Conferences: The French of Outremer: Communities, Communications, Confabulations

Announcing:
34th Annual Conference
Center for Medieval Studies, Fordham University
The French of Outremer: Communities, Communications, Confabulations

Saturday March 28, 2014
with related activities Sunday, March 29, 2014
Lincoln Center Campus, New York City

The 34th annual conference of Fordham’s Center for Medieval Studies is an extension of its French of Outremer Project (www.fordham.edu/frenchofoutremer). This project aims to expand awareness of the French-language writings produced in Outremer (the settlements established in the lands of the near East after the First Crusade until the sixteenth century) and the communities in which these texts were produced. To date, these texts and communities have principally received scholarly attention from art historians, scholars of language and literature, and historians.  Given the wide variety of works belonging to the French-language corpus of Outremer, the conference will offer a platform for work across disciplines to view these texts in a new light, as products of an environment in which the French language was a viable and often desirable linguistic option.

We encourage work on a wide range of topics related to the French of Outremer, including:

–          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 contributions to the “French” quality of these communities;
–          Single texts or textual traditions that originated or were preserved in 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.

One of the conference aims is stimulate further contributions to the website in the form of overview essays, descriptions of relevant archival material, annotations of primary and secondary sources in print, or digital tools that take advantage of new humanities software platforms.  Because the French of Outremer Project began as a digital initiative, this conference provides an excellent opportunity to foster a dialogue about how innovative digital tools promote and help develop a new and highly interdisciplinary field within Medieval Studies.

For inquiries about the conference or the French of Outremer project, contact Laura Morreale at medievals@fordham.edu, or visit our site, www.fordham.edu/mvst.

(See our calendar for more conferences)

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2013 Summer Institute in Spanish Paleography

2013 Summer Institute in Spanish Paleography
Application deadline: March 1
Institute dates: June 3 – 21
Instructor: Carla Rahn Phillips, University of Minnisota
Held at the Newberry Library, Chicago

For details and application materials, see: http://www.newberry.org/06032013-2013-mellon-summer-institute-spanish-paleography.

The institute will provide participants with practical training in reading and transcribing documents written in Spain and Spanish America from the late fifteenth to the early eighteenth centuries.

The institute will enroll 15 participants by competitive application. First consideration is given to advanced graduate students and junior faculty at U.S. colleges and universities, but applications will also be accepted from advanced graduate students and junior faculty at Canadian institutions, from professional staff of U.S. and Canadian libraries and museums, and from qualified independent scholars. Advanced language skills are required.

Applicants selected for admission receive a stipend to help defray living expenses to attend the institute.

Funded by a major grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

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The 8th Marco Manuscript Workshop

The Eighth Marco Manuscript Workshop will be held Friday and Saturday, February 1 and 2, 2013, at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville; the workshop is organized by Professors Maura K. Lafferty (Classics) and Roy M. Liuzza (English).

This year’s workshop focuses on practical manuscripts, or manuscripts as tools – classroom texts, collections of memoranda, recipes, or formulae, miscellanies, corrected or annotated texts, dog-eared and interleaved manuscripts, indices, running headings, and other signs of everyday use. We hope to explore new and old ways of interpreting such evidence, of reconstructing original contexts, and of imagining the relationship between reference and practice that such well-used books represent. What do the physical traces in books tell us about the people who used the books? Can we discern a history of pragmatic readers, builders, makers, and practitioners parallel to the history of the authors who write texts and scribes who create manuscripts? How do we read a manuscript as a living book with a busy life?

The following scholars will present their work:

Elizabeth Archibald (John Hopkins University) “Liber magistri: Text and Manuscript in Carolingian Classrooms”

W. Martin Bloomer (Notre Dame University) “Modeling reading: The commentary tradition on the use and abuse of the Distichs of Cato”

Kate Fedewa (University of Wisconsin) “School Work: Deciphering the Teacher, Student, and Text in Yale, Beinecke Library MS 3 (34)”

Matthew Giancarlo (University of Kentucky) “The Manuscripts of Peter Idley’s Works at Work, c. 1450”

Holly Johnson (Mississippi State University) “The Making of a ‘Model’ Sermon Collection: Robert Rypon and His Scribes and Readers.”

Karen Jolly (University of Hawai’i, Manoa) “Representing Durham Cathedral Library A.IV.19”

Clara Pascual-Argente (Rhodes College) “Nota exempla antiqua: Life at the Margins of Manuscript BNM 3666”

Sarah Zeiser (Harvard University) “A Tradition in Transition: British Library, Cotton MS Faustina C.I., Part II and Welsh Manuscript Production at the Turn of the Twelfth Century”

The workshop is open to scholars and students at any level who may be interested in learning more about textual scholarship through this informal discussion of practical examples. All workshop events, including lunches on Friday and Saturday and a reception on Friday night, are free, but registration is required; dinner on Friday evening is available for an additional charge. Please visit http://web.utk.edu/~marco for more information, or contact Roy M. Liuzza, Department of English, University of Tennessee, 301 McClung Tower, Knoxville, TN 37996-0430, email rliuzza@utk.edu.

The workshop is sponsored by the Marco Institute for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and is supported by the Humanities Center, the Hodges Fund, and the Office of Research at the University of Tennessee.

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Manuscripts Online 1000 to 1500: Exploring Early Written Culture in the Digital Age

11.I.2013: Manuscripts Online 1000 to 1500: Exploring Early Written Culture in the Digital Age (Leicester, University of Leicester). – http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/news/conferences/manuscriptsonline

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The Bonnie Wheeler 2013 Summer Research Fellowship

The Bonnie Wheeler 2013 Summer Research Fellowship is open to women medievalists below the rank of full professor, and for 2013 offers up to $10,000 in financial support. Candidates from previous years are welcome and encouraged to reapply. In the two years since our foundation, our recipients have been Lorraine Stock (English, U Houston) and Lois Huneycutt (History, U Missouri). Applicants should register at http://bonniewheelerfund.org/ and see the Application Instructions http://bonniewheelerfund.org/content/application-instructions for details.

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2013 Summer Institute in Spanish Paleography

2013 Summer Institute in Spanish Paleography
Application deadline: March 1
Institute dates: June 3 – 21
Instructor: Carla Rahn Phillips, University of Minnisota
Held at the Newberry Library, Chicago

For details and application materials, see: http://www.newberry.org/06032013-2013-mellon-summer-institute-spanish-paleography.

The institute will provide participants with practical training in reading and transcribing documents written in Spain and Spanish America from the late fifteenth to the early eighteenth centuries.

The institute will enroll 15 participants by competitive application. First consideration is given to advanced graduate students and junior faculty at U.S. colleges and universities, but applications will also be accepted from advanced graduate students and junior faculty at Canadian institutions, from professional staff of U.S. and Canadian libraries and museums, and from qualified independent scholars. Advanced language skills are required.

Applicants selected for admission receive a stipend to help defray living expenses to attend the institute.

Funded by a major grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

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Call for Essays – Studies in Medievalisam

Studies in Medievalism, a peer-reviewed print and on-line publication, seeks 3,000-word essays discussing ethics in medievalism.  What role do ethics play in post-medieval responses to the Middle Ages?   In interpretations of those responses?  How is moral behavior portrayed (or not)?  How is the audience treated?  Who is the audience?  SIM’s audience is wide-ranging, and potential contributors should anticipate that their readers will include not only specialists but also generalists, including non-academics.  Submissions should be sent in English in Word as an e-mail attachment on or before June 1, 2013 to the editor, Karl Fugelso (kfugelso@towson.edu).  For a style sheet, please visit the website http://www.medievalism.net/sim.html.

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Exposition “Les livres de Notre-Dame, XIe-XVIIIe siècles”

Paris, Bibliothèque Mazarine, 14.XII.2012 – 15.III.2013 : Les livres de Notre-Dame, XIe-XVIIIe siècles. – http://www.irht.cnrs.fr/colloques/notre-dame-de-paris-1163-2013

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Exposition “Un vescovo, il suo tesoro, la sua cattedrale. La committenza artistica di Federico Vanga (1207-1218)”

Trento, Museo Diocesano Tridentino, 14.XII.2012 – 7.IV.2013 : Un vescovo, il suo tesoro, la sua cattedrale. La committenza artistica di Federico Vanga (1207-1218). – http://www.museodiocesanotridentino.it/mediacenter/FE/articoli/la-committenza-artistica-di-federico-vanga-1207121.html

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Call for Participants: Mediterranean Seminar/UC MRG Winter Workshop; UCLA 2 February 2013

The Mediterranean Seminar/University of California Multi-Campus Research Project (MRP) in Mediterranean Studies announces its Winter 2013 Workshop, to be held at UCLA on Saturday, 2 February 2013.  This is part of a three-day event which also includes the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (CMRS) Ahmanson Conference, “Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Medieval and Early Modern Mediterranean,” to be held on January 31-February 1.

The Workshop consists of discussion of three pre-circulated papers and a talk by our featured scholar, Michael Herzfeld (Anthropology, Harvard University).

Carol Lansing
Professor of History, UC Santa Barbara
“Captive Women in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Later Middle Ages”

Erith Jaffe-Berg
Assistant Professor of Theater, UC Riverside
“Mediterranean Cartographies of Sixteenth-Century Commedia dell’ Arte Actresses”

Lucia Carminati
Graduate Student, Middle Eastern and North African Studies, University of Arizona
“Egypt 1919: Working-class Cosmopolitanism and Shifting Boundaries of Belonging”

Michael Herzfeld
Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences
Harvard University
“Gender, Geography, and the Imagining of the Mediterranean”

Space is limited, so please register now. Registration opens for UC faculty and graduate students and those at institutions affiliated with the Mediterranean Consortium today. Registration for all others will begin on Dec. 26 (registration requests may be sent in at any time; early applications will be queued in the order they are received).

Travel assistance (max $350) will be provided to attendees coming from outside the LA area. UC graduate students and faculty are guaranteed this support; others can apply, and it will be awarded on the basis of availability.

Registration requests and other inquiries should be directed to Courtney Mahaney (cmahaney@ucsc.edu) at the UC Santa Cruz Institute for Humanities Research.

Attendees are encouraged to register for the Ahmanson Conference. This is done through UCLA’s Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies; see http://www.cmrs.ucla.edu/programs/calendar_jan13.html#1-30.

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