Call for Papers – ACMRS Annual Conference

The 19th Annual ACMRS Conference

When:  14 – 16 February 2013
Where:  Renaissance Hotel, Phoenix, AZ, USA

Theme:  BEASTS, HUMANS AND TRANSHUMANS IN THE MIDDLE AGES AND RENAISSANCE
Description:  The 19th Annual ACMRS Conference will be held on 14-16 February 2013, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Keynote speaker:  Professor Juliana Schiesari, Department of Comparative Literature, University of California, Davis.

CALL FOR PAPERS:

We welcome any topic related to the study and teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, especially those that focus on this year’s theme of beasts, humans and transhumans both in literal and metaphorical manifestations. Proposals must be submitted electronically at http://link.library.utoronto.ca/acmrs/conference  through 20 November 2012.

Details and information: www.acmrs.org/conferences/annual-acmrs-conference
Contact:  acmrs@acmrs.org   phone:  480-965-9323   fax:  480-965-1681

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Call for Papers – Books Have Their Histories: Medieval Chronicles and Their Scribes, Manuscripts, and Early Editions

Books Have Their Histories: Medieval Chronicles and Their Scribes, Manuscripts, and Early Editions – In Memory of Lister M. Matheson
International Medieval Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, Michigan: May 9-12, 2013.

Deadline: September 15, 2012
For information, contact dominique.hoche@westliberty.edu or dominique.hoche@gmail.com

Lister Matheson (1948-2012; Professor of English and Medieval Studies, Michigan State University) was a major scholar in many fields, but two of his most important scholarly legacies lie in the arenas of medieval chronicle studies (including the Middle English Prose Brut and the relation of chronicles to medieval literary traditions) and early book and manuscript studies (in a wide variety of content areas, from historical writing and popular legends to scientific texts and ownership/biographical studies). He was a frequent and fondly-remembered participant in many Medieval Congresses over the years, both as a speaker and as an organizer and chair of sessions.

Papers for these memorial sessions should be united by the broad theme of the medieval presentation of history and the codicological settings through which that history was transmitted. Papers may focus on various aspects of later medieval chronicles; manuscripts and printed texts linked to medieval historical writings; the scribes, printers, owners, or commissioners of such texts; and similar topics. As Professor Matheson’s own work has shown, a full understanding of medieval historical texts demands attention to both the content of the works in question — which could vary quite significantly depending on the needs or interests of the users of those texts — and the material circumstances of producing those works. Papers illuminating these connections shou
ld be of interest to historians, literary specialists, and/or early book scholars, inter alia.

Proposals should be no longer than 400 words and must clearly indicate the significance, line of argument, principal texts and relation to existing scholarship (if possible). Email the proposal in the body of the message, a 50-word bio note, and a completed Participant Information form (http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF) to Dominique Hoche at dominique.hoche@westliberty.edu or dominique.hoche@gmail.com . Due September 15, 2012.

For general information about the 2013 Medieval Congress, visit: http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/index.html.

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‘Ars Medicinae’. I libri dei medici dell’Università di Bologna

Bologna, Biblioteca dell’Archiginnasio, 8.V. – 1.IX.2012 : ‘Ars Medicinae’. I libri dei medici dell’Università di Bologna. –http://www.archiginnasio.it/mostre/arsmedicinae.htm

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Late Medieval Scribes

Late Medieval English Scribes is an online catalogue of all scribal hands (identified or unidentified) which appear in the manuscripts of the English writings of five major Middle English authors: Geoffrey Chaucer, John Gower, John Trevisa, William Langland and Thomas Hoccleve.

http://www.medievalscribes.com/

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Jobs for Medievalists

Assistant Professor – Eastern Mediterranean Religion

The History Department of the University at Albany, SUNY, invites applications for a tenure-track position at the assistant professor level for a candidate whose research is focused on some aspect of religion in the Eastern Mediterranean (including the Balkans) from 600 to 1800 C.E., with scholarly proficiency in Greek and Arabic or Turkish. The successful candidate will be expected to teach the first half of a Western Civilization or World History survey, and upper level courses in Byzantine history, the history of Islam, and the history of the Middle East, as well as more specialized graduate seminars.
Applicants should show promise of a distinguished career as a scholar and teacher, and must have the Ph.D. in hand by the summer of 2013. The degree must be from a university accredited by the US Department of Education or by an internationally recognized accrediting organization. Competitive salary with start up funds. Applicants should address in their application their ability to work with a culturally diverse population.

A detailed job description and instructions on how to apply can be found at http://albany.interviewexchange.com/jobofferdetails.jsp?JOBID=34169

Established in 1844 and designated a University Center of the State University of New York in 1962, the University at Albany’s broad mission of excellence in undergraduate and graduate education, research and public service engages 17,000 diverse students in ten schools and colleges across three campuses.
Located in Albany, New York, New York State’s capital, the University is convenient to Boston, New York City and the Adirondacks.

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Call for Papers – Gender in Material Culture

Gender and Medieval Studies Conference 2013
Corsham Court, Bath Spa University

Gender in Material Culture
4th-6th January 2013

Keynote Speakers
Prof. Catherine Karkov, University of Leeds
Dr Simon Yarrow, University of Birmingham

From saintly relics to grave goods, and from domestic furnishings to
the built environment, medieval people inhabited a material world
saturated with symbolism. Gender had a profound influence on
production and consumption in this material culture. Birth charms and
objects of Marian devotion were crafted most often with women in mind,
whilst gender shaped the internal spaces of male and female religious
houses. The material environment could evoke intense emotions from
onlookers, whether fostering reverence in religious rituals, or
inspiring awe during royal processions. How did gender influence
encounters with these objects and the built environment? Seldom purely
functional, these items could incorporate complex meanings, enabling
acts of display at every level of society, in fashionable circles at
European courts or amongst civic guilds sponsoring lavish pageants.
Did gender influence aesthetic choices, and how did status shape the
way that people engaged with their physical surroundings? In literary
texts and in art, the depiction of clothing and objects can be used to
negotiate symbolic space as well as class, gender, sexuality and
ethnicity. Texts and images also circulated as material objects
themselves, with patterns of transmission across the British Isles,
the Anglo-Norman world, and between East and West. The exchange of
such objects both accompanied and enacted cross-fertilisation in
linguistic, political and cultural spheres.

The Conference will consider the gendered nature of social, religious
and economic uses of ‘things’, exploring the way that objects and
material culture were produced, consumed and displayed. Papers will
address questions of gender from a range of interdisciplinary
perspectives, embracing literature, history, art history, and
archaeology.

Themes will include:
·               adornment, clothing and self-fashioning
·               the material culture of devotion
·               objects and materialism
·               the material culture of children, adolescents and life cycle
·               emotion, intimacy and love-gifts
·               entertainment and games
·               memory and commemoration
·               pleasure, pain, and bodily discipline
·               production and consumption
·               monastic material culture
·               material culture in literary texts

Please e-mail proposals of approximately 300 words for 20 minute
papers to the GMS committee at gms.bathspa.2013@gmail.com by 14
September 2012. Please also include your name, research area,
institution and level of study in your abstract. The Kate Westoby
Travel Fund provides limited financial support for postgraduates and
independent researchers who wish to attend the meeting.

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Call for Papers – Using Large-Scale Text Collections for Research

Workshop “Using Large-Scale Text Collections for Research: Status and Needs”, 21 November 2012, The Hague, cf. http://blogdurmblf.blogspot.fr/2012/08/appel-contribution-using-large-scale.html (a pre-conference workshop to : http://www.textualscholarship.eu/conference-2012.html ).

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Launch of the British Armorial Bindings Database

The Bibliographical Society in conjunction with the University of Toronto is pleased to announce the publication of an important new online reference work for book history. The British Armorial Bindings Database, begun by John Morris and continued by Philip Oldfield, is now available on the web at  http://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/.

This catalogue which attempts to record all known British armorial bookbinding stamps used by personal owners to mark and decorate their books, reproduces over 3,300 stamps used between the sixteenth and twentieth centuries, associated with nearly two thousand individual owners.

Intended primarily as a tool to facilitate the identification of heraldic stamps, the database may be searched from many angles. Stamps may be searched by heraldic devices, such as arms, crest, mottoes etc. Owners can be found under their family name, their titular name, rank in the peerage, and by gender. The 12,000 odd books which provide the sources for the stamps, from libraries around the world, may be sorted by author and title, and individual libraries can be searched for their holdings of armorial bindings. The database will be useful to rare book librarians, book historians, book dealers, students of heraldry, genealogists, and anyone with an interest in questions of provenance and the identification of coats of arms.

The database has been created and hosted at the University of Toronto and is made available as a free public resource through the sponsorship of the Bibliographical Society.

Links
The Bibliographical Society: http://www.bibsoc.org.uk/
University of Toronto Libraries: http://onesearch.library.utoronto.ca/
British Armorial Bindings Database: http://armorial.library.utoronto.ca/

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The Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship Announces 2012 Competition

The Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship announces the 2012
competition for the best graduate article on feminist scholarship on the
Middle Ages.

The SMFS Awards Committee solicits nominations for Best Graduate Article
in any area of medieval studies.  Nominated articles should represent the
best in feminist scholarship written in the 2011-2012 academic year.  The
prize, which includes an award of 5 years’ membership in SMFS and
publication of the winning paper, subject to editing, in our journal
Medieval Feminist Forum, will be announced at the SMFS reception at the
2013 International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, MI.
Self-nominations are acceptable.

Please send nominated articles by September 15, 2012 to:

Professor Sally Livingston
Department of Humanities-Classics
Ohio Wesleyan University
61 S. Sandusky Street
Delaware, Ohio 43015
saliving@owu.edu

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APS Franklin Research Grants 2012-2013

Franklin Research Grants from the American Philosophical Society

Scope
Since 1933, the American Philosophical Society has awarded small grants to scholars in order to support the cost of research leading to publication in all areas of knowledge. In 2011–2012 the Franklin Research Grants program awarded nearly $380,000 to 77 scholars, and the Society expects to make a similar number of awards in this year’s competition. The Franklin program is particularly designed to help meet the costs of travel to libraries and archives for research purposes; the purchase of microfilm, photocopies, or equivalent research materials; the costs associated with fieldwork; or laboratory research expenses.

Franklin grants are made for noncommercial research. They are not intended to meet the expenses of attending conferences or the costs of publication. The Society does not pay overhead or indirect costs to any institution. Grants will not be made to replace salary during a leave of absence or earnings from summer teaching; pay living expenses while working at home; cover the costs of consultants or research assistants; or purchase permanent equipment such as computers, cameras, tape recorders, or laboratory apparatus.

Special Programs Within the Franklin Research Grants
APS/British Academy Fellowship for Research in London

In collaboration with the British Academy, the APS offers an exchange postdoctoral fellowship for a minimum of one and a maximum of two months’ research in the archives and libraries of London during 2013. This award includes travel expenses between the United States and the United Kingdom and a monthly subsistence paid by the APS. Candidates should specify that they are asking for the British Academy Fellowship and apply by October 1; applicants not selected for the British Academy Fellowship will be considered for a Franklin Research Grant.

APS/Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities Fellowship for Research in Edinburgh
In collaboration with the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (IASH) at the University of Edinburgh, the APS offers a visiting fellowship of between two and four months for research in Edinburgh in the calendar year 2013 in any aspect of the humanities and social sciences. To maximize the benefits of the fellowship, applicants are strongly encouraged to schedule their visit to overlap with one of the two main teaching semesters (January–March and September–December). This award includes travel expenses between the United States and the United Kingdom, a private office, library and research facilities at the IASH, and a monthly subsistence paid by the APS. Travel expenses and the monthly subsistence amount will not exceed a maximum of $6,000. Candidates should specify that they are asking for the IASH Fellowship and apply by October 1; applicants not selected for the IASH Fellowship will be considered for a Franklin Research Grant. Further information about the IASH, including current research themes, is available at http://www.iash.ed.ac.uk/.

Eligibility
Applicants are expected to have a doctorate or to have published work of doctoral character and quality. Ph.D. candidates are not eligible to apply, but the Society is particularly interested in supporting the work of young scholars who have recently received the doctorate. Independent scholars and faculty members at all four-year and two-year research and non-research institutions are welcome to apply provided that all eligibility guidelines are met. American citizens and residents of the United States may use their Franklin awards at home or abroad. Foreign nationals not affiliated with a U.S. institution must use their Franklin awards for research in the United States. Applicants who have previously received a Franklin grant may reapply after an interval of two years.

Awards
Funding is offered up to a maximum of $6,000 for use in calendar year 2013. Grants are not retroactive.

Grants are payable to the individual applicant. Franklin grants are taxable income, but the Society is not required to report payments. It is recommended that grant recipients discuss their reporting obligations with their tax advisors.

Deadlines
For applications and two letters of support:

October 1, 2012, for a January 2013 decision for work in February through December

December 3, 2012, for a March 2013 decision for work in April through December

It is the applicant’s responsibility to verify that all materials, including the required two letters of support, reached the Society on time; contact Linda Musumeci, Director of Grants and Fellowships, at LMusumeci@amphilsoc.org or 215-440-3429.

Requirements
Reports are due no later than one month after completion of the work for which the award was made. Instructions will be provided with notification of an award.

Application
Access to the online application is available at www.amphilsoc.org/grants/franklin.

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