Call for Papers – The Fourth International MARGOT Conference

The Fourth International MARGOT Conference

June 18-20, 2014

Barnard College, New York City

Women and Community in the Ancien Régime: Traditional and New Media

Scholarly Focus

This three-day conference will feature research and teaching approaches that explore how women participated in and contributed to different kinds of community in medieval and early modern Europe.  Conference sessions will feature presentations based on texts and images in traditional manuscript and print format, as well as work that employs new technology and media projects. The conference will be interdisciplinary, and will consider the function and importance of female communities in the natural and social sciences, religion, literature, history, music and fine arts.

Presentation topics may explore women in:

  • Medical communities; midwifery
  • Religious communities and non-orthodox or heretical groups
  • Salons and académies
  • Women and the Republic of Letters
  • Epistolary communities
  • Literary circles
  • Artists’ and performing artists’ communities
  • Guilds
  • Oral communities; storytelling
  • Print and Manuscript format
  • Digital resources of all kinds
  • Online publication of texts and images
  • Database design and creation
  • Material culture and artifacts
  • Film

Resources and approaches used may include:

This conference is co-sponsored by the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

PROCEDURE FOR SUBMISSION OF PROPOSAL:

We welcome three types of submissions:

  1. Demonstrations/showcasing of existing projects which will include discussion of their creation and implementation for research and/or teaching
  2. Abstracts for regular paper presentations
  3. Proposals for entire sessions (including the names, titles, and abstracts of three/four presenters)

Regular papers will last for 20 minutes, and will be followed by 10 minutes of discussion. Project demonstrations will last for 30 minutes followed by 15 minutes of discussion. We ask participants to include the following information in their proposal:

  1. Paper or Session title
  2. Session type – Regular or Project Demonstration
  3. 250 word abstract
  4. Contact information and bio paragraph

The Committee will look at all the proposals and their compatibility with the sessions that are planned. As far as possible, we will try to avoid parallel sessions.

The language of the Colloquium will be English.

DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION:

The deadline for submitting your proposal is October 1, 2013.

Please submit proposals by e-mail to the conference committee:

Prof. Laurie Postlewate: lpostlew@barnard.edu.

Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by October 15, 2013. Information about the conference, including registration, accommodation at negotiated favourable rates, will be provided early in 2014. We will periodically update information here.

We look forward to your participation,

The Conference Committee:

  • Christine McWebb (University of Waterloo)
  • Laurie Postlewate (Barnard College, Columbia University)
  • Catherine Dubeau (University of Waterloo)

For more information, please see http://margot.uwaterloo.ca/conference-2014/

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Call for Papers – Urban Culture and Ideologies in Medieval and Early Modern Europe: c.1100-1600

Date: Thursday 30 ‐ Friday 31 January 2014
Venue: Massey University, Albany Campus, Auckland, New Zealand

This conference will focus on the textual traditions of the urban world: the literature of all kinds produced in the urban context, from chronicles to song, illumination to speech acts. Its main theme is notions of ‘urbanity’. What is ‘urban’ about ‘urban culture’? In what ways did urbanity contribute to cultural and ideological sign systems in political speech, historiography, literature, the visual arts and music? How did the production and reception of chronicles shape urban identity – or identities?

Speakers include:
Tracy Adams (University of Auckland); Mark Amsler (University of Auckland); Jan Dumolyn (University of Ghent); Constant Mews (Monash University); James Murray (Western Michigan University); Johan Oosterman (Radboud University, Nijmegen); Kim Phillips (University of Auckland)

If you would like to give a paper, please submit an abstract to Tina Sheehan, t.m.sheehan@massey.ac.nz

Senior scholars and postgraduate students are equally welcome. If you would like to register attendance at the conference, please do so on the website, http://urbanculture.massey.ac.nz

Abstract submission and early‐bird registration closes 6 December 2013.

If you have any queries please contact:
Dr Andrew Brown, School of Humanities, Massey University
A.D.Brown@massey.ac.nz

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Call for Papers – 34th Annual Conference of the Center for Medieval Studies

Proposals for papers are being accepted for the 34th Annual Conference of the Center for Medieval Studies, Fordham University, on the topic “The French of Outremer: Communities and Communications in the Crusading Mediterranean,” and to be held at the Lincoln Center Campus, Saturday, March 29, 2014

Plenary Speakers include Peter Edbury, Cardiff University; Laura Minervini, University of Naples
With the participation of Suzanne Conklin Akbari, Marilynn Desmond, Laura Morreale,
Nicolas Paul, Teresa Shawcross, Alan Stahl, Suzanne Yeager

We welcome papers that address any of the following questions, and encourage papers on related topics:

• Differences between the real and the imagined Outremer
• The cultural identities of communities in the Latin East, and the mechanisms that perpetuated or contravened these identities
• Ties developed with the West through crusading, pilgrimage, and merchant activities, and their contribution to the “French” quality of these communities
• Single texts or textual traditions that originated  or were preserved in the lands of Outremer
• French-language translations in the Latin East
• The role of Outremer in the diversification of French-language genres or French-
inspired cultural products (art, architecture, legal and  intellectual concepts, sacred or urban spaces)
• The place of Outremer within a Francophone medieval world

Please submit an abstract and cover letter with contact information by September 30, 2013 to Center for Medieval Studies, FMH 405b, Bronx, NY 10458, by e-mail to medievals@fordham.edu, or by fax to 718.817.3987.
The Conference Site is: http://www.fordham.edu/mvst/conference14/index.html

For website submission guidelines, see www.fordham.edu/frenchofoutremer/submissions.

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Editor of Speculum

Message to all members:

The Council of the Academy has been re-examining the structure of the Cambridge office, as recent experience has indicated mounting difficulties with the volume and variety of work that is now normal. The expansion of our programs and services, along with advances in information technology, have created new opportunities but also meant a greater burden for the Executive Director and the rest of the staff. The Council had identified this trend several years ago, and the current Council now recommends that the Academy separate the tasks of editing Speculum from those of the Executive Director. This division of roles would enable the Executive Director to pursue new initiatives and improve member services. It would also allow greater specialization, limiting the range of skills required of any one individual.

To move in this direction, the Academy is now seeking proposals for a new editor or editors of Speculum. The advertisement follows; please circulate it as widely as possible. Nominations (including self-nominations) of potential editors or teams of editors are welcome. A committee of five, chaired by me, will examine proposals and discuss them with candidates as necessary. The Council is confident that its membership includes highly qualified persons who will be able to maintain the well-known and respected quality of our journal.

The appointment of a new editor(s) of Speculum will be the first step in reorganizing responsibilities within the Academy. The entire process will take some time but the presidential officers, with the consultation and assistance of the Executive Committee and Council, will move as expeditiously as possible to establish an efficient arrangement. All of us are very grateful to the Acting Executive Director, Lisa Fagin Davis, and to the Acting Editor of Speculum and Director of Medieval Academy Publications, Jacqueline Brown, for their service in this transitional period.

Richard Unger
President, Medieval Academy of America

_______________________________________________________________________________

Speculum, published quarterly since 1926, was the first scholarly journal in North America devoted exclusively to the Middle Ages. It remains the premier journal for all fields devoted to study of the Western Middle Ages, a period ranging from approximately 500 to 1500. The journal has been edited in the past by the Executive Director of the Medieval Academy of America, but the organization is now seeking proposals from individuals to assume the role(s) of editor or editors.

Speculum is the intellectual center of the Medieval Academy’s program, and editing the journal to an unfailingly high standard is a challenging and absorbing task. The main challenge for a journal that represents such an enormously diverse field is to publish articles that make substantive contributions to their areas of expertise while appealing to the wide range of scholarly interests of the medievalists in various disciplines that constitute the readership.

The editor(s) will be charged with the final responsibility for peer review and acceptance of manuscripts and book reviews for publication. The editor(s) should be established scholar(s) with academic credentials in some field(s) of medieval studies and should also possess good organizational and decision-making skills. Experience in journal or book editing is helpful but not necessary. The term of service is anticipated to be five years with the possibility of renewal by mutual agreement. The editor(s) enjoy the support and assistance of an editorial board and a board of book review editors, both representative of a broad range of methodologies and areas of specialization. There is provision for one or more editorial assistants, chosen by the editor, as well as an online manuscript-management platform. The new editor(s) should plan on taking office at the beginning of 2014.

Applications should be sent to the chair of the selection committee, Richard Unger [richard.unger@ubc.ca], Department of History, University of British Columbia, 1297-1873 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1, Canada, before 15 September 2013.   They should include a curriculum vitae, a statement of interest outlining editorial plans for the development of the journal, three letters of reference from scholars who can speak to the applicant’s or applicants’ editorial experience and scholarship, and an indication of the level of support that any host institution is willing to provide. The President of the Medieval Academy, Richard Unger, and the current Acting Editor of Speculum, Jacqueline Brown [jb@themedievalacademy.org] would be happy to respond to questions about the duties involved.

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Conferences – Latin in Medieval Britain: Sources, Language, and Lexicography

Registration is now open for:

Latin in Medieval Britain: sources, language, and lexicography Oxford, 12-14 December 2013

2013 is the centenary of the proposal for a new dictionary of Medieval Latin that led to the start of many dictionary projects across Europe. It also sees the completion of the final fascicule of the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources.

To mark these events, the DMLBS will be holding a conference in Oxford from 12th to 14th December. The conference will provide a forum for the consideration of British Medieval Latin in its historical, intellectual and linguistic context, examining the diversity of medieval sources and genres, and relevant issues in lexicography and linguistics.

Our distinguished list of speakers includes Charles Burnett (Warburg Institute), Mary Garrison (York), Andy Orchard (Toronto), and Richard Sharpe (Oxford), as well as the longest-serving editor of the DMLBS, David Howlett.

To book, and for more information, please visit http://www.dmlbs.ox.ac.uk/conference-2013

(See our calendar for more conferences)

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Winners of the 2012 Berkshire Converence Article Prizes

The Berkshire Conference Article Prize for the best article in the fields of the history of women, gender, and/or sexuality in 2012 by a woman who is normally resident in North America goes to Judith Bennett for “Death and the Maiden,” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 42, no. 2 (2012): 269-305.  Set in the context of the plague in 14th century England, Bennett’s article explores the chilling connection between death and virginity.  Her wide-ranging selection of sources including paintings, saints’ lives, poems, and tomb brasses, illustrate the multiple meanings that medieval English people saw in this pairing:  maidens as death dealers, as miraculous healers, as transcendent martyrs.  Written with verve and clarity, “Death and the Maiden” convinces us that the 14th century is not so far from the 21st as we might have supposed.

The Berkshire Conference Article Prize for the best article published in all other fields of history in 2012 by a woman who is normally resident in North America goes to Ada Ferrer for “Haiti, Free Soil, and Antislavery in the Revolutionary Atlantic,” American Historical Review , 117, no. 1 (2012): 40-66.  Ferrer explains how post-revolutionary Haiti deliberately intervened in the transnational history of slavery by offering “free soil” to any person of color who set foot on Haitian soil.  This elegantly written article starts with a group of Jamaican slaves who escaped to Haiti in 1817, explains the constitutional principles and historical precedents that Haiti drew upon to defend its policies at a time when colonial slavery still flourished, and traces the lines of Haitian influence, from U.S. antislavery activists to Venezuelan revolutionaries. Ferrer’s subtle analysis draws upon an extremely wide array of sources to demonstrate persuasively that, as she writes, “No story of the rise of rights is complete without an engagement with the intellectual and political work done in Haiti.”

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Medieval Academy of America Change of Address

To the members of the Medieval Academy:

The Cambridge office of the Medieval Academy is moving in just a few days. We have almost finished packing, and the office is crowded with boxes and recycle bins and color-coded labels. Please make note of our new address, as of Saturday, 1 June:

Medieval Academy of America
17 Dunster St., Suite 202
Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
USA

Our phone and fax numbers will remain unchanged.

The Medieval Academy website and its member-related functions will be uninterrupted during the move, as they are hosted offsite. The same cannot be said for our phone and internet service, which will be offline from Friday, 31 May through Monday, 3 June. We hope to be up and running by Tuesday morning. In the meantime, we ask for your patience and understanding.

– Lisa

Lisa Fagin Davis
Acting Executive Director,
Medieval Academy of America
LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org
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Call for Papers – The Mediterranean and the Iberian South in the Medieval Age: Culture, Identity and Heritage (V – XV centuries)

The Mediterranean and the Iberian South in the Medieval Age: Culture, Identity and Heritage (V – XV centuries) • 5-6 December 2013 • Evora, Portugal

The international congress “The Mediterranean and the Iberian South in the medieval age: Culture, Identity and Heritage (V – XV centuries)” will take place in the city of Évora, on 5 and 6 December 2013, marking the 1100 years since the plunder of the city by King Ordonho II, which occurred in the year 913.

The meeting will primarily aim to bring together young researchers and experts from Portugal, but also from other countries, from fields as diverse as Archaeology, History, Art History, Literature, Anthropology, among others, which are devoted to the study of issues related to the Iberian South in medieval times. The main purpose is, therefore, always from a multidisciplinary perspective, to analyze the relations of proximity and affinities that existed between the southern regions of the Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean area, in the medieval context, but also any other issues related to specific aspects of art, economic, political and social history, or Culture or Mentalities in the Iberian South, provided that they fall within the chronological scope of the congress.

Is important to emphasize that, in the context of this academic congress, the Iberian South is understood as an extended space, without definite geographical boundaries, culturally unified by a common Mediterranean matrix, but with the specificities of a territory where, during the medieval period (that is, during the period between the fifth century and the late fifteenth century), Christians, Muslims and Jews coexisted side by side, mutually influencing each other.

Proposals due: 30 June 2013
Contact: mediterraneosuliberico@gmail.com
Information: http://mediterraneosulibericomedieval.weebly.com/introduction-en.html

The organization of this academic congress, which results from the cooperation between various institutions based in southern Portugal, will be undertaken by the Centro Interdisciplinar de História, Cultura e Sociedades da Universidade de Évora (CIDEHUS/UÉ) [the Interdisciplinary Centre for History, Cultures and Societies of the University of Évora], the Centro de História da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa (CH/FLUL) [Centre for History of the Faculty of Letters of the University of Lisbon], the Campo Arqueológico de Mértola (CAM) [Mértola’s Archeological Campus], the Centro de Estudos de Património e História do Algarve (CEPHA/UAlg) [Centre for the Study of the History and Heritage of the Algarve of the University of Algarve] and the Centro de História da Arte e Investigação artística da Universidade de Évora (CHAIA/UÉ) [Centre for Art History and Art Research of the University of Évora].

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Jobs for Medievalists

The CORPI Project (Conversion, Overlapping Religiosities, Polemics, and Interaction: Early Modern Iberia and Beyond) is currently recruiting doctoral and post-doctoral research fellows for 2013-14.
The application deadline is 31 May 2013.

The Project
This project is concerned with questions of religious change and specifically of the change brought about by forced mass conversion in late medieval/early modern Iberia. It will study adversarial relationships reconceived as dependencies, against a complex backdrop of dramatic religious change.

It departs from two convictions: Firstly, that new Converts constituted complex groups, in dialogue both among themselves and with Old Christians, and were open to the transmission and translation of ideas, images, and religious emotions. It will bring under close analysis the existence in sixteenth-century Iberia of cross-currents common to different religious groups, areas of local religiosity in which different religions overlapped, and vague or hybrid sorts of religiosity which indicate the blurring of clear ascriptions, categories, and borders including confusion, doubt, unbelief. Secondly, that the desire to eradicate difference within the majority society was always combined with the fear of infiltration and contamination, and that the disappearance of differences exacerbated the search for allegedly essential characteristics in those with Jewish and Muslim ancestors, who were generally seen by Christians as crypto-Jews or crypto-Muslims.

The project is at the same time concerned with the impact that forced conversion had on intellectual life (including the substitution of memory and re-invention of the past), and with the emergence of shifting identities and new religious attitudes. It will recalibrate the traumatic transition that led to the birth of the Inquisition and a mono-confessional Spain, and will convey the incredulous reaction of those who had to live through it, establishing what they read and what solutions they proposed
Both aspects of overlapping and redefinition will be viewed in connection with the increasingly intense polemical engagement that was taking place in Europe, and against the backdrop of the movements of proselytization, migration, and religious conflict stimulated by the Reformation and by the Ottoman invasions. This broader framework needs to be taken into account in order properly to assess the nature of many phenomena in late-medieval/early modern Iberian intellectual and social history, and which have been exclusively attributed to the existence of Jewish and Muslim minorities in the Peninsula.

The broad framework includes the Iberian works of Islamic thought and anti-Christian polemic that were translated into European languages (Latin or vernacular), and used as a tool with which dissident elements reinforced a radical critique of Christianity and the Christian world. In the seventeenth century Islam was once more the vehicle for criticizing an intolerant Christianity, and in this process the Moriscos and their writings played a role that this project will explore.
The multi-faceted analysis of these phenomena will involve unearthing new archival material, most notably Inquisition trials, as well as numerous sixteenth- and seventeenth-century texts (both manuscripts and early modern editions) ranging from new translations of the Qur’an and other Jewish and Islamic classics (in Arabic and Hebrew) to a rich polemical literature (disputes, controversies, apologies, polemical hagiographies), as well as theological treatises on new converts, both in Latin and Spanish.

CALL: Post-doctoral Researchers
Two Post-doctoral positions for a two-year period extendable to five years. Candidates must have a doctorate in Medieval or Early Modern History or/and Arabic and Islamic or Hebrew and Jewish Studies. Knowledge of Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish or Latin is necessary. The candidate must work on a topic of research included in the general themes and objectives of the project. He/she will carry out his own project, but also participate in teamwork. He/she will contribute to the research activities of CORPI (such as conferences and seminars) supervise PhD students and be included in all aspects of the project. Working languages will be Spanish and English.

Requisites:
. Official transcript or equivalent of the title that enables the candidate to apply for the fellowship (doctorate). It will be needed only when the candidate selected will begin his/her contract.
. CV
. Research project.
. Sample of work, such as published articles or book chapters or unpublished chapter of PhD thesis.
. References. Only names and emails of the proposed referees are needed.

Post-docs. will receive, in the first two year period, 26.733,28 euros divided in 14 payments of 1.909, 52 euros. If the contract is renewed for another three years, the increase in salary will be substantial.
The call is open from 15 April 2013 to 31 May 2013. Interviews will take place at the end of June or first days of July. The positions will start from October 2013.
Applications must be sent to corpi@cchs.csic.es

CALL: Doctoral Reseachers
Four five years PhD positions. Candidates must have a Master Degree in Medieval or Early Modern History or/and Arabic and Islamic or Hebrew and Jewish Studies. Knowledge of Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish or Latin is necessary. The candidate must work on a topic of research included in the general themes and objectives of the project. Working languages will be Spanish and English.

Requisites:
. Official transcript or equivalent of the title that enables the candidate to apply for the fellowship: Spanish “licenciatura”, Master degree or equivalent in your country. It will be needed only when the candidate selected will begin his/her contract.
. Candidates which do not have a Master will have to finish one (60 credits) in the first year of the grant
.CV
. PhD project statement.
. Sample of work, such as published articles or book chapters or unpublished work, such as Master thesis.
. References. Only names and emails of the proposed referees are needed.

PhD positions will receive 22.128, 96 per year in 14 payments of 1. 580,64 euros.
The call is open from 15 April 2013 to 31 May 2013. Interviews will take place at the end of June or first days of July. The positions will start from October 2013.
Applications must be sent to corpi@cchs.csic.es

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Call for Papers – Cistercians and Canons Regular in Medieval Brittany, Normandy, England and Wales

Ancient Abbeys of Brittany Project
Colloquium – May 1-2, 2014
York University, Toronto, Canada
aabp.info.yorku.ca

Call for Papers

Title: Cistercians and Canons Regular in Medieval Brittany, Normandy, England and Wales / Cisterciens et Chanoines réguliers en Bretagne, en Normandie, en Angleterre et au Pays de Galles au Moyen Âge

Papers are welcome concerning any aspect of this topic

The languages of the conference are French and English.

If you would like to participate please send a title and a short abstract to pevans@yorku.ca by October 31, 2013.

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