Call for Papers: The Future Perfect of the Book

The Future Perfect of the Book – A Call for Papers

Book History Research Network: a one-day colloquium

Institute of English Studies (University of London), 25 November 2011

At a moment when the rise of e-Readers foretells the end of the printed book, the founder of the Internet Archive Brewster Kahle launches an initiative for the preservation of the book.  He is creating a storehouse for physical books in specially-adapted containers on the West Coast of the United States in order to preserve them as “backup copies” for posterity.  His idea came about as a reaction against the notion that books can be put beyond use (or thrown away) as soon as they are digitized.

While the future of the book is certainly an important topic for consideration, an initiative such as Kahle’s also begs the question how did past the past envision the future of the book – or of the predominant medium of the time.  Victor Hugo’s phrase, ‘ceci tuera cela’, spelt a new paradigm of mistrust when the printed book suddenly disrupted the foundation of manuscript culture and the transmission of the written. Although the digital revolution is possibly the most radical change in the history of writing, one can wonder how other similar transitions fared: from the scroll to the codex, from manuscript to printed book, from printing on the handpress to machine and offset printing, from writing by hand to writing on the typewriter and the wordprocessor?  More fundamentally, do the concerns of fifteenth-century critics of print like those of Abbot Johannes Trithemius of Sponheim have anything in common with twenty-first-century anxieties about the triumph of digital technology? Is access to knowledge and preservation, which champions of the digital revolution invoke, really a new concern? How much of the (old) culture of the book is retained in the new digital media?

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Call for Papers: Sixth International Conference of Iconographic Studies

Center for Iconographic Studies, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Rijeka

Department of Art History, Iconology Research Group

 Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

 Institute of English Studies, SAS, University of London

 are pleased to announce the call for the

Sixth International Conference of Iconographic Studies

 Visions

Rijeka,  30 May – 1 June, 2012

This conference seeks to encourage interdisciplinary dialogue as well as to continue the cycle of sessions for scholarly discourse on significant subjects in iconographic studies. The conference presentations will deal with different subjects concerning “visions” with an emphasis upon the relation between mysticism and art in the European Middle Ages (other periods in Art history are included as well).

The themes and subjects for discussion are as follows:

–  concepts of visions
–  semantics of vision
–  visions in the Old Testament
–  visions in the Book of Revelation
–  visions of the medieval mystics
–  Christian mysticism between theory and practice
–  visions and political theory
–  visions and eternity
–  visions and the visual arts
–  visions “materialized” in different media

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Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age Vol. 2 Now Online

Dear colleagues and friends,

Volume 2 of Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age is now freely available online. For downloads of the full volume and each article see below or the IDE website:
http://www.i-d-e.de

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Jobs for Medievalists

Positions available at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens

For more information go to the ASCSA website: http://www.ascsa.edu.gr/index.php/about/position

ELIZABETH A. WHITEHEAD VISITING PROFESSORS
Two Positions
Term: Early September 2012 to June 1, 2013.

Compensation:  Stipend of $35,000, plus round-trip coach airfare to Athens, board at Loring Hall for the Whitehead Professor (one-half senior rate for spouse, and one-half student rate for dependents) and School housing.  Hotel and transportation on all fall trips and transportation on all winter Attica excursions. Residence permit and limited amount of office supplies.

Qualifications: A senior scholar with a significant record of publication and teaching in a North American institution; Managing Committee Member or faculty/staff from a Cooperating Institution. Preference will be given to those who have not received recent support from the School. Candidates who have held the Whitehead Professorship may apply if the previous term was at least five years prior.

Mission:  Advancing research on a project, which utilizes the facilities of the School and enriches the academic program of the School. Whitehead Professors are encouraged to present a seminar during the winter term on the subject of their expertise and to contribute to the academic program in other significant ways, such as mentoring or advising students at the School.

DIRECTORS OF THE 2013 ASCSA SUMMER SESSIONS (GERTRUDE SMITH PROFESSORS)
Two Positions
Term: Summer 2013.
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Deadline Extended for Submissions to Ye Olde Workshoppe

The Medieval and Early Modern Interdisciplinary Graduate Workshop (a.k.a. Ye Olde Workshoppe), is continuing to solicit contributions for our Fall 2011 schedule. This workshop is a place for graduate students across the university to present, discuss, and receive feedback from both students and faculty commenters on their works in progress, such as conference papers, articles, and dissertation chapters. We will focus on Europe from roughly 400 to 1789, although materials that fall outside these parameters may be considered. Meetings take place Fridays at 10:00 a.m.

If you are a graduate student interested in circulating a piece, please email Cameron Bradley at bradl231@umn.edu with a description of no more than 500 words of your projected submission by October 2. Please indicate whether you are available to present early in the semester, and who you would prefer for your faculty commenter.

Regards,
Ann Zimo, Steve Gray, and Cameron Bradley
Graduate students in the Department of History

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Call for Papers: 9th Annual Symposium of the International Medieval Society

Dates: Thursday 28 – Saturday 30 June 2012
Location: Paris, France
Deadline for submissions: 15 January 2012
Keynote speakers: TBA

The International Medieval Society in Paris (IMS-Paris) is soliciting abstracts for individual papers and proposals for complete sessions for its 2012 symposium organized around the theme of human/animal in medieval France.

Animals – both real and fantastical – were frequently central to medieval culture, thought and artistic production. This symposium addresses a particular aspect of this centrality: the relationship between humans and animals and the way this was imagined, defined and re-defined across the historical and cultural spectrum of the Middle Ages. The distinction between human and animal that modern culture often takes for granted is far from clear-cut in medieval contexts and was subject to historical and cultural change. Historians have suggested that the concept of the animal and the extent to which it represented a form of life distinguishable from that of human beings underwent considerable alteration in the twelfth century. This may be seen in shifts in the terms used to describe animals; developments in the ways animals were represented in literature and art; and the evolution of key texts such as the Physiologus and its variants, the bestiaries. Within this context, the boundaries between humans and animals – which might be established through elements as diverse as the possession of language, a capacity for laughter, or legal responsibility – were subject to change and negotiation. The conference aims to interrogate the questions that the fluctuating relationship between human and animal in the Middle Ages raises from an historically inclusive, crossdisciplinary perspective by focusing on a number of key questions:

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Heckman Research Stipends

Hill Museum & Manuscript Library
Collegeville, Minnesota  56321

PURPOSE:  For research at the Library.

ELIGIBILITY:  Graduate students or scholars who are within three years of completing a terminal master’s or doctoral degree.

DURATION:  Two weeks to six months.

AMOUNTS:  Variable up to $2,000.

DEADLINES:  Twice a year. April 15 for research conducted from July 1-December 31. November 15 for research conducted from January 1-June 30.

APPLICATION:  Submit a letter of application, c.v., a one-page description of the research project including proposed length of stay, an explanation of how the Library’s resources will enable you to advance your project, and a confidential letter of recommendation from your advisor, thesis director, mentor, or, in the case of postdoctoral candidates, a colleague who is a good judge of your work.

SEND:  All inquiries and materials to The Committee on Research, Hill Museum & Manuscript Library, Box 7300, Saint John’s University, Collegeville, MN 56321-7300 or directed to hmml@csbsju.edu, or fax (320) 363-322

The Hill Museum & Manuscript Library houses extensive resources for the study of manuscripts and archives. Almost 120,000 manuscripts are available on microfilm and in digital format.  HMML has microfilmed extensively in Austria, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Malta, and Ethiopia, and is currently digitizing manuscripts in Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Iraq, India, Ukraine, Malta and Italy. Consult the Library’s website for further information, including an electronic inventory of its collections (OLIVER) and a growing database of manuscript and book images (Vivarium).

http://www.hmml.org

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New Medieval Academy Member Benefit

ACLS HUMANITIES E-BOOK

ACLS Humanities E-Book, a project of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), offers unlimited access to its collection of more than 3,300 cross-searchable, full-text titles across the humanities and social sciences, including works in history, art history, philosophy, literature, archaeology, musicology, the history of religion and other fields.  It contains hundreds of titles in late ancient, medieval and Renaissance studies and in such area studies as Women’s studies, Byzantine and Middle Eastern studies. At $35 a year that’s less than half the cost of a typical single monograph. ACLS Humanities E-book has been called, “One of the best – if not the best – electronically accessible sites in the humanities.” (Reviews in History, Institute of Historical Research, London).

ACLS Humanities E-Book titles have been selected and peer-reviewed by ACLS constituent learned societies for their continued importance and value in teaching and research.  The collection, which grows by about five hundred titles a year, includes both in- and out-of-print titles published from the 1880s to the present and offers monographs, collections of primary sources, selected collections of essays, born-digital and retrospectively digitized titles.  ACLS Humanities E-Book titles also link to publishers’ websites and to online reviews in JSTOR, Project MUSE, and other sites.

As a special benefit, individual members of the Medieval Academy of America can acquire a twelve-month, renewable subscription to ACLS Humanities E-Book for only $35.  The collection can be accessed anywhere with a standard web browser on desktop and laptop computers, tablets and handheld devices. This is particularly valuable for off-campus use, during travel, or for MAA members who are between institutional affiliations.

You can preview the collection by searching or browsing at: http://www.humanitiesebook.org.

A full list of titles is available at: http://www.humanitiesebook.org/titlelist.html.

Please use this link to start your subscription: https://www.humanitiesebook.org/subscription_purchase.html.

Choose Medieval Academy of America for your Society Affiliation and make sure to have your membership number available.  For inquiries, please write to subscriptions@hebook.org or call 212-697-1505 x148.

If you are not already a member of the Medieval Academy, you may join online through our website at http://medievalacademy.org/memberinfo/join.php.

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Call For Papers – Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Old Questions, New Directions

CALL FOR PAPERS
Gothic Ivory Sculpture: Old Questions, New Directions
Friday 23rd March 2012, Sackler Centre, Victoria and Albert Museum

Proposals are invited for papers to be presented at this one-day conference, jointly organised by the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Courtauld Gothic Ivories Project, to be held at the V&A in 2012. The papers will be presented in three sessions, each composed of three speakers, with papers lasting twenty minutes.

The conference takes as its starting point the observation that in recent years there has been an unprecedented revival of scholarly activity in the study of Gothic ivory carvings, a class of object which survives in large numbers (nearly 4,000 known examples), but which has largely been regarded as an area of minor interest by medieval art historians. In recent years, led by such scholars as Danielle Gaborit-Chopin and Charles Little, much new work has been carried out on these artworks, ranging from the re-dating of accepted groupings, to detailed analysis of individual pieces. A particular impetus has been given to the field thanks to the inception of the Gothic Ivories Project (www.gothicivories.courtauld.ac.uk) at the Courtauld Institute of Art, which aims to provide catalogue records and images of the majority of the surviving works scattered around the world. In parallel, the V&A will shortly issue a comprehensive new scholarly catalogue of its holdings in this area, one of the most important collections in the world.

Papers are invited on a wide variety of themes and topics emerging from the study of gothic ivory carving. These may range from the focused study of individual objects or groups from a physical, iconographic or stylistic standpoint, to more synthetic approaches seeking to contextualise ivory carving in terms of its relationships to other media, ownership or use. A further issue for discussion will be the afterlives (nachleben) of gothic ivory carvings, both in private collections and in museums. Any discussion of gothic ivories also raises the issue of authenticity, restoration and forgeries, and proposals for papers on these topics would also be welcomed.

Proposals should take the form of a short text of one or two paragraphs, outlining the paper’s title, the main themes to be considered, and the objects on which the study will concentrate. Some indication of where the research sits within the historiography would also be of use.

The deadline for submissions is Monday, 7th November. Potential speakers should be contacted about whether or not their paper has been accepted by the first week of December.

Contacts: Glyn Davies (g.davies@vam.ac.uk) and Catherine Yvard (catherine.yvard@courtauld.ac.uk).

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Call for Papers: Postgraduate Conference in Medieval Studies

The committee representing Imbas 2011 is delighted to announce the call for papers. Imbas is an interdisciplinary postgraduate conference hosted annually by NUI Galway. The conference gives postgraduate students the opportunity to present ongoing work and discuss their research with peers in an informal, interdisciplinary setting. The theme of the conference this year is ‘Identity: individual, society and realm’, and it will run from the 11th -13th of November in the Moore Institute of NUI Galway. We are thrilled to have Dr. Alan Murray from the University of Leeds as our keynote speaker.

We accept papers from all disciplines, with a focus on any topic from Late Antiquity to the end of the Medieval period. Interested postgraduates are invited to submit a title and abstract of 250-300 words, for a research paper of 20 minutes, to the Imbas committee at imbasnuig@gmail.com by 30th September, 2011.

Selected proceedings from the conference will be published in our peer-reviewed journal.

Kindest Regards
Imbas Committee 2011

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