Call for Papers – International Medieval Meeting Lleida 2014

The Consolidated Medieval Research Group “Space, Power and Culture” of Lleida University is currently organising the fourth International Medieval Meeting Lleida, which will be held at Lleida’s Facultat de Lletres on  25, 26, 27 June 2014. Like the last IMMLleida, this event will featurefour different conferences, each of them focusing on a different aspect of  “POTESTAS” and different papers on a different aspects of medieval studies (i.e. history, art history, archaeology, philology and  literature).
Furthermore, there will be sessions about research management, as well as sessions introducing the activities of research institutions,
presentations by companies dedicated to the management and promotion of heritage, and other activities related to the Middle Ages.

Anyone interested in any aspect of Medieval History is welcome to participate in the IMMLleida! We would like to encourage you to present a paper or organise a session or, if applicable, introduce your research group, your publications, or simply come along to enjoy the conference and take part in the free cultural events we have organised for those summer nights.

To enrol, simply fill in the relevant form on our website: www.internationalmedievalmeetinglleida.udl.cat

If you have any queries at all, please contact us: immlleida@historia.udl.cat

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Duke University Rubenstein Library, History of Medicine Collections Travel Grants

The History of Medicine Collections in the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Duke University is pleased to announce our new travel grant program.

The History of Medicine Collections offers research grants of up to $1,000 to researchers whose work would benefit from access to the historical medical collections at the Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Our holdings include over 20,000 print items and 4,500 unique manuscripts along with prints, photographs, and approximately 500 medical instruments and artifacts including a large collection of ivory anatomical manikins. Collection strengths include but are not limited to pediatrics, psychiatry, human sexuality, yellow fever, and materia medica.

Any faculty member, graduate or undergraduate student, or independent scholar with a research project requiring the use of materials held by the History of Medicine Collections is eligible to apply. All applicants must reside outside of a 100-mile radius of Durham, NC.

We encourage each prospective grant applicant to discuss his or her research project and the collections that might support it with the Curator before submitting an application.

The travel grant may cover:

  • Transportation expenses, including air, train, or bus ticket charges; car rental; mileage using a personal vehicle; and parking fees
  • Accommodations
  • Meals

To apply:

  • Review the application instructions carefully. A sample application form is available as a PDF for reference purposes only.
  • Complete the online application form, which includes your C.V. (You may start the form and return to it later, but it must be completed within a week from the same computer and browser.)
  • Graduate and undergraduate students must ask a faculty advisor to write them a letter of recommendation. We will not consider an application complete until we receive the recommendation.
  • Advisors may submit a letter of recommendation as an e-mail attachment to rachel.ingold@duke.edu or mail a hardcopy letter to:

History of Medicine Collections
Attn: Research Grant Program
David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Box 90185
Duke University
Durham, NC 27708-0185

The deadline for applications is January 31, 2014 by 5:00 PM EST. Grant recipients will be announced by March 28, 2014. Grants must be used between April 2014 and June 2015.

Please view our website for further details or feel free to contact the Curator of the History of Medicine Collections at rachel.ingold@duke.edu or (919)684-8549.

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Summer Programs – Geographical, Ethnic, Social and Cultural Frontiers in Late Antiquity

The Summer Intensive Course – Luminosus Limes: Geographical, Ethnic, Social and Cultural Frontiers in Late Antiquity to be held at Central European University, in Budapest, July 7-12, 2014 is calling for participants.

The “Bright Frontier” summer course explores the dynamic transformation of classical frontiers between the second and the sixth century from a multidisciplinary perspective: archaeology, medieval studies, social and cultural history, art, theology, and literature. Offering a groundbreaking approach to the field of border studies including social, gender, ethnic and religious categories with the participation of outstanding scholars in the field, this course will provide students with a solid knowledge of up-to-date international scholarship on frontiers: a strong theoretical background as well as hands-on acquaintance with physical borders and material artifacts excavated along the Danube River (the ripa Pannonica) as well as in the late antique cemetery of Pécs in Hungary.

The “Bright Frontier” summer course explores the dynamic transformation of classical frontiers between the second and the sixth century from a multidisciplinary perspective: archaeology, medieval studies, social and cultural history, art, theology, and literature. Offering a groundbreaking approach to the field of border studies including social, gender, ethnic and religious categories with the participation of outstanding scholars in the field, this course will provide students with a solid knowledge of up-to-date international scholarship on frontiers: a strong theoretical background as well as hands-on acquaintance with physical borders and material artifacts excavated along the Danube River (the ripa Pannonica) as well as in the late antique cemetery of Pécs in Hungary.

For more information, see: http://www.summer.ceu.hu/limes-2014

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Jobs for Medievalists

The Department of Art in The College of Liberal Arts at Auburn University is seeking candidates for a full-time, tenure-track Assistant Professor with a primary research specialty in the visual and material culture of the Mediterranean and/or Near Eastern World (ancient or early medieval), with the ability to teach courses in ancient and medieval art as well as diverse secondary areas. Continued research activity required. The typical teaching load is four courses a year (2/2), and includes the art history surveys. Duties also include academic advising, curriculum development, and service on committees. The appointment will begin August 16, 2014.

Minimum qualifications: A Ph.D. degree in Art History or a closely related field before the employment date is highly desired; outstanding candidates who are in the final stages of dissertation writing (ABD) will be considered. However, appointment to the tenure-track position at the rank of assistant professor requires the earned doctorate by the August 16, 2014 start date.

Successful candidates must have an active record of scholarly achievement in the visual and material culture of the Mediterranean and/or Near Eastern World (ancient or early medieval). The Department of Art is seeking individuals with a minimum of 2 years of effective teaching experience as the instructor of record at the college level.

Application materials will be submitted online through Auburn University’s employment site: https://aufacultypositions.peopleadmin.com/postings/373
Please submit the following:
•    Letter of application addressing research projects, plans, and publications, teaching experience and philosophy, and other professional qualifications as they relate to the position.
•    Curriculum Vitae
•    Writing sample: dissertation chapter or published article, c. 20 pages in length
•    Sample syllabi for two courses: one related to the primary research field, one related to a secondary field
•    Names and contact information of three references (letters will be requested at a later date for finalists)
•    Transcript of the terminal degree

Review of applications will begin February 12, 2014 and continue until the position is filled. Following the initial screening of applications, preliminary interviews with selected candidates will be conducted via Skype in late February/early March.

The candidate selected for this position must be able to meet eligibility requirements to work in the United States at the time the appointment is scheduled to begin and continue working legally for the proposed term of employment; excellent communication skills required.

Additional Information: The Department of Art currently offers a B.A. degree in art history, a minor in art history, two degrees in studio art (B.A., B.F.A), and a minor in studio art. Fifteen permanent faculty work with 150 majors. The Department of Art is a charter member of NASAD and is the oldest fully accredited art department in the Southeast. Housed in historic and recently renovated Biggin Hall and a 3D Arts Building, the department includes an 800 sq. ft. instructional exhibitions gallery. For more details, visit the department website at: http://www.cla.auburn.edu/art/

Auburn University, with an enrollment of 24,864 students, is ranked 40th among public universities nationwide according to the U.S. News and World Report 2014 survey. The university’s 1800-acre campus includes the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University, the only university art museum in Alabama. The city of Auburn is a thriving intellectual community located approximately 100 miles southwest of Atlanta, GA and southeast of Birmingham, AL.

Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.
Auburn University is an Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action Employer.
Please apply online:https://aufacultypositions.peopleadmin.com/postings/373
Questions? Contact Art@auburn.edu

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Editor of Speculum

To the Members of the Medieval Academy:

The Council, on the recommendation of a search committee chaired by Richard Unger, is pleased to announce the appointment of Professor Sarah Spence as the new editor of Speculum.

Sarah Spence has just taken early retirement from her post as Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at the University of Georgia, where she was Distinguished Research Professor from 2009 to 2013.  A specialist particularly in troubadour poetry, Spence’s scholarship and professional activities demonstrate a great range, from classical antiquity to the Renaissance and beyond.  Her career has been marked not only by an impressive list of publications but also by skill in working collegially.  She has an extensive history as an editor.  In addition to two co-edited volumes of critical essays, Spence has developed particular expertise as a journal editor.  She was founding editor of Literary Imagination and held that post for eight years.  Before that, she was managing editor of Tenso.  After leaving Literary Imagination, Spence took on Vergilius for three years, raising its quality and readership.  Editing has thus been a major thread in Spence’s career, rivaling her activities as scholar and teacher.  Editing and the study of literature, while they are twin strands in her career, have never been divided.  Her interest in encouraging younger scholars to send their work to Speculum, though they may be daunted by the idea of publishing in the field’s most prestigious journal – famed (as it should be) for its rigorous standards – has the potential to establish new directions.  Her wide experience and genuine pleasure in the nitty-gritty of nurturing and editing articles hold great promise for her term as the editor of Speculum.

The task of the search committee proved a difficult one.  Making a choice among the ten applicants, individuals with varied and distinguished credentials, took longer than anyone had anticipated.  After extensive, careful, and thoughtful deliberation the committee made its recommendation to appoint Sarah Spence. The Academy is grateful to all ten members who applied for their willingness to serve and their interest in the organization. We owe a special debt of gratitude to the members of the search committee – Christopher Baswell, Susan Einbinder, Cynthia Hahn, and Cary Nederman – for their hard work over the last months and their contributions to the difficult decision that has now been made.

Sarah Spence is enthusiastic about this appointment and is very much looking forward to her new role as editor of Speculum. We are sure you will join us in wishing her all the best in her service to the Academy.

Richard Unger, President
William Chester Jordan, First Vice-President
Barbara Newman, Second Vice-President

Sarah Spence: Curriculum Vitae

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Jobs for Medievalists

Position Available: Private Library in Abu Dhabi

Librarian needed to organize and manage a substantial and growing private library in Abu Dhabi. The ideal candidate will have extensive knowledge of books, both antiquarian and modern, managerial expertise in the acquisition and cataloging of books, and in the organization and services of libraries. The librarian will also provide reference and research assistance for the collection, and supervise daily operations.

Utmost discretion will be mandatory; candidates will be required to sign a non-disclosure statement. The collection will be housed in a new library facility that is currently under construction, and the librarian will administer, supervise, and interpret the collection for library users. The candidate will work closely with book dealers and recommend purchases in keeping with the library’s collection development policy.

Requirements:  Library degree from an accredited graduate library school, and a minimum of five years experience in the field, including experience with rare books and manuscripts.

Preferences: Advanced degree in a related field and proficiency in Arabic language.  The candidate will have a minimum of five years experience in the field, including experience with rare books and manuscripts.

Salary range:  $75,000  to $85,000 plus housing and benefits.

Applications:  Please send cover letter and CV, and the names of two professional referees to John F. Dean (American consultant to the hiring committee in Abu Dhabi) at jfd5@cornell.edu

 

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Jobs for Medievalists

Postdoctoral Research Position

The INALCO offers a postdoctoral research position in medieval Hebraic language and literature – a temporary contract (6 months) in the event of the approval of an ANR financing scheme (INALCO – MSH Lorraine – CNRS ATILF).

The contract begins on February 1st 2014.

Description of the research project framing the position and main focus of the postdoctoral researcher

Aims of the research project
Aliento (Linguistic and intercultural analysis of short sapiential statements and of their transmission East/West, West/East) is a research project whose aim is the creation of a database about the sources, transmission, circulation and posterity of the sapiential statements of the Iberian Peninsula (from the ninth to the sixteenth century) between the Three Cultures. Aliento has been budgeted for three years by the National Agency for Research. At this stage there are four main objectives:

1.    Accurate annotation using an XML/TEI tagging system on the sense, the form, the structure and the moral of each brief sapiential statement found in eight texts from a reference corpus (Arabic, Spanish, Hebrew, Catalan and Latin). The point is to link the brief sapiential statements (about 9,570 items) and, by means of a close collaboration between experts, develop a robust tagging protocol for this type of items which can be transferable to other corpora (formalisation, normalisation, creation of a common ontology to this type of statements).
2.    Cooperatively create a piece of software capable of matching items and displaying a trilingual interface that will allow the monitoring of results, i.e. the links created between the brief sapiential statements.
3.    Analysis of the matching results and production of scientific results in the field of humanities: study of the circulation of brief sapiential statements, their transformation and their degree of acculturation according to their own intertextuality.
4.    Creation of a library of medieval sapiential texts accessible on-line by means of standardised meta-data in TEI format and accompanied by data on the text, authors, translators, compilers and references
The current research project ANR ALIENTO is the result of four consecutive years of research.

For further information: www.aliento.eu

Focus of the postdoctoral researcher:
The postdoctoral researcher must have an extensive background in medieval Hebraic language and literature (especially sapiential, moral and/or philosophical texts from Spain or Provence) as well as solid technical know-how in computing. As a specialist in Hebraic texts s/he will have to tag with precision the brief sapiential statements with compatible XML/TEI annotations on the sense, the form, the structure and the moral of each brief sapiential statement to be found in the books of sayings in Hebrew: Musrei ha-pilosofim translated by al-Harizi, 13th century and Miv’har ha-pninim, the translation of Mukhtar al-Jawâhir by Yehudah ibn Tibbon and attributed to Shelomo ibn Gabirol, 12th century.
S/he will work in Paris (INALCO) in close collaboration with the research group ALIENTO (Nancy – Paris).
S/he will take part in the research meetings and workshops co-organised with the ATILF and will contribute with her/his expertise in medieval Hebraic texts and language.
Background
– Doctorate in medieval Hebraic language, literature and culture.
– Extensive knowledge of the circulation of Hebrew texts in the Mediterranean area.
– Knowledge of Arabic will be taken into consideration.

Terms of contract
Length: 6 months
The postdoctoral researcher can be of any nationality. English may be used as the working language for researchers not speaking French.
The contract begins on February 1st 2014.
Applications must be submitted before January 10th 2014.
The gross salary will be about 2,400 euros per month. The net salary will be about 2,000 euros per month, to which it should be added the Paris public transport card.

Please send a curriculum vitae, a summary of your dissertation and a letter of application to

Marie-Christine Bornes Varol at Varol@noos.fr
Send them as well to the following email addresses:
marie-sol.ortola@univ-lorraine.fr
and
frederique.bey@univ-lorraine.fr

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Call for Papers – The Authors, Editors and Audiences of Medieval Middle Eastern Texts

The Authors, Editors and Audiences of Medieval Middle Eastern Texts

To be convened at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Cambridge, on 1st-2nd September 2014 by Joshua Olsson (jto25@cam.ac.uk) and Ryan Lynch (ryan.lynch@pmb.ox.ac.uk).

Submissions are invited for a graduate conference entitled “The Authors, Editors and Audiences of Medieval Middle Eastern Texts”, at the University of Cambridge on 1st-2nd September 2014.

This conference will bring together graduate students working on the history and literature of the medieval Middle East to discuss what it might mean when we refer to “authors”, “editors”, and “audiences” of medieval texts. Medieval is to be interpreted broadly as falling between the seventh and fifteenth-centuries CE. Submissions will be invited from graduates working on all genres of medieval Middle Eastern texts (including, but not limited to, history, geography, adab, poetry, medicine, science, theology and law), and speakers are encouraged to engage with at least one of the following questions:

  • Authors: What do we mean when we speak of the medieval author? Is the term author anachronistic? Can we identify the distinctive voice of an author? Are there conventions and topoi to which the voice of an author is subject? Is the authorial presence stronger or weaker in certain genres of literature? Does it make sense to talk of authoring works in certain genres? Can we speak of authorship when dealing with translations into Arabic or compilations of other authors’ material, whether written or otherwise?
  • Editors: What is the difference between an author and an editor? How did editors select and arrange their material? Did editors interfere with their sources, and if so why? Does it make sense to speak of passive editors and active authors? What editorial strategies underpin certain texts?
  • Audiences: Who were texts meant for? Was the stated recipient always the intended recipient? Were texts meant to be read or heard? What were audiences supposed to do with texts? How did the intended audience influence authorial or editorial approaches? Did audiences discuss what they had read or heard, and where did they do so? How were texts received among later audiences, and did this audience change?

Abstracts of no more than 300 words for 45-minute papers should be sent to the conveners by the 1st March, 2014. Those submitting approved proposals will be notified no later than 1st April, 2014.

Free central Cambridge accommodation will be provided to all external speakers for the night of 1st September. Refreshments and a buffet lunch will also be provided on both days of the conference.

Please email Joshua Olsson (PhD student, University of Cambridge: jto25@cam.ac.uk) or Ryan Lynch (PhD student, University of Oxford: ryan.lynch@pmb.ox.ac.uk) with any questions.

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Jobs for Medievalists

The Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages at the University of Connecticut, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, solicits applications for a tenure-track appointment at the rank of Assistant Professor.  We are seeking a specialist in Italian Studies (13th-16th centuries) with broader interdisciplinary and trans-cultural focus in the area of Mediterranean Studies. This position will be in Italian Studies, but the candidate will have the opportunity to serve as an important link to Medieval Studies, the Middle Eastern Minor, the Program in Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, and/or Hebrew and Judaic Studies.

Minimum Qualifications:  A Ph.D. (or foreign equivalent) in Italian Studies, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, or a related field by June 1, 2014; native or near-native command of Italian and English; evidence of an active research agenda; strong commitment to innovative teaching.

Preferred Qualifications:  Research specialization in the following possible areas:  migration, race, and slavery; symbolic, cultural, material trade and exchange with the Levant or Africa; cultural and intellectual exchange and interaction with Southern, Central, and Northern Europe, or the Ottoman Empire, or the Judaic and Levantine intellectual traditions.  Knowledge of Arabic or another non-European language.

This is a full-time, 9-month, tenure-track position with an anticipated start date of August 23, 2014.  Salary will be commensurate with qualifications and experience.

Candidates please apply at http://www.jobs.uconn.edu/facult/ and submit letter of application, curriculum vitae, evidence of successful teaching, and an article-length writing sample by January 25, 2014.  Additionally, please follow the instructions in Academic Jobs Online to direct three reference writers to submit letters of recommendation on your behalf.  If you have questions or need further information you may contact Dr. Rosa Helena Chinchilla vie email at rosa.chinchilla@uconn.edu.  The University of Connecticut is an EEO/AA employer and is strongly and actively committed to diversity within its community. Members of populations traditionally under-represented in US institutions of higher education are especially encouraged to apply. (2014325)

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Jobs for Medievalists

The Department of Italian Studies and the Program of Middle East Studies invite applications for a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship offered by the Cogut Center for the Humanities at Brown University for a term of two (2) years beginning July 1, 2014.

Applicants will have received a Ph.D within the past five (5) years from an institution other than Brown in the fields of Italian Studies, Middle East and North African Studies, Comparative Literature, History, History of Art and Architecture, Anthropology, or any other related field with the Mediterranean as a primary focus. The candidate should have worked in Italian and Arabic. Cogut Fellows participate in the activities of the Center and teach two courses each year in English. The term of the fellowship is two years.

We solicit applications by scholars who approach the Mediterranean in a non-traditional and interdisciplinary manner, but who nevertheless have the Mediterranean as the central focus of their research. Scholars concentrating on the constructed or built environment, on migration studies, media, literature, critical geography or archaeology are especially welcome to apply.
Applicants should submit, along with a cover letter, a curriculum vitae, a research statement, a writing sample (in English and of approximately 25 pages), three letters of recommendation,and two course proposals dealing with the topic of Mediterranean Studies.

Stipend: $61,449 (2014/15), 63,907 (2015/16) plus benefits and a yearly $2,000 research budget.

Review of applications will begin on February 1, 2014 and will continue until the position is filled. For additional information contact Suzanne_Stewart-Steinberg@brown.edu (Italian Studies) or Beshara_Doumani@brown.edu (Middle East Studies).  Brown University is an EEO/AA employer.  We strongly encourage women and minorities to apply.

For complete job description and application instructions please see:

apply.interfolio.com/24051

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