Jobs For Medievalists

The research unit ‘Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies’ (Ghent University) has a position available for a:

Scientific Researcher
(Full-Time Predoctoral Researcher)

Project description
The Peace as an Instrument of Social Competition: Toward a Non-Homeostatic Interpretation of Political Relations in the Central Middle Ages (Western Europe, late tenth-early twelfth centuries)

This project will investigate the competitive aspects of the Peace of God-movement during the later tenth to early twelfth centuries. So far, the ritual and symbolic acts associated with the Peace have been studied primarily as part of strategies to maintain the current social order. However, recent studies have given credence to the possibility that forms of symbolic behavior, such as the ritualized Peace of God, could also serve as a form of competition, creating hierarchic inequalities and blocking the ascent of rivals. Using evidence originating from the Northern French archdiocese of Reims, the researchers involved in the project will investigate the extent to which the Peace-of-God-movement can be studied from the perspective of the careers of individual participants.
This research project is funded by the Research Foundation-Flanders (FWO).

Professional environment
Medieval studies at Ghent University cover a wide range of subjects and methodological approaches. Intensive exchanges within the Department of History and the Henri Pirenne Institute for Medieval Studies, and with the international academic community, create a stimulating environment for innovative research. Research on the early and central Middle Ages currently focuses on the tenth to early twelfth centuries, with scholars involved in the study of a wide range of subjects including reform, conflict management, commemorative practices, material aspects of communication, and ritual and performance (http://www.resoma.ugent.be). This project will also benefit from the support of the International Research Network Conventus (http://www.conventus.ugent.be).

Qualifications
The candidate:
– has a Master’s degree in History or a Master’s degree with demonstrable interest in Medieval History;
– has experience with Latin sources of the Middle Ages;
– has active knowledge of Dutch and/or French and/or English (one of the latter two is sufficient) and can read publications in at least French and English. He/she is also willing to learn basic Dutch during his/her employment at Ghent University (introductory courses are available);
– is an enthusiastic and inventive team player and must be willing to travel abroad for conferences, meetings, etc.;
– is willing to prepare, and finish, a doctoral dissertation on the subject of the project within four years.

Offer
▪ A 4-year contract as a full time scientific staff member of Ghent University (scholarship starting from around 1700 euro net./month);
▪ Contact with national and international research groups;
▪ A friendly, dynamic environment for research;
▪ Opportunity to follow an individualized PhD programme at the UGent Doctoral School of Arts, Humanities and Law or the Doctoral School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, including language courses;
▪ Extra benefits: free public transport between home and work place; biking fee; access to university sports facilities and university restaurants.

Start of the project: May 1st, 2013

How to apply
If you are interested in joining us, please send a copy of your diploma, your CV and a cover letter describing your interest in the project, before January 10th, 2013 to Prof. Dr. Steven Vanderputten (Steven.Vanderputten@ugent.be).

More information:
http://www.resoma.ugent.be
http://ugent.academia.edu/StevenVanderputten
http://www.conventus.ugent.be
http://www.pirenne.ugent.be/
http://www.ugent.be

 

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Winner of the 2012 Prize for Best Article by a Graduate Student Announced

The Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship is pleased to announce that the winner of the 2012 Prize for Best Article by a Graduate Student is Jennifer Freeman, a Ph.D. student in the Graduate Department of Religion at Vanderbilt University.  Her essay, “Theologizing Gender in the Rothschild Canticles,” which was written for a course with Professor Kathleen Flake, will be published in the winter issue of Medieval Feminist Forum.  The Award Committee considered a strong field of papers, which represented the best of graduate student feminist scholarship written in the 2011-2012 academic year.  Jennifer will be honored at the SMFS reception at the 2013 International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo in May.

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Dietrich Reinhart OSB Fellowship in Eastern Christian Manuscript Studies

http://www.hmml.org/news10/fellowship.htm

The Hill Museum & Manuscript Library (HMML) announces the establishment of the Dietrich Reinhart OSB Fellowship in Eastern Christian Manuscript Studies, to be awarded annually for three years beginning with the Academic Year 2013-2014. The fellowship has been established through the generosity of Rebecca Haile and Jean Manas of New York, New York, in memory of Br. Dietrich Reinhart OSB (1949-2008). Br. Dietrich, 11th President of Saint John’s University, was a visionary leader who saw HMML as integral to the mission of Saint John’s Abbey and University, and enthusiastically promoted HMML’s work in the Middle East, Ethiopia, and India.

Awardees must be undertaking research on some aspect of Eastern Christian studies requiring use of the digital or microfilm manuscript collections at HMML. They must have already been awarded a doctoral degree in a relevant field and have demonstrated expertise in the languages and cultures of Eastern Christianity relevant for their projects.

The Fellowship may be held for a full academic year (September 1-April 30) or for one semester (September 1-December 20; January 4-April 30). The Fellowship provides accommodation in an apartment at the Collegeville Institute on the Saint John’s University campus; working space at HMML; access to library, recreational and cultural activities at Saint John’s University; round-trip transportation; and a stipend of up to $25,000 for a full academic year. Stipends will be adjusted for less than a full year in residence.

Awardees will be expected to devote full attention to their research projects while in residence. They will also be expected to participate in a weekly seminar for Collegeville Institute resident scholars, to present their research in a public lecture sponsored by HMML, and to be a resource for HMML staff and other researchers during their stay.

Applicants are asked to provide: 1) a cover letter with current contact information and an indication of availability for a full-year or one-semester residency; 2) a description of the project to be pursued, including an explanation of how access to HMML’s resources will be important for its success (1000-1500 words); 3) an updated curriculum vitae; 4) two letters of reference.

The cover letter, project description, and CV should be sent by the applicant to hmmlfellowships@csbsju.edu; letters should be sent by the referees directly to the same email address or in hard copy to Julie Dietman, HMML, Box 7300, Collegeville, MN 56321.
Applications for the Academic Year 2013-14 are due December 15, 2012. The decision and acceptance process will be completed by the end of February 2013.

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Colloque “Codex and text. The use and relevance of codicology, paleography and illumination for textual studies”

6-7.XII.2012 : Codex and text. The use and relevance of codicology, paleography and illumination for textual studies Napoli (Università degli studi « L’Orientale »). — http://www.proyectos.cchs.csic.es/KOHEPOCU/sites/proyectos.cchs.csic.es.KOHEPOCU/files//2012-Codex%20and%20text%20Napoles.pdf

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Call For Papers – Future of the Mediterranean – Mediterranean Futures

The Center for Mediterranean Studies of the University Bochum, announces a call for the conference “Future of the Mediterranean – Mediterranean Futures,” to be held 30 September to 2 October 2013 in Bochum, Germany.

IThe future is terra incognita which can provide the surface onto which we project our dreams and yearnings or our nightmares. Today the Mediterranean region is commonly associated with conflict and crisis: the Middle East conflict has continued to smoulder for decades, the economic crisis has shaken countries on the northern and southern shores to their foundations, while responses to pressing environmental issues and dwindling resources have yet to be found. Despite all this, the upheaval in the countries of the Arab world shows that the dream of a better life can still move people to turn against existing power structures and stakeholders or even lead to rebellion. Thus the vision of a better future has become a resource which is driving societal, political and social changes in spite of all resistance.

Political, social, economic or cultural transformations provide a forum for a variety of notionsof what constitutes “progress” or “modern”. The future becomes a contested and controversial resource and may be construed according to religious beliefs, social class or prevailing perception of history, may be romanticised or may be discarded completely as a concept: Thus depictions of the future are always statements on a society’s “reality”.

We at the Center for Mediterranean Studies are now seeking contributors from all disciplines, who would be prepared to present their work or research results at the conference in one of the categories listed below. Thus we are looking for contributions which deal with historical and current visions of the future, from the oracle of Delphi to modern rating agencies. Furthermore we wish to examine the stakeholders and the structures which define, influence or manipulate visions of the future and the changes in and dynamics of local visions of the future, which contrast with those visions of nations, superpowers and dynasties.

If you are interested in contributing please send your details by e-mail to Meike.Meerpohl@ruhr-uni-bochum.de by 15 December 2012. Please enclose a synopsis in English (approximately 300 words) for a lecture of 20 minutes duration and a short CV.

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Colloque “Taxonomies of knowledge”

16-17.XI.2012 : Taxonomies of knowledge. 5th annual Lawrence J. Schoenberg symposium on manuscript studies in the digital age (Philadelphia [PA], University of Pennsylvania). – http://www.library.upenn.edu/exhibits/lectures/ljs_symposium5.html

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Call for Papers – Mid-America Medieval Association [MAMA] 2013 Conference

Mid-America Medieval Association [MAMA] 2013 Conference
22-23 February 2013
University of Missouri—Kansas City
Remembering and Honoring Shona Kelly Wray

Plenary Address:  Professor Stanley Chojnacki (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill): “Wives and Goods in the Venetian Palazzo”

This year’s MAMA Conference will focus on the intellectual and scholarly legacy of Shona Kelly Wray (1963-2012), our beloved colleague, friend, and mentor.  Paper and session proposals in any area of medieval studies will be welcome, but we hope to pay particular attention to the following topics:

Women, gender, families
Interdisciplinary studies
Italian history, literature, culture
Legal history and analysis
Paleography, manuscript studies, diplomatics, codicology
The medieval university
|The Black Death, medicine, disease

In addition, the organizers will be hosting a roundtable discussion, “Teaching with Shona” that will focus on pedagogical issues such as using technology in the classroom, interdisciplinary teaching, and teaching interpretation of varied sources.

Submissions should be in the form of abstracts (300 word limit) for both individual papers and sessions, and should include all contact information.  Presenters in session proposals must be listed, with all contact information.

Deadline for submission of paper and session proposals:  Friday, 7 December 2012
Send all submissions via email to:
Linda E. Mitchell         mitchellli@umkc.edu<mailto:mitchellli@umkc.edu>

Graduate Students whose papers have been accepted and who wish to submit them for the Jim Falls Prize must send their papers (no more than 10 pages, and including full citations) NO LATER THAN 1 FEBRUARY to Linda Mitchell at the same email address.

Registration and Program information, including hotel info, will be sent out in mid-January.

 

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Tech Gets Medieval Symposium

Tuesday, November 13  12:00 PM – 5:00 PM

Location: Student Success Center, Press Room B Hosted by GT/LMC The Writing and Communication Program

This symposium highlights the connections between 21st-century and medieval/early-modern technologies, showcasing Georgia Tech faculty who have found innovative ways to teach the past in their classrooms. Faculty speakers include Brian Bowen (College of Architecture), Hugh Crawford (LMC),  Krystina Madej (LMC), Celia Pearce (LMC), Chrissy Spencer (School of  Biology), Richard Utz (LMC), and Brittain Fellows Leah Haught, Diane Jakacki, Amanda Madden, and Katherine Tanski.

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Call for Papers – Script and Signs. A computer-based analysis of high medieval papal charters. A key to Europe’s cultural history

International Conference of the Project Script and Signs. A computer-based analysis of high medieval papal charters. A key to Europe’s cultural history of the Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Erlangen (Germany), 14th-15 th June 2013

Pattern recognition and analyse of historical handwritings

The high medieval papal charters are in the focus of the research project “Script and Signs. A computer-based analysis of high medieval papal charters. A key to Europe’s cultural history”. Sponsored by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research in the context of eHumanities, this project is a cooperation between the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (Chair of Medieval History, Prof. Dr. Klaus Herbers; Chair of Pattern Recognition, Prof. Dr. Joachim Hornegger) and the Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich (Chair of Historical Base Sciences and Historical Studies). The project aims at a detailed and systematic analysis of the development of writing in 11th and 12th century papal charters. This new approach benefits from its interdisciplinary character, which combines the new means of pattern recognition with those from traditional historical and paleographic methods.

The possibilities offered by pattern recognition help to reconstruct the process of changes in writing in a detailed way, whereas until now the development from the “papal curia” to the “papal minuscule” and finally to “Gothic writing” has been stated only roughly in a general way. Other characteristics of a charter, such as the “Benevalete” and “Rota”, will also be examined in the project. The results will not only be analyzed paleographically and diplomatically, but will also be placed in a cultural and historical context.

The analysis will begin with the papacy of Leo IX (1048-1054), who changed the layout of papal charters in a significant way, and will end in the year 1198 with pope Innocent’s III papacy.

Apart from descriptive observations about when and how changes in writing were taking place, further questions will be worked on in the project. Why did these changes happen? Can they be related to single persons or events? Moreover, new knowledge about the papal chancery – the most efficient chancery in the High Middle Ages – will be expected by the automatically supported attribution to specific scribal hands.

TOPIC AND FORMAT OF THE LECTURE

This conference’s main focus will be on the technical aspects of the project. Based on the traditional paleography questions of automatic pattern recognition, digital paleography and the writer’s identification as well as the general analysis of papal charters will be discussed.

Three to four orators per section are supposed to speak for 20 minutes with a a 20-minute discussion following each presentation.

Scholars having their main focus on paleography or/and automatic pattern recognition are kindly invited to submit a paper. These propositions should be sent to Viktoria.Trenkle@gesch.phil.uni-erlangen.de including an abstract of the proposed paper (maximum 300 words) as well as a short academic curriculum of the presenter.

Deadline:  2012-11-23


THE TOPICS IN SUMMMARY
I.            “Traditional” Paleography – methods, results, desiderata
II.            Handwriting Recognition
III.            Digital Paleography
IV.            Identification of diffrent scribal hands
V.            General Document Analysis

Contact persons:
Thorsten Schlauwitz/ Viktoria Trenkle
Kochstr. 4  BK 9
91054 Erlangen
Fon: 09131/8525904
Mail: Thorsten.Schlauwitz@gesch.phil.uni-erlangen.de
Viktoria.Trenkle@gesch.phil.uni-erlangen.de

URL: http://www5.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/puhma

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8-Week Intensive Greek and Latin Summer School, University College Cork, Ireland

June 24th – August 15th 2013

For the 14th year running, the Department of Classics at UCC offers an intensive

8-week summer school for beginners with parallel courses in Latin and Ancient Greek. The courses are primarily aimed at postgraduate students in diverse disciplines who need to acquire a knowledge of either of the languages for further study and research, and at teachers whose schools would like to reintroduce Latin and Greek into their curriculum. Undergraduate students are more than welcome to apply as well.

The basic grammar will be covered in the first 6 weeks and a further 2 weeks will be spent reading original texts.

For further information and an application form see our website:
http://www.ucc.ie/en/classics/summerschool/

or contact the Director of the Summer School: Ms.Vicky Janssens, Department of Classics, University College Cork, Ireland, tel.: +353 21 4903618/2359, fax: +353 21 4903277, email: v.janssens@ucc.ie

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