Book of Hours by the Library’s Department of Special Collections. The campus Digital Visualization Theater will be used for a 360-degree visual and aural presentation on the cosmology of Hildegard of Bingen, while the University’s DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, with five venues for film, theater, and music, will offer meeting attendees the chance to enjoy a variety of performing arts activities. Notre Dame is located about two hours’ drive from Chicago, with commuter train service available. Scholars may wish to extend their visit and take advantage of the opportunity for research or sightseeing.

Theme: “Medieval Studies across the Disciplines” will provide a conceptual focus for the meeting. The Medieval Academy welcomes innovative sessions that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries or that use various disciplinary approaches to examine an individual topic. To both facilitate and emphasize interdisciplinarity, the Call for Papers is organized in “threads.” Sessions listed under these threads have been proposed to or by the Program Committee but the list provided below is not meant to be exhaustive or exclusive.

The complete Call for Papers with additional information, submission procedures, selections guidelines and organizers is available here.

Please contact the Program Committee at MAA15@nd.edu with any questions.

THREADS AND SESSIONS:

Anniversaries
1. Dante’s Intellectual Formation
2. Lateran IV
3. Magna Carta
4. The Battle of Agincourt
5. The Council of Constance and the Great Western Schism
6. Jan Hus and the Council of Constance

The Cosmos and the Globe
7. Hildegard of Bingen’s Cosmic Egg
8. Configuring the Cosmos, Diagramming the World
9. Eco-Criticism
10. Representing and Reacting to Landscapes
11. The Medieval Globe
12. Global Exchange in the Middle Ages
13. New Light on the Stars: Medieval Cosmology

Universities

14. Theology in the University: Illustrations from the 13th to 15th Centuries
15. Artes and Philosophy in the University:Illustrations from the 13th to 15th Centuries
16. Gender and the Medieval University
17. Medieval Biblical Exegesis
18. Mystical Theology 75 Years after Gilson

The North Sea
19. North Sea Currents: Latin and Vernacular
20. Reading the Icelandic Sagas Differently
21. Insular Monasticism
22. North Sea Currents: Travelers and Travelers’ Tales
23. Anglo-Saxon Ecologies
24. Danelaw Cultures
25. Archaeology
26. Architecture

Language and Regional Identity
27. Continuity of English in the Multilingual Middle Ages
28. Insularity and Language: Case Studies (e.g., Sicily, Bohemia, Iberia, Northern England)
29. Performance and Embodiment of Medieval German Literature

Medieval Latin Literature
30. Rhetoric in the Middle Ages
31. Dictionary of Latin from Regional English Sources
32. Songs with Latin Texts
33. Chronicles
34. Prose Genres

Manuscript Studies
35. English Manuscript Studies
36. Women in the Scriptorium
37. The New Philology at Twenty-Five
38. The Interdisciplinary Codex
39. Margins/Marginalia
40. The Future of the Critical Edition
41. The Middle Ages Meets Digital Humanities: Text Editing

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Jobs for Medievalists

The Professorship of Medieval and Renaissance English

University of Cambridge

The Board of Electors to the Professorship of Medieval and Renaissance English invite applications for this Professorship to take up appointment on 1 October 2014 or as soon as possible thereafter. Preference will be given to persons whose work is connected with medieval English literature (1066-1550)

Candidates will have an outstanding research record of international stature in medieval and early modern English literature and the vision, leadership, experience and enthusiasm to build on current strengths in maintaining and developing a leading research presence. They will hold a PhD or equivalent postgraduate qualification.

Standard professorial duties include teaching and research, examining, supervision and administration. The Professor will be based in Cambridge. A competitive salary will be offered.

Further information is available by clicking the Apply link below or contact the Academic Secretary, University Offices, The Old Schools, Cambridge, CB2 1TT, (email: ibise@admin.cam.ac.uk).

Applications, consisting of a letter of application, a statement of current and future research plans, a curriculum vitae and a publications list, along with details of three referees should be made online no later than 24 February 2014.

Informal enquiries about this Professorship may be directed to Professor David Trotter, Chair of the Faculty of Board of English, email chair@english.cam.ac.uk.

Click here for Employer Profile

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MAA News – Speculum News

As a new feature of the Newsletter, we will summarize in this space the latest

Speculum publication news. 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. If not, you can simply read below about what’s new:

October 2013: By now, you should have received the print edition of volume 88.4 (October 2013). This issue (and the entire Speculum archive) is available online.

January 2014: Articles and reviews from volume 89.1 (January 2014) are available now to members in advance of printing, using CUP’s FirstView feature.

Please note: articles and reviews available in FirstView have not yet been assigned permanent page numbers. Page numbers are assigned once the volume is in print.

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MAA News – Executive Director Search

Master and scholars. British Library, MS Royal 19 A IX f. 4

Master and scholars. British Library, MS Royal 19 A IX f. 4

The Medieval Academy of America invites applications to serve as Executive Director of the world’s largest scholarly organization devoted to the study of the Middle Ages. The Executive Director is appointed for a five-year term by the Council; the term is renewable.

The position of Executive Director is of vital importance to the successful fulfillment of the mission of the Medieval Academy of America. As its highest-ranking professional employee, the incumbent is responsible for representing the organization’s members, their elected leadership, and the vibrant programs in Medieval Studies whose role in contemporary society and culture we support. Working from the Academy office in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in collaboration with and reporting to the organization’s elected Board (a sixteen-member Council which includes the officers – president, first- and second-vice presidents, and treasurer), the Executive Director proposes, develops and implements policies and programs addressing the present and future needs of a national and international community of medieval scholars.

Responsibilities include advancing the interests of the Academy and implementing policies in conjunction with the elected Officers and Council, overseeing the Academy’s governance and membership services, supervising Academy finances and fundraising efforts, promoting membership growth, facilitating the work of Academy committees, coordinating the Annual Meeting and meetings of the Council and Executive Committee, and managing the Academy office and staff. A fuller description of the position is available on request from the chair of the search committee.

Position qualifications include:
-Proven leadership skills
-Excellent oral and written communication abilities
-Demonstrated ability to direct an office and supervise staff
-Knowledge of financial systems and non-profit accounting
-Ability to engage the Academy’s various constituencies in a positive, tactful manner          -Strategic planning and organizing skills
-Knowledge of and experience in dealing with current challenges confronting higher education and learned societies.

In addition to meeting the above criteria, the ideal candidate will possess a PhD in a recognized sub-discipline of Medieval Studies and have a distinguished record of publications in that field. Compensation will be based on qualifications and comparable to that of administrative leaders in similar institutions.

Nominations, including self-nominations, are welcome. Interested parties should submit applications including a curriculum vitae, a statement outlining plans for the development of the organization, and three names (with contact information) of individuals who can speak to the applicant’s qualifications, to directorsearch@themedievalacademy.org or as hard copy to the Academy office, 17 Dunster St., Suite 202, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA addressed to Director Search. Screening of applications will begin 15 February 2014. EEO/AA

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MAA News – 2014 Annual Meeting

annualmeeting2014The Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at the University of California Los Angeles is pleased to host the 2014 Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America, which will be held jointly with the annual meeting of the Medieval Association of the Pacific at UCLA on April 10-12, 2014. The meeting’s theme is “Empires and Encounters.”

The program will include four plenary sessions:

Presidential Address: Richard Unger, University of British Columbia
Opening Plenary Session: Susan Boynton, Columbia University
Fellows Plenary Session: Margaret Mullett, Dumbarton Oaks
CARA Plenary Session

The meeting will conclude with a private reception at the Getty Villa in Malibu on Saturday evening. The annual meeting of CARA delegates will take place on Sunday.

Registration is now open. The Program, registration link and hotel information can be found here:

http://www.cmrs.ucla.edu/medieval_academy/index.html

We hope you will join us for what promises to be a very successful meeting.

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