MAA News – President’s Column

Maryanne Kowaleski

Medieval Studies and Digital Humanities

Dear MAA members,

During my presidential year, which began in April at the annual meeting, the Academy has set a variety of priorities and new initiatives. I would like to take this opportunity to focus on the considerable attention and resources that the Academy is now devoting to the issue of the digital in medieval studies and the humanities at large.

“Digital Humanities” (DH) is being hailed as the next big thing on campuses and at museums, libraries, and archives, but what are its accomplishments, challenges, and future in medieval studies? A neologism coined a little more than a decade ago, the term describes the use of digital tools to ask and answer questions in the humanities, although in the spirit of the lively and constructive discussion that surrounds any DH issue, even this definition is subject to debate. This field has grown remarkably, with an Office of Digital Humanities at the NEH; the proliferation of DH centers and working groups on many campuses; with conferences, books, and online journals; and even with new tenure-track lines defined as DH.

Medievalists were front and center when the humanities and computing movement that generated the digital humanities phenomenon originated. In the late 1940s, Rev. Roberto Busa, S.J., convinced IBM to let him use a mainframe computer to search for specific terms in the works by Thomas Aquinas. Busa’s Index Thomisticus is now available online, as are a whole host of related digital resources in the Corpus Thomasticum.

Early on medievalists also recognized the value of computing technologies to large concordances and dictionaries. We transformed our paper slips to key-punch cards and print-outs, producing results first in print, then on CD-ROM, and eventually online, in such projects as the Middle English Compendium, Dictionary of Old English, Dictionnaire du Moyen Français and Anglo-Norman Dictionary. Since our sources largely pre-date the printed page, medievalists quickly grasped the advantages of thinking beyond print and began to produce electronic scholarly editions and digitized images of manuscripts, making easily available our relatively scarce and hard-to-access sources. Many masterpieces of medieval literature are now available online as a scholarly edition or electronic archive, including Beowulf, Chaucerian texts, Piers Plowman, works by Dante, and the Roman de la Rose. Also accessible online are images of manuscripts for medieval music, law, English court records, and Old Norse to name only a few. The numbers available have increased to the extent that a searchable Catalogue of Digitized Manuscripts is being developed. Many more valuable examples could be named.

DH tools have also helped bring to light information and interpretations that are not possible without the aid of computers. Database technology, for instance, helps medievalists quickly find and categorize manuscripts and images. Early innovators here are the Digital Scriptorium, the Index of Christian Art, and Cantus. Prosopographical databases allow us to more easily discover Anglo-Saxon or Byzantine people, Scottish or Icelandic saints, and late medieval soldiers. More recently, medieval projects have drawn on new innovations in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to provide interactive maps for the Frankish empire, Mediterrranean cities, the Gough Map, and other aspects of medieval civilization. Entirely new tools, such as DM (Digital Mappaemundi) to link and annotate texts and images and DigiPal for digitally-assisted paleography, are also being applied to a wide variety of projects. Most of these medieval projects, moreover, include a strong pedagogical component, a trend especially notable in sites that provide translations for students, such as the Internet Medieval Sourcebook, or those that combine a variety of pedagogical resources, such as Monastic Matrix and the Medieval Architecture Online Teaching Project.

In the midst of all this activity and accomplishment, digital humanities have encountered challenges that are still to be resolved. How, for example should merit, tenure, and promotion committees judge DH work? The MLA adopted guidelines for evaluating digital scholarship, and the AHA has recently convened a task force on digital scholarship, but most departments have not yet figured out how to “count” the tremendous amount of collaborative labor that digital work often requires. This is particularly an issue when it comes to labor on coding or developing new digital tools since many humanities departments consider this type of work outside their brief, even though others working in digital humanities strongly believe that ability to code is a key attribute of DH scholarship.

Tensions also crop up in critiques (the “where’s the beef? question) that DH spends too much time and money focusing on digital tools and not enough on substantive research questions. The growth in DH has also helped fuel a trend, especially in Europe, towards large research teams funded by multi-year grants, which require considerable investment in management and finances but also promises to reach a wider audience, part of the “democratization” that DH scholars often cite as a benefit. It is also worth noting how successful medievalists have been in securing this type of funding in such international competitions as the Digging into Data Challenge.

DH has yet to resolve pressing issues of cost and sustainability. Digital humanities projects can be expensive; most rely on external grants, which themselves require significant contributions from home institutions. Almost all of the websites cited here are free to end users and some are run by one devoted person, but a few of the larger projects have survived by becoming fee-based. Commercialization creates walls, but it also better ensures sustainability. We all know the frustration of URLs that become unreliable when the web author loses interest in the site, or when the grants run out.

Open-access publishing presents another challenge. Should all dissertations be immediately available online, as some universities now mandate? The Medieval Academy recently distributed a survey on this issue. The issue is especially important because many publishers–including Speculum–will not publish books or articles drawn from material already available online.

The Medieval Academy has already begun to deal vigorously with such questions and is currently moving into new digital roles. We are setting out criteria to determine if the MAA should affiliate with particular digital projects, and we have already begun collaborations with the newly proposed Digital Latin Library project and ACLS’s Humanities E-Book. Under our previous executive director we had begun digitizing the MAA monographs as an open-access, online collection, and we are continuing and expanding this work by offering many of these and other publications, offering our digital titles in print-on-demand format as well as on the Kindle and other mobile devices. The MAA has long been arranging discounts to access specific digital resources, such as the IMB, and it has just rolled out its new website and its underlying association management system to offer further such benefits to our members. We have also begun revamping the Academy’s digital committees under the auspices of a proposed comprehensive Publications board.

We can now see our way into a near future when the MAA can offer its members both a print and digital edition of Speculum, online reviews, and a comprehensive publication strategy that offers a seamless continuum from print to born-digital, all with the Academy’s traditional attention to detail and scholarly rigor. Indeed, we hope to build on this reputation for scholarly rigor by establishing a peer-review process for medieval online projects. Central to this is the creation of a what we are calling a “taxonomy of digital medieval resources” to help categorize and navigate the widest variety of digital resources in all disciplines and methodologies, from digital archives of texts and images, to archaeological reports, mapping projects, architectural virtual reality, to manuscript collections and online facsimiles, collections of narrative sources, interpretative and reference works, the websites of individual scholars, projects, departments, centers and other digital sites of value and interest to medievalists and the broader humanities community. This new “digital taxonomy” is now in the planning stages, but as it evolves it will help to make the MAA a focal point of peer review for new digital scholarship and a model for other learned societies. Much done; much to do!

Posted in MAA Newsletter | Leave a comment

Jobs For Medievalists

The Department of History at Stephen F. Austin State University invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professorship in ancient/medieval history to begin in August 2013. In addition to teaching upper-level and graduate courses in the areas of specialization, the successful candidate will teach freshman-level Western Civilization surveys. Preference will be given to candidates who can also teach an upper-level course in Renaissance and Reformation history. Ph.D. in history is preferred by the time of appointment, but advanced ABD applicants will also be considered. The standard teaching load in the department is 12 hours per semester.

Review of applications will begin on November 26, 2012 and continue until the position is filled. To apply, please send an application letter detailing commitment to teaching excellence and research interests, curriculum vitae, graduate transcripts, and three letters of reference to: Dr. Troy Davis, Chair, Ancient/Medieval Search Committee, P.O. Box 13013 SFA Station, Nacogdoches, TX 75962. In addition to sending these materials to the search committee, applicants must also complete an online application at http://careers.sfasu.edu.

Stephen F. Austin State University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer. This is a security sensitive position; criminal background check required for successful candidate.

Posted in Jobs for Medievalists | Leave a comment

Exposition “The Art of the Page. Manuscript Leaves from Medieval Europe and Elsewhere”

Murfreesboro (TN), Middle Tennessee State University, X-XII.2012 : The Art of the Page. Manuscript Leaves from Medieval Europe and Elsewhere. – http://library.mtsu.edu/specialcollections/exhibits.php

Posted in Announcements | Leave a comment

Colloque “14th international seminar on the care and conservation of manuscripts”

17-19.X.2012 : 14th international seminar on the care and conservation of manuscripts (Copenhagen, University of Copenhagen). http://nfi.ku.dk/cc/programmecc14/CC14_Programme_web_pdf.pdf/

 

Posted in Announcements | Leave a comment

Quadrivium VIII – Registration is now open

Registration is now open for Quadrivium VIII, which will be held at the HRI University of Sheffield, 1-2 November 2012 under the auspices of Manuscripts Online (http://manuscriptsonline.wordpress.com/about/).

For those of you who are new to the PhD, The Quadrivium programme offers lectures, seminars, and networking opportunities over a two-day period to postgraduate students who works on medieval textual cultures, and will be of value to research students at various stages of their doctoral careers.  The programme is a collaborative training event run by medievalists at Birmingham, Queen’s Belfast, Oxford, York, Leicester, Glasgow, Sheffield and St Andrews.

This year Quadrivium will focus on digital humanities and their value for postgraduate research, including an hands on workshop on the new project ‘Manuscripts online’. There will also be sessions on academic and non-academic careers, workshops on grants’ applications and other ‘generic skills’ sessions. A full programme will be posted on the symposium website soon.

Quadrivium V is generously subsidised by  JISC. Registration for Quadrivium is free, and lunches and the conference dinner will also be offered free of charge. We are also pleased to offer financial support to cover accommodation and travel expenses which will distributed on a first come, first serve basis (on production of receipts). Students  will be informed promptly whether funds are still available to you.

The deadline for the receipt of registration forms is 25 October 2012. 

For further information, including accommodations, please visit our website: http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/news/conferences/quadrivium2012

Posted in Announcements | Leave a comment

Jobs for Medievalists

English, Anderson Hall, 10th Fl 1114 W Berks St, Philadelphia, PA 19122
http://www.temple.edu/english
Assistant Professor  [17705]
The Department of English at Temple University is searching for a tenure-track Assistant Professor in Medieval literature, with an ability to teach Chaucer, History of the English Language, and Old English. A secondary interest in gender studies, cultural studies, and/or postcolonial studies is preferred. A successful candidate will show promise of significant scholarly productivity and will teach in both our undergraduate major and in our Ph.D. program. Current teaching load is 2/2 for faculty with a significant research agenda. Salary is commensurate with qualifications and teaching experience. Ph.D. is required by time of appointment.

To receive full consideration, applications (letter/cv/dossier) should be postmarked by October 19th to Professor Joyce Joyce, Chair, Department of English, Temple University, 1114 W. Berks Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122.

We plan to interview at MLA, but the position will remain open until filled.

Temple University is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer, committed to equal access and achieving a diverse community. Qualified women and minority candidates are encouraged to apply. [R]

Posted in Jobs for Medievalists | Leave a comment

Call For Papers – Sam Houston State University’s First International Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Thought

April 4-6, 2013
Featuring Plenary Speaker
Dr. Richard North,
Professor of Old English Literature, University of London

The conference is slated to be held on our beautiful campus in Huntsville, Texas.

Deadline to propose a Special Session: December 1, 2012
Deadline for abstracts: December 1, 2012
Notification of acceptance: December 15, 2012

You are invited to send your 250-300-word abstract to Dr. Darci Hill, Conference Coordinator, on any topic dealing with Medieval and/or Renaissance thought.  If you would like to propose a special session, you are welcome to do that as well.  We welcome papers, posters, and performances on any aspect of this time period.  Papers dealing with language and linguistics, literature, music, philosophy, history, art, and theater are all equally welcome.

Please send all inquiries and abstracts electronically to:

Dr. Darci Hill, dr.darci.hill@gmail.com
Conference Coordinator Department of English
Sam Houston State University
Huntsville, Texas 77341
P
hone: 936-294-1473

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Senate House Library Friends Lectures: Autumn 2012

Tuesday 16 October 2012: 6.00pm: Chancellor’s Hall, Senate House
ANNUAL CHARLES HOLDEN LECTURE: Andrew Brown (Cambridge University Press):
‘ “A Future for academic publishing”: Disseminating Arts and Humanities Research in a Digital World’

Andrew Brown is International Development Director at Cambridge University Press. He joined CUP in 1976 as an editor on the literature list, became Editorial Director for the Humanities in 1990, and from 2001-2011 was Managing Director of the Academic Division. His current role involves new publishing ventures in India, China, and Brazil. He edited George Eliot’s Romola for the Clarendon Edition and writes on the Victorian novelist Edward Bulwer Lytton.

Tuesday 13 November 2012: 6.00pm: Seng T Lee Centre, Senate House Library
SENATE HOUSE LIBRARY FRIENDS A.G.M. LECTURECatherine Grout (JISC Content Director):
‘The future of the academic library and the role of JISC’
As Content Director at JISC, Catherine Grout is responsible for the delivery of JISC programmes and projects in the e-content area.  Her specialist areas are digital archiving, internet businesss models and film, sound and image services.  She has worked in digital technology for education since the mid 1990’s and has worked on a number of pioneering projects and services including the Visual Arts Data Service which deliver innovative new digital resources for education and research.

Attendance free.  All welcome.  If you would like to attend either event, please contact Senate House Library office: shl.officeadmin@london.ac.uk | tel. 020 7862 8411.

Posted in Announcements | Leave a comment

Call for Participants: Mediterranean Seminar/UCMRP Fall Workshop and Conference, Santa Barbara

The Mediterranean Seminar/University of California Multi-Campus Research Project and the Medieval Studies Program at UC Santa Barbara invite participants in a two-day, two-part event to be held on 9 & 10 November 2012 at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Friday, 9 November
The UC Mediterranean Studies MRP Fall Workshop, “Excavating the Past,”
will feature three pre-circulated papers and a presentation by our featured scholar. All interested graduate students and scholars are welcome; pre-registration is required, and attendance is limited so please register soon. UC-affiliated scholars may register immediately, non-UC scholars on or after October 8.

Papers:
Luca Zavagno (Visiting Research Fellow, Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Center, Princeton)
“Two Hegemonies, One Island: Cyprus between the Byzantines and the Umayyads
(650-850 A.D.)”

Nikki Malain (Graduate Student, History, UC Santa Barbara)
“Predators and praeda: The Logistics of Piracy in the Twelfth-century Mediterranean”

Karen R. Mathews (Research Assistant Professor, Art & Art History, University of Miami)
“Anxiety of Origins: Shifting Conceptions of the Past in Genoese Historical Chronicles and Civic Architecture of the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries”

Featured Scholar:
Marcus Milwright (Associate Professor of Islamic Art & Archaeology, Director of the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Victoria)

Saturday, 10 November
“Digging up a Mediterranean Past? Archaeology and Comparative Material Culture”
A one-day conference sponsored by the UCSB Program in Medieval Studies.

The conference will feature a panel of local scholars, including John Lee, Chris Thomas, Claudio Fogu, and Fikret Yegül, discussing the archaeology of the Mediterranean, ranging from ancient Greek work to that of the Italian fascists. In the afternoon, there will be one or more sessions (TBA) with papers on topics such as early Medieval Venice, Venetian fortresses in the Morea, Ottoman pottery in the Levant, and archaeology and myth.
Full program available soon at http://medievalstudies.ucsb.edu/events.html.

To register for the workshop and/or conference and receive the draft papers, please contact Courtney Mahaney (cmahaney@ucsc.edu) at the University of California, Santa Cruz. UC-affiliated faculty and graduate students will be eligible for up to $350 for travel expenses; non-UC participants may apply but support will granted as available (and only after the workshop concludes).

The Mediterranean Seminar is an interdisciplinary scholarly forum the aim of which to promote collaborative research and the development of the field of Mediterranean Studies. The UC Mediterranean Studies Multi-Campus Research Project is funded by the UC Office of the President, and is administered by the Institute for Humanities Research at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

To join the Mediterranean Seminar, send your name, professional status, affiliation and fields of interest to mailbox@mediterraneanseminar.org.

Posted in Workshops | Leave a comment

Call for Papers – 1st Annual Symposium on Medieval and Renaissance Studies

June 17-19, 2013
Saint Louis University

Saint Louis, Missouri

This Year’s Plenary Speakers:
Peter Brown, Princeton University
Andrew Pettegree, University of St. Andrews

CALL FOR PAPERS

The 1st Annual Symposium on Medieval and Renaissance Studies (June 17-19, 2013) is a convenient summer venue in North America for scholars to present papers, organize sessions, participate in roundtables, and engage in interdisciplinary discussion. The goal of the Symposium is to promote serious scholarly investigation into all topics and in all disciplines of medieval and early modern studies.

The Symposium is held annually on the beautiful midtown campus of Saint Louis University. On campus housing options include affordable, air-conditioned apartments as well as a luxurious boutique hotel. Inexpensive meal plans are also available, although there is a wealth of restaurants, bars, and cultural venues within easy walking distance of campus.

While attending the Annual Symposium participants are free to use the Vatican Film Library, the Rare Book and Manuscripts Collection, and the general collection at Saint Louis University’s Pius XII Memorial Library.

The Annual Symposium on Medieval and Renaissance Studies invites proposals for papers, complete sessions, and roundtables. Any topics regarding the scholarly investigation of the medieval and early modern world are welcome. Papers are normally twenty minutes each and sessions are scheduled for ninety minutes. Scholarly organizations are especially encouraged to sponsor proposals for complete sessions.

The deadline for all submissions is December 15, 2012. Decisions will be made in January 2013 and the final program will be published February 15.

For more information and to submit your proposal online go to: http://smrs.slu.edu   (or by email:  smrs@slu.edu)

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment