Call for Papers – Gower in Contexts: His Words, His Books, His Heritage

CALL FOR PAPERS
“Gower in Contexts: His Words, His Books, His Heritage”
V International Congress of the John Gower Society
University of St. Andrews, Scotland
7-10 July 2023

The John Gower Society invites proposals for presentations at the V International Congress of the Society, July 7- 10, with an optional excursion 11 July, 2023, on the campus of the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. The Congress theme, “Gower in Contexts: His Words, His Books, His Heritage,” is broadly understood, to encompass:
– interpretative, linguistic, and/or stylistic discussions of his poetry;
– books behind the books he wrote — his sources;
– published forms his work has taken, both in manuscript and print;
– his poetic legacy, including the nature and extent of his influence on his contemporaries and later writers;
– Gower in the classroom.

In addition to proposals for individual papers consonant with the Congress theme, full paper sessions and/or roundtables organized around a relevant topic are also encouraged.
Proposals of all types should be no more than 250 words in length, and sent to R. F. Yeager, President of the Society, via email at rfyeager@hotmail.com or alternatively to Brian Gastle, by either email bgastle@email.wcu.edu or by post, Department of English, 305 Coulter Hall, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723.

The deadline for receipt of proposals is 1 September, 2022.

N.B. Presenters originally scheduled for the cancelled 2020 Congress at Notre Dame may be included automatically in the 2023 program. If your paper was accepted for the 2020 Congress, and you wish to present at the 2023 Congress, please email R. F. Yeager (rfyeager@hotmail.com) with your updated title and a brief (a few sentences would be fine) precis if your focus has changed or developed significantly.

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Call for Papers – Pandemic Reflections: Saint Francis and the Lepers Catch Up with COVID

Call for Papers for a forthcoming edited collection, Pandemic Reflections: Saint Francis and the Lepers Catch Up with COVID

To be published with Ethics International Press (https://ethicspress.com/).

The collection will focus on Saint Francis, his life with lepers, and the COVID pandemic. The collection is meant to explore what it means to think about Francis in light of the pandemic and what to think of the pandemic in light of Francis, specifically his embrace of and subsequent life with lepers.

Given the profundity of Francis’ relationship with lepers, his enduring status and influence, and the complexities associated with the COVID pandemic, the volume calls for an array of scholarly and disciplinary reflections. The collection is significant because it will fill a lacuna in Catholic-Franciscan scholarship. The collection will constitute the first book length treatment focusing specifically on the application of Francis’ life with lepers to how individuals and communities ought to live.

The call for papers can be accessed with the following link: https://ethicspress.com/pages/pandemic-reflections-saint-francis-and-the-lepers The call provides further details regarding the project and potential themes for development. Abstracts for the project are due by July 31st. Completed essays are due by January 15th 2023. The collection is aiming for pieces roughly 3,000 to 6,000 words in length. However, this is more of a guideline than a hard and fast limit.

To discuss or submit a Chapter for consideration in Pandemic Reflections: Saint Francis and the Lepers Catch Up with COVID Collection, please contact the Editor, Geoffrey Karabin – karabing@neumann.edu or Ethics International Press – admin@ethicspress.com.

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Call for Papers – The International Conference on the Voynich Manuscript 2022

Call for papers
The Voynich Manuscript has been described as one of the most mysterious books in the world. The manuscript is written in an unidentified script from an unknown language and contains illustrations of plants, bathing women, mysterious creatures, and what appear to be Zodiac signs and astrological symbols. The manuscript was radio-carbon dated to the 15th century and is held at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University. The manuscript has, so far, resisted all attempts at decipherment and interpretation.

Research on the Voynich Manuscript is truly a multidisciplinary effort.
We invite papers reporting on research on the Voynich manuscript from numerous areas such as (but not limited to):

– History of the Voynich Manuscript (historical approaches, ciphers).
– Natural Language Processing techniques applied to the Voynich Manuscript.
– Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning techniques applied to the Voynich Manuscript.
– Image Processing of the Voynich Manuscript folios.
– Works around whether or not it is a hoax, a natural language, or enciphered.
– Works that draw on methods from Digital Humanities.
The initial submission should be a 2 page abstract/summary of the paper that is intended to be submitted.
Upon notification of acceptance the authors will have 1 month to submit the full paper [5-9 pages] for additional review.

Review Process
The goal of the conference is to publish exciting new work that has not been published elsewhere. Therefore, by submitting a manuscript for consideration to the conference the authors acknowledge that it is not a previously published work nor has it been accepted for publication in a similar form in a peer-reviewed forum including journals, conferences and workshops.

The review process itself (both abstract and submission of paper) will entail a double blind process with volunteer reviewers. Every effort will be made to match the most appropriate reviewers to the submission received.
The submission process entails two phases:

Abstract/Summary:
Provide an abstract/summary for the work that is to be submitted. This should be no longer than 750 words. Please use the abstract submission component of the EasyChair submission link below to input your abstract/summary directly. Be specific with contribution, findings and methodologies used. Successful submissions will be invited to submit a paper (5-9 pages) for the conference.

Paper Submission:
A paper (of length 5-9 pages) will be submitted. It is requested the a authors used the CEUR-ART templates as the conference proceedings will be published on the CEUR-WS open access website.
The authors will also agree that if the paper is accepted at least one of the authors will register for the conference and present the paper and participate in the relevant Q&A session. The conference presentation format will consist of a pre-recorded video presentation from the author(s) of the paper followed by a question and answer session with the author(s).
In the event a submission is received where there is nexus with any PC member(s) a member who is not involved will be responsible for selecting the reviewers for it. This will be transparent and the member(s) with a connection to said submission will not be involved in the review process in any fashion nor be aware of who the reviewers are.

Important Dates
Conference Dates: 30th November -1st December, 2022
Format: Online
Abstract/Summary Deadline: 30th June, 2022 (11:59 Central European Summer Time)
Acceptance of Abstract/Summary submission notification: 20th July, 2022
Full Paper Submission (5-9 pages): 31st August, 2022 (11:59 Central European Summer Time)
Acceptance Notification: 1st October, 2022
Provision of Paper Presentation video deadline: 7th November, 2022

For further information please visit our site: https://www.um.edu.mt/events/voynich2022

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Jobs For Medievalists

The University of California, Berkeley invites applications for a part-time Lecturer to teach one undergraduate course in Medieval French Literature in Fall 2022. We seek a scholar with expertise in medieval literature and culture, high level proficiency in spoken French, as well as teaching experience.

Basic qualifications (required at time of application) Completed Master’s degree (or equivalent international degree)

Additional qualifications (required at time of start) For those who are not US citizens or permanent residents, a legal permit that allows work in the United States (such as a US visa that allows employment) is required by the start date of the position. The department is usually unable to provide a visa/work permit.

Preferred qualifications Completed PhD in Medieval Studies (or international equivalent degree) or closely related field strongly preferred. Fluency in English language and in French Language. Experience and demonstrated excellence in teaching at the college level in the U.S. Evidence of effective teaching in Medieval Studies.

Applicants should submit a cover letter, CV, Statement of Teaching, and contact information for three references.

This position is open until filled. For questions, contact Darlene Alvarez, Academic HR Analyst, at clfa_apc@berkeley.edu.

Position Number: JPF03459

Kindly submit the application using this application portal:

https://aprecruit.berkeley.edu/JPF03459

Diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging are core values at UC Berkeley. Our excellence can only be fully realized by faculty, students, and academic and non-academic staff who share our commitment to these values. Successful candidates for our academic positions will demonstrate evidence of a commitment to advancing equity, inclusion, and belonging.

As a condition of employment, you will be required to comply with the University of California SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) Vaccination Program Policy. All Covered Individuals under the policy must provide proof of Full Vaccination or, if applicable, submit a request for Exception (based on Medical Exemption, Disability, and/or Religious Objection) or Deferral (based on pregnancy) no later than the applicable deadline. Please refer to Appendix F, Section II.C. of the policy for the deadlines applicable to new University of California employees. (Capitalized terms in this paragraph are defined in the policy.) Federal, state, or local public health directives may impose additional requirements.

The University of California, Berkeley is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, disability, age, or protected veteran status.

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MAA News – From the President

Dear Academy Members,

There is a lot of good work going on in our community, and graduate students are doing a lot of it. The Academy’s Graduate Student Committee, moreover, is leading the way in building community.

A good example is how the GSC has developed its newsletter, the GSC News. The current committee’s chair, Reed O’Mara, describes it as providing early career medievalists “with a space to connect with their peers and colleagues.” I was particularly struck by this goal of connectivity. How is it accomplished? She and recent editor Logan Quigley drew my attention to pieces written by members relating their experiences. Shavauna Munster, for example, wrote movingly in the Winter 2019 issue about her experience of Saint Louis University’s Celebrating Belle da Costa Greene conference. As someone who has labored to put on medieval studies events and sometimes wondered “why the hell bother?,” I felt incredibly uplifted in reading her account: what you put into organizing does make a difference to individuals.

Amplifying the voices of others is central to the newsletter’s goal of community building. These voices have related ideas to consider as well as practical tips on the creative process. Sarah Luginbill, for example, shared how she made her dissertation research on portable altars available to the public through a website. Pedagogical successes have also been shared: Jake Coen offered his experience using the case of Saint Maurice to engage students in critical analysis of White Nationalist medievalism and Alexa Sand provided a guide to using STEM models for group work in the humanities classroom. Mimi Zhou’s tips for getting the most out of attending Leeds taught this long-time conference attendee a few things too!

GSC News editors have been particularly agile in addressing the needs of their community via new series and spin-off projects. Their series on Career Alternatives to Academia and the Tenure Track has featured public historian Danielle Griego describing how she got her fulltime job in a state historical society, and Q&As with the owner/executive producer of a podcast company (Hannah Hethmon) and a program manager at the Newberry Library (Rebecca Fall). A new series on Professionalization in a Virtualizing World has yielded a piece by Rebecca Kilgore on lessons learned from planning online conferences and a particularly revelatory contribution by Gregory J. Tolliver on working with his university’s “Graduate Career Coach.” GSC members are also taking this valuable storytelling project into the podcast medium.

I encourage all members of the Academy to check out the online archive of the GSC News (link below). To facilitate your browsing and acknowledge the generous authors, I’ve provided an index below to the articles published. And if you are an independent or early career scholar willing to share your stories, ideas, projects, and experiences, please reach out to the current editors Reed O’Mara (rao44@case.edu ) and Will Beattie (wbeattie@nd.edu).

In closing, I thank the recent GSC chairs—Theodore Chelis, Jillian Bjerke, Christine Bachman, and Jonathan Correa Reyes—who have nurtured the newsletter’s evolution, and all the members of this vibrant MAA committee. Your efforts are really making a difference.

Maureen C. Miller (mcmiller@berkeley.edu), President of the Medieval Academy of America

INDEX TO BACK-ISSUES OF THE GSC NEWS (available here)

11.1 Winter 2019
Caroline Gruenbaum, “GSC Mentoring Program: A Success Story”

Shavauna Munster, “Conference Spotlight: Celebrating Belle da Costa Greene at Saint Louis University”

11.2 Summer 2019
Mimi Zhou, “Conference Spotlight: Tips for the International Medieval Congress at Leeds”

11.3 Fall 2019
Rachael Vause, “But That’s Another Story: Experiences in Teaching and Learning ‘Difference'”

12.1 Spring 2020
Hannah Weaver, “GSC Mentoring Program: A Reflection”

Alexa Sand, “Teaching Mentorship through Group Work: Applying STEM Practices in the Humanities Classroom”

12.2 Summer 2020
Jake Coen, “Medievalist Pedagogy Against White Nationalism: The Case of Saint Maurice”

Chris Humphrey, “As a medievalist, you are good at solving problems”

Aidan Holtan, “Finding a Routine: The Trials and Errors of Developing a Work/Life Balance”

12.3 (Fall 2020)
Dot Porter, “Creative Medievalism as a Digital Humanist”

Emilee Ruhland, “Juggling Glass Balls: Three Tips for Working at Home”

13.1 (Spring 2021)
Joseph Williams, “Applying to Opportunities: The ‘Fit Strategy’ vs. the ‘Crapshoot'”

Danièle Cybulski, “For Indies, This Above All: To Thine Own Self be True”

Konrad Hughes, “Unintentional Blessings”

13.2 (Summer 2021)
Sarah Luginbill, “Spread the Love: Sharing Your Dissertation Research with the General Public via Websites” (Series on Innovations in Dissertation Research)

Q&A with Hannah Hethmon [Owner and Executive Producer of Better Lemon Creative Audio] (Series on Career Alternatives to Academia and the Tenure Track)

13.3 (Fall 2021)
Angelica Verduci, “Writing a Dissertation on the Triumph of Death in a Time of ‘Plague'” (Series on Innovations in Dissertation Research)

Danielle Griego, “Medievalists and Careers Outside of Academia” (Series on Career Alternatives to Academia and the Tenure Track)

Gregory J. Tolliver, “‘You’re Gonna Make It After All’: Finding Confidence and Community through Nonacademic Professionalization” (Series on Professionalization in a Virtualizing World)

14.1 (Spring 2022)
Gennifer Dorgon, “Is the future of Latin medieval”

Q&A with Rebecca Fall [Program Manager, Center for Renaissance Studies at the Newberry Library] (Series on Career Alternatives to Academia and the Tenure Track)

Claire Kilgore, “Planning an Online Conference During a Global Pandemic: Lessons Learned During My Time on the Vagantes Board of Directors”

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MAA News – MAA Advocacy Committee: Call for Nominations

Dear Colleagues:

The Council of the Medieval Academy of America has voted to establish an Advocacy Committee. This committee will consider and select matters on which the MAA will issue public statements and will craft those statements. The six-member Committee is also charged with reviewing and signing on to the statements issued by other scholarly societies. We seek to assemble a committee that is representative of the membership, including members from different fields within medieval studies, from various career stages and employment profiles, as well as diverse backgrounds, perspectives, and orientations.

Several excellent volunteers have already responded to an earlier call, and we now offer all members of the Academy the opportunity to nominate members to do this important work: who do you think would collaborate effectively to best represent the perspective of medieval studies on current issues? Members need not ascertain the nominee’s willingness to serve before submitting a nomination, and self-nominations are still welcome.

Three Council members and the Academy presidents will craft a balanced slate of nominees and alternates from the members’ nominations and self-nominations, which will be submitted to Council for approval at its July meeting (after which the Executive Director will contact those on the slate to determine their willingness to serve).

You are welcome to make multiple nominations! Submit one nomination per form and look for the “submit another?” prompt at the end. Please submit your nominations by June 15th.

Here’s the Google form to nominate:
https://forms.gle/iRPVBEBHRdV4uarXA

– Maureen Miller, President, Medieval Academy of America

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MAA News – MAA @ Leeds

If you’re going to be at the Leeds International Medieval Congress this year, please join us on Tuesday, 5 July, 19.00-20.00 for the Annual Medieval Academy of America Lecture: Carol Symes (Dept. of History, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign): “Médiévistes sans frontières – Shifting Medieval Boundaries at Multiple Scales”

Afterwards, join Prof. Symes and MAA governance and staff members for the Medieval Academy’s open-bar wine reception.

The Medieval Academy’s Graduate Student Committee roundtable, “Gatekeeping the Middle Ages: Accessing, Congrolling, and Disseminating the Medieval Past in the Modern World,” will take place on Monday, 4 July, from 19.00-20:00.

We hope to see you there!

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MAA News – CARA Summer Scholarship Winners

Thirteen student members of the Medieval Academy have been awarded CARA Summer Scholarships to support their summer coursework, traveling to centers and programs across North America and overseas. We are thrilled to be able to support this supplemental coursework:

Susan Shoshan Abraham (University of Virginia): “Reading Aljamiado” at The Mediterranean Seminar

Tess Artis (University of South Florida): “Beginning Latin” at University of Toronto Centre for Medieval Studies

Wei-Ting Chen (Department of History, University of Kentucky): “Medieval Latin” at the Marco Institute, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Alexander Amir D’Alisera (Boston College): “Digital Paleography Summer School” at the University of Göttingen

Tiffany Elder (University of Arkansas – Fayetteville): “Paleography and Codicology: A Seminar on Medieval Manuscript Studies” at University of New Mexico

Alexandra Elizabeth Evans (The Peabody Institute at Johns Hopkins): “Research Techniques and Applied Musicology” at Medieval Music Besalú

Dov Honick (University of Notre Dame): “Summer Hebrew Manuscript Studies Workshop” at the Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, Oxford University

Darcy Ireland (Providence College): “Paleography and Codicology: A Seminar on Medieval Manuscript Studies” at the University of New Mexico

Camila Roxana Marcone (Yale University): “Classical Arabic” at The Qasid Arabic Institute, Amman, Jordan

Mitchell Bryan Simpson (University of Arkansas): “Paleography and Codicology: A Seminar on Medieval Manuscript Studies” at the University of New Mexico

Isabel Grace Thomas Howard (University of North Carolina Chapel Hill): “Latin For Reading” at Fordham University

Lauren Urbont (Stanford University): “Summer Workshop in Hebrew Manuscript Studies” at the Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, Oxford University

Julian Wood (Gonville & Caius College, University of Cambridge): “Classical Arabic” at The Qasid Arabic Institute, Amman, Jordan

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MAA News – Good News From Our Members

Former MAA President Thomas E. Dale (Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison) has been awarded the Chazen Distinguished Chair of Art History for 2022–2027.

Several MAA members were awarded publication prizes at the 2022 International Congress on Medieval Studies: Dyan Elliott (Northwestern Univ.) was awarded this year’s Otto Gründler Prize for her monograph, The Corrupter of Boys: Sodomy, Scandal, and the Medieval Clergy (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2020); and Katie Menendez (Univ. of Toronto) was awarded the Paul E. Szarmach First Article Prize for “Gregory the Great as Intermediary Figure between East and West: The Eleventh-Century Manuscript Context of the Old English Dialogues,” Viator 51 (2020): 241-271.

Katherine French (Univ. of Michigan) has been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship to support her research on a fifteenth-century London boarding house for single women.

Alani Hicks-Bartlett (Brown Univ.) has been granted a Short-Term Residency at the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies to support her research on women and violence in Medieval and Early Modern drama.

William Jordan (Princeton Univ.) has been awarded an honorary degree from Oxford University.

Amy Livingstone (Univ. of Lincoln) has been appointed Head of the Lincoln School of History and Heritage, and Professor of History, at the University of Lincoln, UK.

Sarah Luginbil (Univ. of Colorado, Boulder) has been awarded a 2022-2023 Public Humanities Fellowship from Trinity University’s Humanities Collective in San Antonio.

If you have Good News to share, please send it to Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis.

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Call for Papers – 2022 Southeastern Medieval Association Conference

The Southeastern Medieval Association’s 2022 Conference will take place in Birmingham, Alabama, November 10-12. The conference theme is “The Body and the Human,” and plenary speakers will be Rick Godden and Carissa Harris.

The CFP is below; the deadline for proposals is July 7. Find additional information at https://www.samford.edu/arts-and-sciences/events/The-Body-and-the-Human

The Body and the Human

In his Timaeus, Plato hypothesizes that human beings participate in the same world-soul that animates the cosmos, a microcosm of the wider macrocosm. This analogy proved stimulating for the inhabitants of the Middle Ages and inspired them to explore the connections between the body and the wider universe, as well as the relationship between bodies. This conference likewise encourages scholars across the fields of medieval studies to examine the body, the human, and the spaces in-between.

The SEMA 2022 conference organizers welcome proposals for individual papers, whole sessions, or round tables from all medieval disciplines and geographical regions, but preference will be given to abstracts that pertain to the conference theme and sub-themes:

Medieval medicine and notions of health
Disability studies
The body politic
Bodies and humans in motion
Visible and invisible bodies
Persecuted and privileged bodies 
Human and non-human
Embodiment and corporeality
Gender and sexuality
Race and racialization
The body in medieval law

Proposals for individual papers must be 200-300 words, and proposals for paper sessions or round tables should provide abstracts for all participants in addition to a brief statement of the panel’s purpose.

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