Medieval Intellectual History Seminar

The Newberry Center for Renaissance Studies presents:

Medieval Intellectual History Seminar
Saturday, December 7, 2013
1 pm

Eric Goddard, former student and scholar at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and now at Trinity Christian College in Chicago, will present on the topic: “Demographic Representation and the Crisis of the University of Paris (c.1418 – 1444).”

Eric’s paper will be distributed roughly a week prior to the seminar.

Brett Whalen of the University of North Carolina, currently at the Humanities Institute at the University of Wisconsin, will join us to present on: “The Last Papal Monarch: Innocent IV and the ‘Plentitude of Power'”

http://www.newberry.org/12072013-december-2013-medieval-intellectual-history-seminar

This program is free and open to the public; advance registration is NOT required.

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Call for Papers – Mediterranean Studies Association

The Seventeenth Annual International Congress of the Mediterranean Studies Association will be held on May 28-31, 2014, at the University of Málaga, Spain. Proposals are now being solicited for individual paper presentations, panel discussions, and complete sessions on all subjects related to the Mediterranean region and Mediterranean cultures around the world from all historical periods. Sponsors of the congress include the Mediterranean Studies Association, University of Málaga, Ayuntamiento de Marbella, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, University of Kansas, Utah State University, and the Institute for Mediterranean Studies, Busan University of Foreign Studies, Korea.

Following optional excursions, the Congress will open with a plenary session and reception on the evening of Wednesday, May 28. Over 150 scholarly papers will be delivered before an international audience of scholars, academics, and experts in a wide range of fields. The official languages of the Congress are English and Spanish. Complete sessions in any Mediterranean language are welcome. A number of special events are being planned for Congress participants that will highlight the unique cultural aspects of Andalusía.

Guidelines for Submission of Proposals
1.    You may submit a proposal for an individual paper presentation, a complete session, or a round table panel on any Mediterranean topic and theme. The typical session will include 3 or 4 papers, each lasting twenty minutes, a chair, and (optionally) a commentator. (For examples of paper, roundtable panels, and session topics, and the range of subjects, see the programs from previous congresses.)
2.    Submit a 150-word abstract in English for each paper, and a one-page CV for each participant, including chairs and commentators, as well as each participant’s name, email, regular address, and phone number. Proposals for complete sessions or roundtables need to include the chair’s name. Only ONE paper proposal per person will be accepted.
3.    Proposals for papers and/or sessions must be submitted through the MSA website: https://www.mediterraneanstudies.org/
Membership and Congress Registration
All accepted participants must be 2014 members of the MSA as well as register for the Congress no later than February 1, 2014.

Publication
After the congress, you are encouraged to submit your revised, expanded paper for consideration for publication in the Association’s double-blind, peer-reviewed journal, Mediterranean Studies, published by Penn State Univ. Press.

If you have questions, please contact Ben and Louise Taggie @ medstudiesassn@umassd.edu, and Geraldo Sousa @ Sousa@ku.edu

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Jobs for Medievalists

The Department of History at the University of Minnesota, Duluth has a full-time, tenure-track position as Assistant Professor in the history of the ancient world to begin August 25, 2014. Specialization is open, but preference will be given to candidates whose research focuses on the Mediterranean world including Greece and/or Rome, trans-regional connections, Egypt and/or Northeast Africa, and/or Indian Ocean networks. Training and/or experience in museums or public history a plus.  Essential qualifications include: Ph.D. or equivalent in History, Classics or related field from a regionally accredited university (doctorate must be in hand by July 1, 2014), demonstrated ability in relevant languages, demonstrated teaching experience (T.A. experience is acceptable), demonstrated potential for research and publication, excellent written communication skills, and an ability to work with people of diverse backgrounds and experiences.

The University of Minnesota requires online applications for this position.  For a complete position description and information on how to apply online, visit http//employment.umn.edu and search for job requisition 187935.  Complete applications will be reviewed beginning December 16, 2013.  The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer.

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Call for Participants: Early Modern Art in Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean (2014-15, Harvard)

From Riverbed to Seashore. Art on the Move in Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean in the Early Modern Period – a Harvard University Research Seminar organized as part of the Getty Foundation’s Connecting Art Histories initiative, led by Alina Payne, Harvard University

This research seminar zeroes in on rivers as the cultural infrastructure of the Mediterranean world in the early modern period, as carriers of people, things, and ideas tying geographies and cultures together. The king of such rivers was undoubtedly the Danube, running a parallel course to the Mediterranean and cutting across Europe from West to East. Flowing into the Black Sea, it entered the system of communicating vessels of the Mediterranean—the old Roman *mare nostrum* itself, the Sea of Marmara, the Black Sea, and, the last ripple that separates and unites three continents, the Sea of Azov.

But the Danube was not alone in swelling the Mediterranean world with the cultures along its shores. The Sava, the Adige, the Neretva, the Pruth, the Dniester and Dnieper, and the Don (which flows into the Sea of Azov) etc. connect the “traditional” Mediterranean cultures—the Italian, the Ottoman, the Greek/Byzantine, the French and Spanish—with the world of the Balkans and beyond. Starting from this perspective, this seminar seeks to develop a framework for understanding how the Balkans and its northern neighbors mediated between East and West, as well as the region’s contribution to the larger Mediterranean cultural melting pot in the early modern period.

The premises underlying this seminar are twofold: 1) that the contours of the Mediterranean Renaissance need to be re-drawn to include a larger territory that reflects this connectedness; and 2) that the eastern frontier of Europe extending from the Mediterranean deep into the interior played a pivotal role in negotiating the dialogue between western Europe, Central Asia and Ottoman Turkey. On the cusp between cultures and religions, Balkan principalities, kingdoms, and fiefdoms came to embody hybridity, to act as a form of buffer or cultural “switching” system that assimilated, translated, and linked the cultures of near and Central Asia with those of Western Europe. Taking a trans-regional approach, this project aims to reconstruct the fluid ties that linked territories in a period in which hegemonies were short-lived and unstable, and in which contact nebulas generated artistic nebulas that challenge traditional historical categories of regional identities, East/West and center/periphery.

The seminar will run from spring of 2014 to summer of 2015 and will be guided by a distinguished group of scholars. Participants are invited to propose their own projects related to these themes on which they will work during this period. We seek contributions on building types (eg. carvanserais/ hans), infrastructure (bridges, fortifications and roads), domestic architecture (villas/palaces), religious and domed structures, etc., building practices, materials and artisans, on *Kleinarchitektur* and portable architectural objects. Proposals are also invited from participants working on spolia, on “minor” arts—cloth/silks, goldsmithry, sculpture, leather, gems and books—as well as on collecting and treasuries, that is, on artworks and luxury items that allowed ornamental forms and formal ideas to circulate and created a taste for a hybrid aesthetic, as well as on historiography.

The countries under consideration here are: Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Slovenia, and Ukraine.

The seminar involves three stages: 1) a two-week “mobile” workshop traveling along the Dalmatian coast and using this region as case study of the issues, historiography and methodologies that this project seeks to foreground (May/June 2014); 2) a two and a half week stay at Harvard University (2 day workshop focusing on interim presentation of participants’ findings and 2 week library access in January/February 2015); and 3) a final conference (presentation of developed individual projects) and short trip to key sites on the Black Sea. On-going participation in the seminar will be based on the quality of scholarly contribution and on the level of engagement with the group.

Applicants should be post-doctoral scholars working in the Eastern European countries on which the project focuses (maximum 10 years from a doctoral degree; doctoral degree must be in hand at time of application). Travel expenses are covered. The seminar language is English: participants will need to demonstrate a strong command of the language to enable wide-ranging discussion with the other members of the seminar. Facility with languages of the region is an asset. Applications must include: CV, personal statement, description of proposed project (500 words + one page bibliography), one published writing sample and three letters of reference are due no later than January 10, 2014. Finalists will be interviewed; participants will be notified by early February.

Please send applications to the attention of Elizabeth Kassler-Taub, Department of History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University, ekassler@fas.harvard.edu.

This project is supported by a Connecting Art Histories grant from the Getty Foundation.

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MAA News – 2014 Slate of Candidates

We are pleased to announce the names of the MAA members who have generously agreed to stand for election to office in 2014, as reported by the Nominating Committee. The list of candidates with their photos and brief biographies appears online on the MAA website at:

http://www.medievalacademy.org/?page=2014Elections

The Slate includes eight nominees for four seats on the Council and four nominees for two seats on the Nominating Committee.

According to article 26 of the new by-laws of the MAA (adopted 2011):

Nominations of other members of the Academy for elected officers, Councillors, or members of the Nominating Committee may be made by written petition signed by at least seven members of the Academy. A nomination by petition may be for a single office, several offices, or an entire slate. Such petitions must be received by the Executive Director within twenty days of the circulation of the report of the Nominating Committee (article 25), unless the Council extends the period for making nominations by petition.

Since the slate of candidates from the Nominating Committee was published on 23 October, the closing date for nomination by petition is set at midnight, 22 November 2013.

Electronic balloting will open in December. If you would like to receive a paper ballot, please let us know.

Voting in the MAA elections is one of the most important means that members have to impact both the MAA and the future of medieval studies in North America. We look forward to your participation in the election of the leadership of the MAA.

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Call for Papers – Peregrinatio pro amore Dei: Aspects of Pilgrimage in the Middle Ages and Renaissance

Peregrinatio pro amore Dei: Aspects of Pilgrimage
in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
June 12-14, 2014
Denver, Colorado

The Rocky Mountain Medieval and Renaissance Association invites panel and paper proposals on the conference theme, “Peregrinatio pro amore Dei: Aspects of Pilgrimage in the Middle Ages and Renaissance.”  The conference dates are June 12-14, 2014, and venue is SpringHill Suites Marriott in downtown Denver, CO, adjacent to the Metropolitan State University of Denver.

Pilgrimage to Christian holy sites and shrines was a mainstay of western European life throughout the medieval and Renaissance periods, and the journeys to places such as Canterbury, Santiago de Compostela, Assisi, Rome, and Jerusalem informed a devotional tradition that encouraged participation from all social classes, evoked commentary by chroniclers, playwrights, and poets, and inspired artistic, iconographic, and literary expressions.  Even when the faith-based culture of the Middle Ages began to transform into the more empirical (and experiential) centuries of the Renaissance and Protestant Reformations, pilgrimages were still very much on the minds of writers and geographers as a source of both inspiration and criticism (Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Bunyan, Hakluyt, and Raleigh).

The RMMRA Program Committee welcomes individual paper and panel proposals that address the conference theme from disciplines within the late antique, medieval, Renaissance, and Reformation periods (c. 4th to 17th Centuries). We invite all approaches, but special consideration will be given to those papers that attempt historical, literary, scientific, archaeological, and anthropological inquiries of pilgrimage, especially in the following subject areas:  holy sites & shrines; cults of relics and saints; salvific aspects (healing, science, medicine); gender studies; geographical reckoning (faith-based vs. empirical); theological promotion, dissuasion, and contestation; mystical and philosophical beliefs (and criticism); internationality; secular vs. clerical approaches; considerations about (and representations of) space; relevant aspects of communitas and liminality; travel and communication; and, finally, intellectual history.

AS ALWAYS, ALL PAPER AND SESSION PROPOSALS RELATED TO MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES ARE WELCOME! (THEME NOT REQUIRED.)

Proposals for panels or abstracts for individual papers should be directed via email (Word, .pdf, or Rich Text) to one of the conference’s co-organizers: Kim Klimek (klimekk@msudenver.edu) and Todd Upton (tj_upton@icloud.com). Abstracts are due December 31, 2013.

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Medieval Studies Seminar: Publishing and Medieval Studies with Jerome Singerman of UPenn Press next Monday, 11 November

The Medieval Studies Seminar is delighted to welcome Jerome Singerman, senior acquisitions editor for medieval and Renaissance, Jewish, and literary studies at the University of Pennsylvania Press, next Monday, 11 November, at 4:30pm where he will speak on “The Medieval Studies Monograph in the 21st Century.” The talk will be followed by “The Polygraph Test: Multiple Authorship and Scholarly Enterprise in the 21st Century”, a roundtable discussion with Jerry Singerman, Daniel Smail (History, Harvard), Michael Papio (Italian Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst), and Dana Polanichka (History, Wheaton College). Both Mr. Singerman’s talk and the roundtable will take place in Barker Center 114 (the Kresge Memorial Room).

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Newberry Library Fellowships in the Humanities, 2014-15

The application deadline for Newberry Library Long-Term Fellowships is quickly approaching! Additionally, we offer Short-Term Fellowship opportunities for smaller-scale research projects. Please read on for more information.

The Newberry’s fellowships support humanities research in residence at the Newberry. If you study the humanities, we have something for you.

Our collection is wide-ranging, rich, and sometimes eccentric. We offer a lively interdisciplinary community of researchers; individual consultations on your research with staff curators, librarians, and scholars; and an array of scholarly and public programs. All applicants are strongly encouraged to examine the Newberry’s online catalog before applying.

LONG-TERM FELLOWSHIPS
http://www.newberry.org/long-term-fellowships

These fellowships support research and writing by post-doctoral scholars. The purpose is to support fellows as they develop or complete larger-scale studies which draw on our collections, and also to nourish intellectual exchange among fellows and the Library community.

Fellowship terms range from four to twelve months with stipends of up to $50,400.

Deadline: December 1, 2013

SHORT-TERM FELLOWSHIPS
http://www.newberry.org/short-term-fellowships

PhD candidates and post-doctoral scholars are eligible for short-term fellowships. The purpose is to help researchers gain access to specific materials at the Newberry that are not readily available to them elsewhere. Short-term fellowships are usually awarded for a period of one month. Most are restricted to scholars who live and work outside the Chicago area. Most stipends are $2,500 per month.

We also invite short-term fellowship applications from teams of two or three scholars to collaborate intensively on a single, substantive project. Each scholar on a team-fellowship is awarded a full stipend.

Deadline: January 15, 2014

More information is available on our website:
http://www.newberry.org/fellowships

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Reminder: 11/15 Dante Lecture – Guy Raffa

The Newberry Center for Renaissance Studies presents:

Friday, November 15, 2:00 pm
Dante Lecture
Guy Raffa, University of Texas at Austin
Dante’s Immortal Remains: From Florentine Martyr to Global Icon
http://www.newberry.org/11152013-guy-raffa

A reception will follow the lecture.

This program is free and open to the public, but space is limited and registration in advance is required by 10 am Thursday, November 14.

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Call for Papers – The Third International Symposium on Crusade Studies

The Third International Symposium on Crusade Studies
Saint Louis University
February 27 – March 1, 2014

Plenary Speakers
Christopher Tyerman, Oxford University
Adrian Boas, University of Haifa

CALL FOR PAPERS

World events continue to bring the subject of the Crusades to a place of prominence and importance. This surge of interest comes on the heels of a renaissance in Crusade scholarship that has greatly expanded our understanding of all aspects of the movement. While a western phenomenon, the Crusades also represented an interactive episode in which diverse cultures – western Christian, eastern Christian, Jewish, and Muslim, among others – came into contact, conflict, and collaboration.

The International Symposium on Crusade Studies is organized quadrennially by the Crusades Studies Forum at Saint Louis University to explore and inquire into these questions and dynamics. The Symposium provides a venue for scholars to approach the Crusades from many different perspectives, to present the fruits of new research, and to assess the current state of the field.

Twenty-minute scholarly papers on all topics related to the crusading movement are welcome Abstracts can be submitted by mail, fax, email. or online.  Submissions must be received by December 1, 2013.

For more information, go to http://crusades.slu.edu/symposium

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