Call for Papers – Lleida June 2012

The Consolidated Medieval Research Group “Space, Power and Culture” of Lleida University is currently organising the second International Medieval Meeting Lleida, which will be held at Lleida’s Facultat de Lletres on 26th, 27th, 28th and 29th June, 2012.
Like the last IMMLleida, this event will feature six different conferences, each of them focusing on a different aspect of medieval studies (i.e. history, art history, archaeology, philology and literature); over a hundred scholars from across the world will participate in the different thematic strands of the conference. The interdisciplinarity and  internationality of this event is reflected in the range of its presentations, papers, meetings, sessions and poster presentations. Furthermore, there will be sessions about research management, as well as sessions introducing the activities of research institutions, presentations by companies dedicated to the management and promotion of heritage, and other activities related to the Middle Ages.

Anyone interested in any aspect of Medieval History is welcome to participate in the IMMLleida! We would like to encourage you to present a paper or organise a session or, if applicable, introduce your research group, your publications, or simply come along to enjoy the conference and take part in the excursions and the free cultural events we have organised for those summer nights.

To enrol, simply fill in the relevant form on our website:
www.internationalmedievalmeetinglleida.udl.cat

If you have any queries at all, please contact us at
immlleida@historia.udl.cat

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Call for Papers – COMITATUS: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies

COMITATUS: A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE STUDIES, published annually under the auspices of the UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, invites the submission of articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies. Submissions should be sent as e-mail attachments to Dr. Blair Sullivan, sullivan@humnet.ucla.edu.

SUBMISSION DEADLINE FOR VOLUME 43 (2012): 1 FEBRUARY 2012. The Comitatus editorial board will make its final selections by early May 2012.

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PhD-grant “Early Modern Textual Cultures of Western Europe.”

Queen Mary, University of London (Departments of English and French) is offering a doctoral grant to carry out research into “Early Modern Textual Cultures of Western Europe.”(http://www.sllf.qmul.ac.uk/postgraduate/SharonsDocs/documents/phd_studentship_early_modern_textual_cultures_of_western_europe.pdf)
Deadline 31 January 2012

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ACMRS Seminar on “Health and Disease in the Middle Ages”

Applications are being sought for a five-week Seminar for College and University Teachers—“Health and Disease in the Middle Ages”—which is being held 24 June through 28 July 2012, in London, UK. Part of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Seminars and Institutes program, the Seminar is sponsored by the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) and will convene at the Wellcome Library, the world’s premier research centre for medical history.  This Seminar will gather together sixteen scholars (including up to two advanced graduate students) from across the disciplines interested in questions of health, disease, and disability in medieval Europe and the Mediterranean.

A primary goal is to explore how the scientific technologies of assessing disease prevalence andidentifying pathogens (particularly leprosy and plague) can inform traditional, humanistic methods (historical, literary, art historical, and linguistic) of investigating cultural responses to disease and disability. The Seminar also explores how humanistic studies of medieval medicine can inform modern scientific studies of historical diseases, which are developing at a rapid pace thanks to new methods in palaeopathology and ancient DNA (aDNA) retrieval and analysis. Our goal is not simply to foster dialogue among the disciplines regarding the intersections of religion, economics, and medicine in the medieval interpretation and treatment of disease, but also to provide a historical basis for understanding crises in global health today.
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Jobs for Medievalists

Two tenured positions in Medieval Literature

The English Department at University of Notre Dame is pleased to announce an initiative to augment its Medieval area. We invite applications for two positions at the rank of either Associate Professor or Full Professor:

(1) Anglo-Saxon Language and Literature. Advantageous areas of secondary interest for this position might be: Anglo-Latin, Old Norse or Early Scandinavian Studies, Celtic Studies, Anglo-Norman, or History of the Language.

(2) One of the following specific fields of Middle English Literature: Early Middle English, Historical Linguistics or History of the Language, Romance, Literary History, Anglo-Norman, Continental European literary relations, Jewish or Islamic literary relations, Celtic Studies, Classical Traditions, Manuscript Studies or Material Culture, Editing or Editorial Theory, Translation Theory, Poetics, Women’s Literature, Sexualities.

The University of Notre Dame, an international Catholic research university whose assets include the Medieval Institute collections, is an equal opportunity educator and employer with strong institutional and academic commitments to racial, cultural, and gender diversity. Women, minorities, and those attracted to a university with a Catholic identity are encouraged to apply. Information about Notre Dame, including our mission statement, is available at http://www.nd.edu.

The University of Notre Dame supports the needs of dual career couples and has a Dual Career Assistance Program in place to assist relocating spouses and significant others with their job search. The University is also a member of the Greater Chicago Midwest Higher Education Recruitment Consortium.

Please send a letter of interest and CV to Medieval Search Committee, Department of English, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA, or via email (mccormack.12@nd.edu) by 31 January 2012.

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Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellowship

The Departments of Comparative Literature and French Studies at Brown
University seek to appoint an Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow in
the field of Multilingualism in Medieval France and the broader
European context.  The recipient of this two-year fellowship (starting
July 1, 2012) will teach one course each semester and will be
affiliated with the Cogut Center for the Humanities, where s/he will
be actively involved in the intellectual life of the Center.
Preference will be given to scholars with expertise in Medieval French
languages and literatures and at least one other medieval language,
and to scholars whose research engages theoretical issues involving
cross-cultural encounters.

Applicants must have received their Ph.D. within the last five years
from an institution other than Brown.  The fellow will receive
stipends of $52,000 and $54,080 in the 1st and 2nd years,
respectively, plus standard fellows’ benefits and a $2,000 per year
research budget.  The application deadline is January 20, 2012.
Applicants should send a cover letter,  CV, three letters of
recommendation, and a writing sample directly to Department Manager
Michele Carreiro, Department of French Studies, Box 1961, Brown
University, Providence, RI  02912.  Please note that no electronic
materials will be accepted.

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MAA News – Update of Report on Grants to Medievalists

Perhaps you recall my report on grants to medievalists published in 2008 in the Medieval Academy News. It reviewed major foundation grants open to all scholars in North America. The good news about 15 ACLS grants to medievalists in the most recent 2010 round of competition, which was circulated to you by Director Emeritus Paul Szarmach, prompted me to review the other grants awarded since my report appeared in 2008. Medievalists have done well on many fronts, and this should inspire others to write applications. As before, I do not name individuals but I indicate some topics and geographical concentrations when it clarifies and I also name a few institutions receiving scholarly-edition grants.

Based on those who checked off “Middle Ages” on their grant applications, NEH grants were won by a number of institutions and individuals in 2010. Three individuals received research grants, one in the university and two in the college faculty and independent scholars category. Three summer stipends were awarded to medievalists. One individual medievalist received a teaching development fellowship and one received a digital humanities start-up grant. There were also two scholarly-edition grants to universities: the Fernao Lopes Translation Project and the Piers Plowman Electronic Archive Project that went to the University of Georgia and University of Virginia respectively.

One grant from NSF, the National Science Foundation, was won by a medievalist for a study of the influence of Byzantine science on twelfth-century England.

Fifteen grants in various programs were awarded by the ACLS. Medievalists received one Ryskamp Fellowship, one Digital Innovation Fellowship, two Dissertation Completion Fellowships, four New Faculty Fellowships and seven ACLS Fellowships. These are impressive results and it is gratifying to see medievalists well represented among the dissertation completion and new faculty grants, that is, the new programs undertaken by ACLS over the past few years.

The American Philosophical Society made three grants to medievalists. These were small awards but no less appreciated by recipients.

At the Institute for Advanced Study five members were medievalists from North American universities (two Canadian, three US universities). One of them is investigating Buddhism and Premodern Korean History, the others proposed European or Middle Eastern topics. One visitor in 2010 was a European medievalist. Six scholars from Europe and the Middle East may be counted as medievalists from the descriptions of their projects, providing a rich mix of interests for all concerned. IAS celebrated its 80th Anniversary in 2010.

The National Humanities Center hosted five medievalists in 2010. One of these submitted a proposal on Tamil and Sanskrit literature that spans the ancient and early medieval eras as we in the West understand early medieval. Others are investigating European or Middle Eastern history of the Middle Ages.

Three Guggenheims were awarded to medievalists. One is listed as a Renaissance proposal but since it concerns fourteenth- and fifteenth-century Italy and was won by a medievalist, it belongs on this list.

At the Getty Foundation one guest scholar, a Byzantinist, received funding for research in residence. Among the small library research grants distributed by Getty two went to medievalists, one is currently an administrator and one works in fifteenth-century Italian art history. It is difficult to identify the field of concentration of graduate students receiving grants because the titles of proposals are not given along with the names at the Getty website.

The Mellon Foundation’s program, New Directions in Scholarship, made grants to two medievalists from designated institutions (the list of eligible institutions changes year by year, so it is worth checking). The most recent information on Awards to Emeriti Faculty was for 2009 and again awardees were selected from a list of designated institutions. Those listed as receiving grants were a bumper crop of five medievalists. Medievalists shine in this competition.

I found less duplication in persons receiving grants in 2010, but the current information on websites lists those who accepted grants rather than listing those offered grants because I collected information at a different time of the year. There does appear to be greater diversity in research topics and in personnel receiving awards. I can only encourage others to write proposals, run them by qualified readers for suggestions, collect sound references, and send them in!

Susan Mosher Stuard, Haverford College

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MAA News – From the Executive Directors

Dear Fellow MAA Members:

At our annual meeting this past spring, the Council of the Medieval Academy considered a wide range of issues and challenges for the continued growth of the MAA. Treasurer Gene Lyman laid out the financial condition of the Academy and projected where we would be in the near future. Unlike most learned societies, the MAA has a substantial endowment, supplemented by the generous gifts of members and enlarged by the wise oversight of our Finance Committee. Yet, as Gene laid out, for the past several years the MAA has experienced the same downturn in its portfolio as every not-for-profit. At the same time, we have begun to accumulate a substantial structural deficit in our annual budgets. These trends could not be left to run their courses without some decisive action.

At that meeting and in subsequent consultations with us as new Executive Directors, the Executive Committee endorsed a series of fiscal reforms and spending cuts at the MAA offices. In addition, Executive and Finance Committee members have begun to cut back on their travel and meeting expenses, making up for these from their own pockets. For the first time in years, the new 2012 budget just endorsed by both the Finance Committee and the Executive Committee includes a small surplus instead of a budgeted deficit: a major fiscal turnaround.

These efforts are intended both to tighten expenditures and to move resources from administrative overhead to core MAA programs. These include Speculum and an array of services and benefits to members that will now begin to expand: MAA book programs, publication prizes, fellowships, and digital offerings, such as the IMB, ACLS Humanities E-Book, and MAA Books Online. The Academy continues to offer travel grants, assistance to graduate students, and support for seminars in paleography and codicology. It also supports numerous committees, including CARA’s efforts to expand the visibility of medieval studies at institutions across North America.

We have already begun to revise our website, revived this Medieval Academy News as a born-digital monthly, launched an interactive online calendar of events, and reinvigorated our MAA Blog, bringing news of and for MAA members in an elegant, up-to-date format. Our annual meeting remains a high point of the academic year, bringing together the best scholars and scholarship in serious discourse and relaxed interaction.

Beginning in the new year, the MAA will implement a new Association Management System that will allow individuals to register their own memberships, to post and control their professional information, to join with their colleagues in discussion groups, virtual committees and peer-review activities, and to plan to offer members Speculum’s digital edition.

To support these activities – and to bring the MAA into line with the best practice of other learned societies – we also plan to enhance revenues. In the year ahead you will see the revival of a few MAA book series as we move to online sales channels like Amazon.com and to the conversion of our titles into digital formats – including the Kindle, iPad and other tablets and handhelds – and into online scholarly aggregations. We are also seeking foundation support for special programs and projects.

The learned society remains the most important public focus of our scholarly energies. As many media and special conferences have reported, the crisis of the academic community has brought program and department cuts, diminished resources for research and publication, and threatens to convert the library from a scholarly to an information resource. Unlike the department, press, or library, the learned society retains its independence and its ability to self-govern, to set its own agenda, to enhance its special place in the world of scholarship. At the MAA we elect our own officers and form our own committees, maintain our esteemed publications series, and offer support for a new generation of scholars and colleagues.

As you may already have guessed, this leads us to one of the most important decisions of the Council this past April: to approve an increase in MAA dues. In the days ahead you will be receiving your renewal notices for memberships, and these increases will be reflected in our request for support. Overall your dues will be increasing an average of about 36%. Dues are scaled to reflect your professional status. This increase will supplement – but not substitute for – current cost-cutting at the MAA offices and revenue enhancements. But dues remain an essential foundation both for the MAA’s financial stability and for the programs that derive from that income. Dues increases will also bring the MAA’s into line with those of other societies of our size and interdisciplinary nature. Our increases have been designed to least affect our younger members – scholars in, or seeking, their first positions – and to place most of the responsibility for support on the older generation who have both benefited from, and already generously contributed to, the efforts of the MAA.

So, please, when you receive your dues notice, think first of MAA cost-cutting efforts already underway, of increasing support for vital programs, of your extra membership fees – and of your donations to the endowment and travel funds – as the core part of the larger effort to enhance the MAA’s financial base and to help maintain and expand its member benefits and its leadership role in the decades ahead. We are, and will be, doing our part to match your efforts and support. Thank you.

Eileen Gardiner & Ron Musto

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Methods and Means For Digital Analysis of Ancient and Medieval Texts and Manuscripts

Call for Participation

Leuven, 2-3 April 2012

Methods and means for digital analysis of ancient and medieval texts and manuscripts

THE WORKSHOP

This workshop aims at mapping the various ways in which digital tools can help and, indeed, change our scholarly work on “pre-modern” texts, more precisely our means of analyzing the interrelationships between manuscripts and texts produced in the pre-modern era. This includes the history of textual traditions in a very broad sense, encompassing several fields of research, such as book history, stemmatology, research on textual sources, tracing of borrowings and influences between texts, etc.

We welcome researches in any field of textual scholarship carried out on any ancient or medieval textual tradition in any language (Latin, Greek, “vernacular” / “oriental” languages…), using computer-aided methods of analysis.
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Call for Papers: Writing Europe before 1450: A Colloquium

We are delighted to open a CFP for the Writing Europe before 1450: A Colloquium, University of Bergen, 3rd-5th June 2012. After the success of the Writing England Conference in 2010, Writing Europe: A Colloquium aims to draw on a range of approaches and perspectives to exchange ideas about manuscript studies, material culture, multilingualism in texts and books, book history, readers, audience and scribes across the medieval period and beyond

Plenary speakers:  William Johnson (Duke University); Kathryn A. Lowe (University of Glasgow); Marilena Maniaci (Universita` di Cassino)

CALL FOR PAPERS

We welcome proposals from scholars working on writers, book production and use, and responses to texts in any language up to 1450. Abstracts (300 words or less) for papers (20 minutes) should be submitted on-line using the form provided. Please visit the conference web site for additional information. To encourage participation from a range of individuals and institutions, a limited number of bursaries will be available to assist in covering travel expenses for participants with limited institutional support.

Places are limited to allow us to subsidise costs, including registration, accommodation and meals. Please send your abstract by 31 January 2012. For further information please contact one of the organisers at the e-mail below.

Conference web site: http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/news/conferences/writing-europe

Writing Europe before 1450 is a collaboration between the Centre for Medieval Studies at the University of Bergen and the School of English at the University of Leicester, and is generously subsidised by the Centre for Medieval Studies and by the School of English.

 

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