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.

Posted in Grants | Leave a comment

2012-13 ACLS Fellowship Competitions Now Open

From the ACLS:

Greetings from the American Council of Learned Societies!

We are pleased to let you know that the 2012-13 ACLS fellowship competitions are now open. You will find updated and comprehensive information on all our programs on the ACLS website: www.acls.org/programs/comps. The majority of competition deadlines are in October and November.

During the past year, ACLS awarded over $15 million to more than 320 scholars worldwide, making it a major source of support for humanistic scholarship in the United States. Fellows’ profiles, along with research abstracts, are accessible at: www.acls.org/fellows/new.

We are looking forward to an equally successful fellowships season in 2012-13.

With best wishes,

Nicole Stahlmann
Director of Fellowship Programs
American Council of Learned Societies
fellowships@acls.org

Posted in Fellowships | Leave a comment

Jobs for Medievalists

Assistant Professor of Music History
Yale Institute of Sacred Music/ Department of Music

The Yale Institute of Sacred Music and the Department of Music seek an assistant professor of music history (tenure track beginning July 1, 2013) with a specialty in the sacred repertories of the Medieval period (ca.900-1400). The successful candidate should demonstrate strong potential in research and teaching and should have completed the Ph.D. by August 2013. This appointment will provide teaching to students in Yale College and the Graduate School as well as the Institute and Divinity School. Candidates should possess knowledge of the liturgical/theological contexts of this repertoire, its performance practices, and an ability to work collaboratively with colleagues in other disciplines, particularly those represented in the Institute and Department. The position includes a courtesy appointment in Yale Divinity School in order that this candidate may teach courses in the history of sacred music.

Apply through Academic Jobs Online (https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/1654). No writing samples at this time. Review of applications will begin November 5, 2012, and will continue until the position is filled.

Yale is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer; women and minority candidates are especially encouraged to apply.

Posted in Jobs for Medievalists | Leave a comment

Call for Papers: Putting England in Its Place

Putting England in Its Place:
Cultural Production and Cultural Relations in the High Middle Ages

33rd Annual Conference of the Center for Medieval Studies
Fordham University, Lincoln Center Campus, Manhattan
March 9-10 2013

The rich culture of England’s mid-eleventh to thirteenth centuries is central to some disciplinary narratives for the High Middle Ages (for example, the political history of its ruling dynasties, analyses of visual and material culture and of Latin historiography), but omitted from others (the period is often assumed, for instance, to have little to do with the history of English literature). This interdisciplinary conference aims to look in a fresh and integrated way at cultural production and cultural relations within England and between England and other locales in order to explore what kind of place England as a region, a changing political entity, and a culture or set of cultures might occupy in our accounts of the High Middle Ages. We welcome papers dealing with England`s cultures (local, regional, general) in themselves and in their many connections (diplomatic, economic, artistic, etc…) with further areas of the British Isles and other medieval regions. We also invite ‘flash’ presentations on “Canterbury in the High Middle Ages” and on “Space and Place, Real and Imagined,” i.e. on a particular kind of space (e.g. marketplace, church, castle), place (a specific locale or region), or the representation of such sites from the High Middle Ages. Flash presentations should be 5-7 minutes long.

The Deadline for Submissions is September 5, 2012

Please send an abstract and cover letter with contact information to Center for Medieval Studies, FMH 405, Fordham University, Bronx, NY 10458, or by email to medievals@fordham.edu or by fax to (718) 817-3987.
See also the conference website at http://www.fordham.edu/mvst/conference13/England/

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Call for Papers – 2013 MAP Conference

The Medieval Association of the Pacific is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for the 2013 MAP conference, hosted by the University of San Diego, in San Diego, CA on March 21-23, 2013. The Program Committee invites proposals for individual 20-minute papers in any area of medieval studies, as well as organized sessions of three 20-minute papers. Submissions can be made through the MAP web site: http://www.csun.edu/english/map/, and the deadline is 15 October 2012.

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Conference – “‘And This Island, Who Knows it?’ Cypriot Identities across Millennia”

The Organising Committee and the University of Nicosia are delighted to announce a three-day international Conference entitled “‘And This Island, Who Knows it?’ Cypriot Identities across Millennia”, that will take place from the 7th to the 9th September 2012 to join in the celebration of the upcoming European Presidency of the Republic of Cyprus.

The Conference will bring together scholars of international calibre to address synchronic aspects of Cypriot culture as it intersects with other coeval civilizations, to highlight aspects related to language, archaeology, anthropology, art and society from the second millennium BC to the present.

Further information regarding the list of participants, the programme and the Organising Committee can be found at www.cypriot-identities.org or by emailing at info@cypriot-identities.org.

Participation is free of charge.

(See our calendar for more conferences)

Posted in Conferences | Leave a comment

Call for Papers – “Beyond the Western Mediterranean: Trade and Exchange of Materials, Techniques and Artistic Production, 650–1500”

Call for Papers: Beyond the Western Mediterranean: Trade and Exchange of Materials, Techniques and Artistic Production, 650–1500 • 20 April 2013 • Courtauld Institute of Art,

The notion of a shared Mediterranean culture has become a central tenet in the study of medieval art history. Growing out of the Roman mare nostrum, the Mediterranean as a conduit of communication, dissemination, and transmission throughout the Middle Ages is shaping the scope of our discipline. Yet the investigation into the Mediterranean remains unbalanced, and while the northern and eastern edges of the basin are well investigated, historiographical and political considerations have limited the study of the sea’s southern shores, not to mention the exchanges across that other sea – the sea of sand – that lies beyond those territories’ southern borders.

This one-day workshop at the Courtauld Institute of Art Research Forum takes as its topic the broader sphere of influence of the Western Mediterranean. Focusing primarily on inter-connections in the Western Mediterranean basin, from the Maghreb to Italy, from Ifrīqiya to Iberia, we will also investigate how this north-south axis extended well beyond the littoral regions to encompass sub-Saharan kingdoms, the Atlantic Ocean, and even the British Isles. The day’s proceedings are primarily intended to implicate art historians in this discussion about a global middle ages, and we will draw from interdisciplinary discoveries in recent years, especially the wealth of archaeological work accomplished by colleagues around London. The material culture of these regions, including such luxurious materials as ivory, gold, ceramics, pigments and textiles, augments the limited offerings of historical texts in delineating the complex interactions across geographical boundaries. In this way we hope to probe the foundations of a world artistic culture not only through shared materials and techniques, but also through the yearnings and desires such interactions engendered.

We seek papers that address evidence touching on connections between at least two regions, for example the transfer of technologies from one region to another, the trade in raw materials, or the emulation of artistic forms.

Please send abstracts of 250-300 words to sarah.guerin@courtauld.ac.uk or m.rosserowen@vam.ac.uk by 3rd September 2012.

Organised by Sarah Guerin (The Courtauld Institute of Art) and Mariam Rosser Owen (Victoria and Albert Museum)
The Courtauld Institute of Art,
Somerset House, Strand,
London WC2R 0RN
tel +44 207 848 2785/2909
web http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/researchforum/index.shtml

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Call for Papers – “Secularization, Mysticism and Religious Hybridities in the Mediterranean”

 “Secularization, Mysticism and Religious Hybridities in the Mediterranean”
7–9 February 2013
University of Malta, Valletta Campus

The aim of this International Conference, sponsored by the Mediterranean Institutes of the University of Malta and Busan University, is to bring leading international experts from diverse humanistic and social sciences to discuss both the historical and the contemporary aspects of religion in the Mediterranean. The theme of Secularization, Mysticism and Hybridities will be explored through the continuous interplay and/or influence that exists between Religion and Society in Mediterranean Cultures.

The conference organisers invite academics and other experts who would like to act as panel convenors to submit proposals for panels for consideration by the organizing committee. Panels should be composed of 3–5 contributors with each contribution not exceeding 30 minutes in length. Panel convenors should identify the topic and the contributors and will be responsible for the organization of the panels. Furthermore, the panel convenors will be invited to act as reviewers in the call for contributions from individual academics and researchers who would like to participate in this conference.

The panels will discuss themes ranging from Inter-religious Dialogue and Extremism (Fundamentalism), Pilgrimages and Places of Worship, Secularization versus Religious Hybridities, Mysticism and Popular Religion, Conflict and Gender Identities within Religions.

The panels will be expected to focus on specific aspects since the subjects per se are vast.  More often than not, contemporary dialogue forgets the origins of secularism, which comes from the dichotomy or differences within religion itself; separating the priest (secular) from the religious (monk and/or friar). This form of separation has taken the word secularism to a further extreme, meaning the separation between the lay and the religious. Religious is here understood as meaning both secular and regular clergy as well as all type of believers. By mysticism we understand popular religion, pilgrimages, while hybridities comprise places of worship, gender and conflict.

Those who are interested in acting as panel convenors are invited to fill in the online proposal form by not later than 31 August 2012.

For queries regarding the academic programme contact:
Dr Simon Mercieca
Director Mediterranean Institute 
University of Malta
Msida MSD 2080
MALTA

Tel: (00356) 2340 2097, (00356) 2340 2985
Email: simon.mercieca@um.edu.mt
Conference Website:
www.um.edu.mt/events/smrim2013

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Call for Papers: 6th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies

Call for Papers: 6th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies, 26-29 March 2013, Athens, Greece

The Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER) organizes its 6th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies, 26-29 March 2013, Athens, Greece. The conference website is: www.atiner.gr/mediterranean.htm.

The aim of the conference is to bring together scholars, researchers and students from all areas of Mediterranean Studies, such as history, arts, archaeology, philosophy, culture, sociology, politics, international relations, economics, business, sports, etc.

The registration fee is €300 (euro), covering access to all sessions, two lunches, the official dinner of the conference (Greek Night), coffee breaks and conference material. Special arrangements will be made with a local luxury hotel for a limited number of rooms at a special conference rate. In addition, a number of social events will be organized: A Greek night of entertainment with dinner (the official dinner of the conference), an archaeological tour (urban walk) of Athens, a special one-day cruise in the Greek islands, and a one-day visit to Delphi. Details of the social program are available at http://www.atiner.gr/2013/SOC-MDT.htm

Please submit an abstract (email only) to: atiner@atiner.gr, using the abstract submission form available at http://www.atiner.gr/2013/FORM-MDT.doc by the 30 September 2012 to: Dr. Gregory A. Katsas, Academic Member of ATINER and Associate Professor, The American College of Greece-Deree College, Greece. Abstracts should include the following: Title of Paper, Full Name (s), Affiliation, Current Position, an email address, and at least 3 keywords that best describe the subject of your submission. Decisions are reached within 4 weeks.
If you want to participate without presenting a paper, i.e. organize a panel (session, mini conference), chair a session, review papers to be included in the conference proceedings or books, contribute to the editing of a book, or any other contribution, please send an email to Dr. Gregory T. Papanikos, President, ATINER (gtp@atiner.gr).

The Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER) was established in 1995 as an independent academic association with the mission to become a forum, where academics and researchers – from all over the world – could meet in Athens and exchange ideas on their research and discuss the future developments of their discipline. Since 1995, ATINER has organized about 200 international conferences and events. It has also published about 150 books. Academically, the Institute consists of four research divisions and twenty research units. Each research unit organizes at least an annual conference and undertakes various small and large research projects. Academics and researchers are more than welcome to become members and contribute to ATINER’s objectives. Members can undertake a number of academic activities.

Posted in Call for Papers | Leave a comment

Jobs for Medievalists

The Department of History at Stanford University seeks an outstanding senior scholar for a tenured professorship (associate or full) in medieval history.  The successful candidate will have a strong program of teaching and publication, and be able to play a leadership role in the development of this field.  The appointment begins September 1, 2013. We welcome applicants from all areas of medieval Europe, including interactions between Europe and other regions of the world.

Review of applications will begin October 1, 2012. Submit application materials on-line via academicjobsonline.org. https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/1613 Please submit a letter of application, curriculum vitae, research statement of no more than three pages, and the names of three recommenders.

Stanford University is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to increasing the diversity of its faculty. It welcomes nominations of, and applications from, women and members of minority groups, as well as others who would bring additional dimensions to the university’s research and teaching missions.

Medieval History Search Committee
Department of History
450 Serra Mall, Building 200
Stanford University
Stanford CA 94305

Posted in Jobs for Medievalists | Leave a comment