Scribes Website Live

Linne Mooney, Estelle Stubbs, and Simon Horobin have now launched the Late Medieval English Scribes website at:  http://www.medievalscribes.com

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Call for Papers: Marco Manuscript Workshop

The workshop is organized by Professors Maura K. Lafferty (Classics) and Roy M. Liuzza (English). For this year’s workshop we invite presentations that focus on the reading, interpretation, and use of manuscripts. The relationship between a text and its readers is reciprocal – the text speaks to readers, readers in turn talk back to the text, and meaning emerges through this series of encounters between readers and texts and negotiations among different readers. Readers sometimes create new texts to answer the ones they read – literary practices such as commentary, quotation, or reference. But they also leave traces of their reading in material ways: physical wear and tear, annotations and corrections, interpolations and excisions, glosses and marginalia, the purposeful grouping or arrangement of texts in a codex or books in a library. How is such evidence recognized and understood? How is it presented to modern readers? What does it tell us about the history of the text? We welcome presentations on any aspect of this topic, broadly imagined.

The workshop is open to scholars and students at any rank and in any field who are engaged in textual editing, manuscript studies, or epigraphy. Individual 75-minute sessions will be devoted to each project; participants will be asked to introduce their text and its context, discuss their approach to working with their material, and exchange ideas and information with other participants. As in previous years, the workshop is intended to be more a class than a conference; participants are encouraged to share new discoveries and unfinished work, to discuss both their successes and frustrations, to offer both practical advice and theoretical insights, and to work together towards developing better professional skills for textual and codicological work. We particularly invite the presentation of works in progress, unusual manuscript problems, practical difficulties, and new or experimental models for studying or representing manuscript texts.

–  The deadline for applications is October 15, 2011. Applicants are asked to submit a current CV and a two-page letter describing their project to Roy M. Liuzza, preferably via email to rliuzza@utk.edu, or by mail to the Department of English, University of Tennessee, 301 McClung Tower, Knoxville, TN 37996-0430. Presenters will receive a stipend of $500 for their participation. The workshop is also open at no cost to scholars and students who do not wish to present their own work but are interested in sharing a lively weekend of discussion and ideas about manuscript studies. Further details will be available later in the year; please contact Roy Liuzza for more information.

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Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowships in the Humanities

The Jackman Humanities Institute at the University of Toronto is pleased to announce Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowships in the Humanities. Three Fellows will be selected for a two-year fellowship on the basis of accomplishment, promise of excellence, and relevance of their research to the 2012-13 theme, Food:

Food is a basic human need. It shapes desires and yields many kinds of enjoyment. The humanities explore food from diverse perspectives seeing it both as an object produced and consumed and also as the means and symbol of our human relations. The diversity of what we eat (and don’t eat) and of how food is produced and shared shapes cultures, communities, nations, and empires. Refracted through literature, religion, and art, food is a central lens for exploring human history and the patterns of our interaction. Hunger, as an index of poverty and of environmental disaster, provides a reversed lens with which we can explore justice and ethics. How humans get what they eat, from near and far, is basic to ways of inhabiting places on the earth and relating to other species. From hunter-gatherers to communal gardens, feudal farming to agribusiness, food and the systems that provide it are matched by a diversity of the tables at which we eat–food for celebration, sustenance, display, competition, joy and sorrow.

Fellowships begin 1 July 2012.  Eligibility: Ph.D. between 1 July 2009 and 30 May 2012.

Apply at www.humanities.utoronto.ca by December 1, 2011:

  1. userID registration
  2. online application form (click Funding, select Post-doctoral Fellowships)
  3. Uploads:
    1. 2-4 page letter of application explaining the link(s) between your research and the 2012-2013 theme, outlining the research to be undertaken during the fellowship
    2. full curriculum vitae
    3. published work, dissertation chapter, or work in progress (not to exceed 25-30 pages)
    4. 2-4 page statement of teaching interests including course proposals.

    4. Names and email addresses of three referees (we will send an automatic reference letter request).

Only completed electronic applications submitted through the website will be considered (no paper, faxes, or email submissions please).

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Paul-Lehmann Graduate Fellowship

The SCRIPTO programme (Scholarly Codicological Research, Information & Palaeographical Tools) at Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg aims to provide a systematic, research-oriented introduction to the study of medieval and early modern books and their interpretation. It combines research and instruction within the framework of a uniquely innovative course of European, not to say world-wide, interest, at the end of which each candidate will be awarded a diploma from Friedrich-Alexander University.

Further information on SCRIPTO:

www.mittellatein.phil.uni-erlangen.de/scripto/scripto.html

www.facebook.com/SCRIPTO.Programm

SCRIPTO coordinator Dr Stefan Weber: Stefan.Weber@as.phil.uni-erlangen.de

The Paul-Lehmann Graduate Fellowship will be awarded to a young scholar who wishes to apply for SCRIPTO V (23rd April to 30th June 2012). The fellowship bears the name of the great medieval scholar Paul Lehmann (1884-1964), whose books constituted the first nucleus of the Erlangen Mittellateinische Bibliothek.

Students must apply for the fellowship in writing before the 15th December 2011. Applicants should write enclosing a full CV to:

Prof. Dr. Michele C. Ferrari
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
Mittellatein und Neulatein
Kochstr. 4/3
D-91054 Erlangen

 

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Fellowships for Research and Study at the Gennadius Library 2012-2013

The American School of Classical Studies at Athens is pleased to announce the academic programs and fellowships for the 2012-13 academic year at the Gennadius Library. Opened in 1926 with 26,000 volumes from diplomat and bibliophile, Joannes Gennadius, the Gennadius Library now holds a richly diverse collection of over 118,000 books and rare bindings, archives, manuscripts, and works of art illuminating the Hellenic tradition and neighboring cultures. The Library has become an internationally renowned center for the study of Greek history, literature, and art, especially from the Byzantine period to modern times.

COTSEN TRAVELING FELLOWSHIP FOR RESEARCH IN GREECE: Short-term travel-to collections award of $2,000 for senior scholars and graduate students for projects and research at the Gennadius Library. Open to all nationalities. At least one month of residency required. DEADLINE: JANUARY 15, 2012.

THE M. ALISON FRANTZ FELLOWSHIP: Ph.D. candidates and recent Ph.D.’s from colleges or universities in the U.S. or Canada for work in the Gennadius Library for full academic year. Stipend of $11,500 plus room, board, and waiver of School fees. DEADLINE: JANUARY 15, 2012.

THE GEORGE PAPAIOANNOU FELLOWSHIP: Ph.D. candidates or recent Ph.D.’s writing on the Greek Civil War. Fellows are required to make use of and refer to the George Papaioannou Papers housed at the Archives of the Gennadius Library. Open to all nationalities. Stipend of €1,000. DEADLINE: JANUARY 15, 2012.

MEDIEVAL GREEK SUMMER SESSION AT THE GENNADIUS LIBRARY (SUMMER OF 2013): Graduate students and post-doctoral scholars in Byzantine studies from any university worldwide. Month-long program in intermediate level Medieval Greek language and philology at the Gennadius Library, with site and museum trips. Up to twelve scholarships available. DEADLINE: JANUARY 15, 2013.  Note: This program is offered every other year, with the next session in June-July 2013.

For further information, consult the website of the American School at www.ascsa.edu.gr/Programs.

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Call for Papers: Medieval Graduate Student Symposium

University of North Texas
Medieval Graduate Student Symposium
April 12th and 13th, 2012
Call for Papers

Dear Colleagues,

We are happy to announce that the College of Visual Arts and Design of the University of North Texas will be sponsoring our 6th Annual Medieval Graduate Student Symposium.    The Graduate Student Symposium will take place on Thursday April 12th and 13th, 2012.  Details can be found on the UNT symposium website– http://www.art.unt.edu/medieval-symposium/

This year’s theme is Nature and the Natural in the Middle Ages.  Addressing that theme in this year’s Keynote Address will be Dr. Jean Givens, Professor of Art History at the University of Connecticut, author of Observation and Image-Making in Gothic Art (Cambridge, 2005), which was awarded the 2009 John Nicholas Brown prize by the Medieval Academy of America; Visualizing Medieval Medicine and Natural History, 1220-1550 (co-edited with historians of science, Karen M. Reeds and Alain Touwaide) (Ashgate U.K., 2006); and Reading beyond the Text: Image, Word, and the Illustrated Tractatus de Herbis.  Her paper will be titled “Art History and the Wonders of Nature: The Case of the King’s Elephant.”

Call for Papers
While we will entertain papers on any topic from any discipline of Medieval Studies—Art History, Religion, Philosophy, English, History, Foreign Languages, Music, we particularly welcome those that engage the multifaceted topic of Nature and the Natural in the Middle Ages, whether it be the visual representation of Nature, the written conveyance of the physical attributes of the natural environment to include water, the air, or the earth, or the spiritual philosophy of conservation and ecology.

We encourage submission of papers that have been submitted and/or delivered elsewhere.  The deadline for submission of a 300 word abstract is February 1, 2012.  Selected full papers will be due March 30th.

Paper Abstracts of 300 words should be sent to:
Abel@unt.edu

or
Dr. Mickey Abel
Associate Professor, Medieval Art History
University of North Texas
1155 Union Station #305100
Denton, TX 76203-5017

 

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Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination

Royal Manuscripts: The Genius of Illumination

Fri 11 Nov 2011 – Tue 13 Mar 2012

Discover the hidden jewel in the British Library’s collection: a unique treasure trove of medieval and Renaissance manuscripts assembled by English kings and queens over 700 years.

They form the best surviving collection of medieval painting in England, and provide the most vivid surviving source for understanding royal identity, moral and religious beliefs, learning, faith artistic trends and international politics of the period.

The works on display include colourful histories and genealogies, Bibles and Psalters, scientific works and accounts of coronations. Each manuscript is a work of art in its own right. As a collection they give an outstanding indication of medieval and early modern royal taste and preferences.

The exhibition will also examine how manuscripts were made, and by whom.

Highlights include:

  • Book of Hours made for Margaret Beauchamp (great-grandmother of Henry VIII)
  • Henry VIII’s Psalter, commissioned and annotated by the king himself
  • Maps of an itinerary from London to Apulia and to the Holy Land
  • Shrewsbury book, presented to Margaret of Anjou on her marriage to Henry VI in 1445

Venue: British Library – PACCAR Gallery
Exhibition generously supported by the Pigott Family

Admission £10 including Gift Aid

Concessions available / Under 18s free

Tickets will go on sale in October. Register for our e-what’s on newsletter to receive an alert.

Teachers and students
Workshops to accompany the exhibition are available for Primary and Secondary groups as well as CPD conferences for teachers.

Click here for more about this exhibition.

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Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellowships

The Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies offers post-doctoral Fellowships to be used for research at the Institute and its celebrated library in the medieval field of the holder’s choice.  Mellon Fellows will also participate in the interdisciplinary Research Seminars.

The Mellon Fellowships are intended for young medievalists of exceptional promise who have completed their doctoral work, ordinarily within the previous five years, including those who are starting on their professional academic careers at approximately the Assistant Professor level.  Fellowships are valued at approximately $35,000 (CDN).

Applications for the academic year 2012-2013 must be received no later than February 1, 2012 and include official confirmation that the Ph.D. has been examined and that its award has been approved by the appropriate authority, by that date.

Application forms and further details may be obtained from the web site (www.pims.ca) or from:

The President’s office
Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
59 Queen’s Park Crescent East
Toronto, ON
Canada  M5S 2C4
Tel:      416-926-7142
Fax:     416-926-7292
barbara.north@utoronto.ca

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University of Pennsylvania Post-Doctoral Fellowship 2012–2013

HERBERT D. KATZ CENTER FOR ADVANCED JUDAIC STUDIES
University of Pennsylvania
Post-Doctoral Fellowship 2012–2013
Application Deadline: November 10, 2011

Institutionalization, Innovation, and Conflict in 13th-Century Judaism:
A Comparative View

The proposed fellowship year will bring together scholars of Jewish, Christian, and Islamic social and intellectual history. The aim of this interdisciplinary enterprise will be to develop a more fully integrated account of Europe and the Mediterranean basin in the 13th century. Major attention will be paid to the way that material and social changes contribute to the creation of new kinds of political and religious institutions and also to the formation of new intellectual horizons and religious concepts. We will also consider the era’s intellectual ferment and criticism of established norms, both within the framework of traditional religious boundaries and beyond. Diverse phenomena such as the appearance of Kabbalah and the institutionalization of Sufi brotherhoods, the creation of new philosophic and scientific cultures, the rise of universities, the establishment of new mendicant orders, the evolution of medieval Halakhah, and the creation of the Inquisition shall be considered, not only as isolated phenomena but in their mutual interrelations.

Potential questions and topics of investigation:

  • What can be learned from a comparative study of the development of institutions of learning—the university, yeshiva, and madrasa—both of their curricula and of their social environment?
  • What can we learn about the cultural intersection of Jews, Christians, and Muslims in this period by charting the physical migrations of merchants, intellectuals, preachers, and others?
  • How might one explain dynamic trends in European Jewish culture such as the Maimonidean controversy and the public emergence of Kabbalah against the backdrop of Jewish political decline, public assaults on the Talmud, blood libels and other forms of Christian aggressiveness against Jews and other minorities?
  • What does the study of financial institutions and markets contribute to our understanding of Christian attitudes to the Jewish presence in the Christian world as well as to changing notions of Christian identity?
  • How does urbanization relate to new forms of religiosity, in the East and the West?
  • What were various strategies of resistance—to hegemony, heresy, and counter traditions? Under what circumstances do diverse groups ally? Diverge?

The Center invites applications from scholars in the humanities and social sciences at all levels, as well as outstanding graduate students in the final stages of writing their dissertations. Stipend amounts are based on a fellow’s academic standing and financial need with a maximum of $45,000 for the academic year. A contribution also may be made toward travel expenses. The application deadline is November 10, 2011. Fellowship recipients will be notified by February 1, 2012.

Applications are available on our website: www.cajs.upenn.edu
For questions contact: Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies
420 Walnut Street     Philadelphia, PA 19106
Tel: 215-238-1290; fax: 215-238-1540;
email: allenshe@sas.upenn.edu

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Rome Prize 2012

American Academy in Rome
Rome Prize 2012
www.aarome.org

Competition Deadline: 1 November 2011
Extended Deadline: 15 November 2011*

The American Academy in Rome invites applications for the Rome Prize competition.  One of the leading overseas centers for independent study and advanced research in the arts and the humanities, the Academy offers up to thirty fellowships for periods ranging from six months to two years.

Rome Prize winners reside at the Academy’s eleven-acre center in Rome and receive room and board, a study or studio, and a stipend.  Stipends for six-month fellowships are $14,000 and stipends for eleven-month fellowships are $26,000.

Fellowships are awarded in the following fields:

Architecture
*Design (including graphic, fashion, interior, lighting, and set design, engineering, urban planning, and other related design fields)
*Historic Preservation and Conservation (including architectural design, public policy, and the conservation of works of art)
*Landscape Architecture
*Literature**
*Musical Composition
*Visual Arts
*Ancient Studies
*Medieval Studies
*Renaissance and Early Modern Studies
*Modern Italian Studies

For further information, or to apply, visit the Academy’s website at www.aarome.org or contact the American Academy in Rome, 7 East 60 Street, New York, NY 10022, Att: Programs.
212-751-7200

info@aarome.org
.

Please state specific field of interest when requesting information.

The Rome Prize competition is underwritten in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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