MAA News – MAA@Kzoo

Now that the International Congress on Medieval Studies is back to meeting in person (May 11-13), the Medieval Academy of America will be returning to Kalamazoo as well:

1) The Friday morning plenary, sponsored by the Academy, will be delivered by Thelma Thomas (Institute of Fine Arts, New York University): “Clothing the Angelic Life: The Desert Fathers on the Necessity of Clothing for Monks, Angels, and Adam” (Friday, May 12, 8:30 AM, Bernhard Ballroom). Two related sessions organized by Prof. Thomas will take place on Thursday at 3:30 PM (Session 133, Schneider 2335, hybrid format) and Friday at 1:30 PM (Session 253, virtual format).

2) On Thursday at 1:30 and 3:30 PM, the Graduate Student Committee is sponsoring a two-part workshop on “Careers Beyond the Academy” (Sessions 81 and 131). Both sessions will take place in Schneider Hall 1330 and in hybrid format.

3) The Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA) is sponsoring two roundtables: Making Medieval I: The Experiential Pedagogy of Literature and the Arts (Friday, 10 AM, Session 189, Schneider Hall 2345 (hybrid)) and Making Medieval II: The Experiential Pedagogy of Bodies and Things (Friday, 1:30 PM, Session 208, Fetzer Center 1040/1050).

4) The annual CARA Luncheon is back! The luncheon will take place on Friday May 12 at noon (Bernhard, President’s Dining Room). This annual event is a forum for sharing ideas and best practices for supporting and growing medieval studies on campus and beyond We hope you will attend as a representative of your institution, center, program, or department. There is no fee to attend, but pre-registration is required and space is limited to fifty attendees. Click here for more information and to register.

5) Finally, we invite you to visit our staffed table in the exhibit hall on Thursday or Friday to introduce yourself, transact any Medieval Academy business you may have, or pick up some chocolate to keep you going during those long afternoon sessions. As in the past, we will be giving away fifty free one-year memberships to new members, so spread the word!

See you at the ‘Zoo!

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MAA News – Upcoming Race & Gender Working Group Webinars

May 5, 2023 at 12pm-1:30pm EST

Nicole Lopez-Jantzen, CUNY: Borough of Manhattan Community College and Graduate Center, “Shifting Concepts of Race: Italy through the Earlier Middle Ages”

Responder: Dr. Sarah Davis-Secord, University of New Mexico

May 19, 2023 at 12pm-1:30pm EST

Sierra Lomuto, Rowan University, “Mongols in Medieval Europe: Exoticism and the Legend of Prester John”

Responder: Dr. Nahir Otaño Gracia, University of New Mexico

Click here for more information and to register.

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MAA News – Call for Proposals – Speculations: The Centennial Issue of Speculum

Speculations
The Centennial Issue of Speculum
January 2026

The centenary of a scholarly journal offers the opportunity to recognize, reflect on, and reimagine scholarly methods and objects, including canonicity and the discursive possibilities of scholarship; the boundaries, borders and spaces that define our disciplines; the genres and taxonomies that shape our work.

To mark the 100th anniversary of Speculum, we aim to commemorate the journal by raising questions about the methods and parameters of our study in a prospective rather than retrospective manner. What might the future of medieval studies look like? What might the place of this journal in that future be? The volume focuses on the future of the journal and the field it helps to define by inviting a wide breadth of scholarship that can collectively speculate about how we can take medieval studies into the future. But of course those living in the medieval world broadly considered speculated on their future as well. How was the future conceived in the past and what might those past reflections about the future, and about the condition of futurity generally, have to teach us as we consider recent shifts in our field and a shifting institutional context.

The format of the centennial volume will model the kind of contributions we seek: instead of 4-5 long form articles, we plan to publish 50 short essays (of approximately 3000 words each) in an attempt to represent a broader range of voices, perspectives, methodologies, and areas of study. We welcome traditional essays as well as innovative forms of research and reflection (pedagogical speculations, creative or dialogic writing, speculative history, etc.).

We invite contributions that speculate on the past and future of scholarly work in medieval studies. We particularly welcome essays that address gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, and that use comparative and interdisciplinary methods and that address at least one of the following questions:

  • What kinds of methods and theoretical models shape our work and will orient us in the future?
  • How might we call on more inclusive and expansive understandings of the Middle Ages in light of the global turn and critical reappraisals of periodization.
  • What histories do we examine, what histories do we obscure, and what criteria will most productively guide our examination of histories in the future?
  • How have scholarly understandings of medieval historicity and temporality shaped the parameters of our inquiry, and how might we critically engage these accounts?

Proposals of 300 words should be sent to speculations@themedievalacademy.org by December 1, 2023.

Speculations editorial collective
Mohamad Ballan
Peggy McCracken
Cecily Hilsdale
Katherine Jansen
Sierra Lomuto
Cord J. Whitaker

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MAA News – MAA Grants Awarded

The following grants were awarded in recent weeks:

Olivia Remie Constable Awards:

Louisa Foroughi, “Peasant Femininity and the Female Relations of Yeomen in Later Medieval England”

Margaret K. Smith, “Identity and Authority in Medieval Ireland”

Kristen Streahle, “Opportunities Underfoot: Repairing Sanità through Community Organizing and Cultural Heritage Stewardship”

Justin Willson, “The Sacralization of Art in Late Medieval Muscovy”

Dissertation Grants:

Hope Emily Allen Grant: Noa Ania Nikolsky (University of Pennsylvania), “Governing Bodies: The Regimen Sanitatis in Late Medieval Europe”

John Boswell Grant: Gabriela Chitwood (University of Oregon), “Toulouse Cathedral: Understanding Life in and around a Cathedral under Construction”

Helen Maud Cam Grant: Claire Kilgore (University of Wisconsin-Madison), “Sensing the Bodily Interior: Visualizing Pregnancy and Reproductive Anatomy in Central Europe, 1300-1550”

Grace Frank Grant: Douglass Hamilton (Fordham University), “The Knight God Forgave: Longinus and the Negotiation of Knightly Piety c. 1000 – c. 1300”

Etienne Gilson Grant: Hallie Voulgaris (Yale University), “Practicing Music Theory with Mind, Body, and Soul in the treatises of Ṣafī al-Dīn al-Urmawī”

Frederic C. Lane Grant: Paige Lynch (University of New Mexico), “Associations between Climate Change, Feudalism, and their Biological Consequences for a Medieval Polish Population”

Robert and Janet Lumiansky Grant: Shannah Rose (New York University), “The Codex Ríos and the Reception of Mesoamerican Pictography in Early Modern Rome”

E. K. Rand Grant: Marcel Camprubi (Princeton University), “Lines of Thought: Notation and Music Books in Early Abbasid Baghdad (762-1055)

Charles Tuttle Wood Grant: Adam Matthew Aaron (University of Tennessee-Knoxville), “The Sons of Melisende: Baldwin III, Amalric, and Kingship in the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1143-1174 CE”

Belle da Costa Greene Award:

Anwesha Das, “Connecting Threads: Gujarat and its Textile Trade in the Medieval Indian Ocean (11th-15th Century CE)”

Schallek Awards:

Mary M. Alcaro (Rutgers University), “Plague Trauma and the Pestilential Poetics of Late Fourteenth Century British Literature”

Erin Kurian (University of Waterloo), “The Cinque Ports: An Urban Confederation in Decline 1350-1450”

Morgan McMinn (West Virginia University), “Daily Life of the Religious in the Late Medieval Diocese of Lincoln”

Bard Swallow (University of Toronto), “The Role of Latin Poetry in Late Medieval England”

Emily Youree (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), “Outlaw Discourse: The Affinity of King and Outlaw in Late Middle English Literature”

Congratulations to all of the recipients! We are so pleased to be able support these scholars and their research.

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MAA News – CARA Summer Scholarships Awarded

The following students have been offered MAA/CARA Summer Scholarships:

Katie Despeaux (The University of New Mexico), “Reading Old French” at The Mediterranean Seminar;

Eliza H. Feero (Northwestern University), “Introduction to Latin Paleography, 800-1500” at Rare Book School, Virginia;

Eva Kuras (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign), “Manuscript Culture in Boccaccio’s Times” at The American Boccaccio Association and Ente Nazionale Giovanni Boccaccio;

Flannery Elisabeth McIntyre (University of California, Berkeley), “International Byzantine Greek Summer School (IBGSS)” at Trinity College Dublin;

Reed Alexis O’Mara (Case Western Reserve University), “Modern Hebrew” at Middlebury Language Schools;

Marie Sarnacki (Eastern Michigan University), “Reading Old French” at The Mediterranean Seminar;

Xin Yue Wang (University of Toronto), “Scientific Analysis of the Book” at Rare Book School, Virginia;

Marshall Woodward (University of Houston), “Introduction to Latin Paleography, 800-1500” at Rare Book School, Virginia.

Congratulations! The MAA is very pleased to be able to support these students’ participation in summer programming that supplements their graduate coursework.

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MAA News – Good News From Our Members

Geraldine Heng (Univ. Texas at Austin) has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Sean Field (University of Vemont) will be a Fellow at the National Humanities Center in 2023-24, where he will be working on a new project entitled Women Writing Saints’ Lives: Gendered Authority and Female Authorship in the Middle Ages.

Congratulations! If you have good news to share, please send it to Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis.

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MAA Seeks Special Projects Assistant

Special Projects Assistant
Medieval Academy of America
15 hours/wk (hybrid)
$30/hr (no benefits)

The Medieval Academy of America, an educational non-profit organization incorporated as a 501(c)3 in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, seeks a Special Projects Assistant to work with the Executive Director, the Editor of Speculum, and other administrative and Speculum staff on various projects, both in the Boston office and remotely. The position is offered for 15 hours per week at $30 per hour, without medical or retirement benefits. Interest in and knowledge about the Middle Ages is ideal, but there are no degree or foreign-language requirements. While many of the position’s responsibilities can be accomplished remotely, easy access to the MAA’s downtown Boston office is necessary as the job will often entail working onsite in collaboration with other staff members.

Responsibilities will include (but will not be limited to):

Remote:

  • processing and assembling grant application dossiers (throughout the year) using the MAA’s backend content management system (YourMembership) as well as Adobe, Excel, and Word;
  • assisting with logistical support for the Annual Meeting and the International Congress on Medieval Studies (as necessary);
  • other administrative tasks as assigned by the Executive

Onsite:

  • processing and shipping books submitted for prize consideration (annually in November);
  • managing mass mailings (approximately four times per year);
  • Digitizing MAA archival material (on an ad hoc basis);
  • Assisting the Speculum mailing operation by recording and organizing incoming books submitted for review and mailing copies to reviewers (approx. 1.5 hours/wk).

To apply, please forward a CV and cover letter stating experience, qualifications, and interest to Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org by MAY 15. Position to begin on or around June 15.

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MAA Advocacy Statement in Support of LGBTQ+ Rights

19 April 2023

We, the Advocacy Committee of the Medieval Academy of America, denounce the anti-LGBTQ+ legislation sweeping the U.S.A., such as the  467 anti-LGBTQ bills currently being tracked by the  American Civil Liberties Union. These affronts to trans and gender non-conforming individuals are an overreach of civil liberties and personal autonomy that will drastically harm not only some of our most vulnerable  colleagues and loved ones, but also the cultural integrity of the U.S.A. This path, as history shows, drives us ever closer to outright fascism.

Medieval studies encourages a critical approach to our modern norms, and so one of the benefits of trans experiences and queer praxis is the framework for interrogating the modern assumptions regarding genders and bodies that some unwittingly impose upon the Middle Ages. We employ “trans” as an umbrella term that aims to include a range of experiences.

Trans people have a long  and rich history that includes the Middle Ages in its broadest geographical and chronological breadth. As a discipline, too, our trans colleagues have long been contributing to the field of medieval studies. Therefore, we have some catch-up work to do. We are ethically bound to build a more inclusive medieval studies that welcomes diverse perspectives and colleagues for the vitality of the field. Moreover, we have a responsibility to advocate for our LGTBQ+ colleagues’ belonging as both independent scholars and those working in higher education. Reclaiming early trans experiences from the medieval past helps to maintain the vitality of the field as a space for innovative scholarship that critically intersects with our students’ lived experiences.

We issue this statement as a public demonstration of support for our trans colleagues to both value their contributions to the field and to encourage medievalists to do the necessary work in their own institutions and communities, as members of the Medieval Academy have begun through their scholarship. Our trans colleagues, including neuroscientist Atom J. Lesiak, have expressed a need for greater structural support. The fields of medieval studies frequently “shut out transgender bodies” (33), as Dr. Gabrielle M.W. Bychowski notes in an article co-authored with Professor Dorothy Kim, “Visions of Medieval Trans Feminism.” Based on their insights, in the context of medieval studies, we encourage:

  • conference organizers and speaker series to invite trans keynote speakers and offer panels that value trans scholars and topics,
  • editors of journals and edited collections to center trans scholars and scholarship around trans themes,
  • faculty to advocate at their home institutions for hiring lines for trans colleagues, notably for  non-precarious faculty positions, and advocate for protected research time for those trans colleagues already working in higher education,
  • the development of curricular and pedagogical tools and models that support student engagement with diverse histories of gender,
  • holding space for nationally recognized events that support our trans colleagues and loved ones, such as
    • Trans Day of Remembrance (November 20) and
    • Trans Day of Visibility (March 31).

Selected Publications and Scholarship from Medieval Academy Members:

Five recent articles and presidential addresses published in Speculum:
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/journals/spc/spc-perspectives

The Regulation of ‘Sodomy’ in the Latin East and West
Ruth Mazo Karras, Speculum 95:4 (2020)

Cultural Encounter, Race, and a Humanist Ideology of Empire in the Art of Trecento Venice
Thomas E. A. Dale, Speculum 98:1 (2023)

What Did Medieval Slavery Look Like? Color, Race, and Unfreedom in Later Medieval Iberia
Pamela A. Patton, Speculum 97:3 (2022)

Personification and Gender Fluidity in the Psychomachia and its Early Reception
Katharine Breen, Speculum 97:4 (2022)

Petrarch’s Queer History
Anna Wilson, Speculum 95:3 (2020)

Borderland Anxieties: Lisān al-Dīn ibn al-Khatị̄b (d. 1374): the Politics of Genealogy in Late Medieval Granada
Mohamad Ballan, Speculum 98:2 (2023)

“Medieval Trans Studies”: https://rss.com/podcasts/mmapodcast/463742/

Visions of Medieval Trans Feminism: An Introduction
M. W. Bychowski and Dorothy Kim

https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2185&context=mff

Trans and Genderqueer Subjects in Medieval Hagiography

https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/61200

Transgender Lives in the Middle Ages through Art, Literature, and Medicine Roland Betancourt, University of California, Irvine
https://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/outcasts/downloads/betancourt_transgender_lives.pdf

This special issue of Medieval Feminist Forum could be useful, too — particularly M. W. Bychowski and Dorothy Kim’s Intro. https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/mff/vol55/iss1/

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Call for Sessions: May Jaharis Center Sponsored Panel, 59th International Congress on Medieval Studies

To encourage the integration of Byzantine studies within the scholarly community and medieval studies in particular, the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture seeks proposals for a Mary Jaharis Center sponsored session at the 59th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, May 9–11, 2024. We invite session proposals on any topic relevant to Byzantine studies.

Session proposals must be submitted through the Mary Jaharis Center website. The deadline for submission is May 15, 2023.

If the proposed session is approved, the Mary Jaharis Center will reimburse a maximum of 4 session participants (presenters and moderator) up to $800 maximum for scholars traveling from North America and up to $1400 maximum for those traveling from outside North America. Funding is through reimbursement only; advance funding cannot be provided. Eligible expenses include conference registration, transportation, and food and lodging. Receipts are required for reimbursement. Participants must participate in the conference in-person to receive funding. The Mary Jaharis Center regrets that it cannot reimburse participants who have last-minute cancellations and are unable to attend the conference.

For further details and submission instructions, please visit https://maryjahariscenter.org/sponsored-sessions/59th-icms.

Please contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture with any questions.

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Online Lecture: The Öngüt Connection: Christianity among the Turks of Medieval Eurasia

East of Byzantium is pleased to announce the final lecture in its 2022–2023 lecture series.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023 | 12:00 PM EDT | Zoom
The Öngüt Connection: Christianity among the Turks of Medieval Eurasia
Joel Walker | University of Washington, Seattle

Early and influential allies of Chinggis Khan, the Öngüt Turks of Inner Mongolia played a pivotal role in the rise of the Mongol Empire (1206–1368). Their adoption of “Nestorian” Christianity represents the culmination of a broad stream of Turkic Christian tradition in medieval Eurasia. The careers of the ascetic Marqos of Koshang, who became the East-Syrian patriarch Yahballaha III (1281–1317), and the ruler Giwargis, the Mongol-appointed “Prince of Gaotang” (d. 1298 or 1299), help reveal the distinctive contours of the Öngüt Christian tradition.

Joel Walker is the Lawrence J. Roseman Associate Professor of History at the University of Washington, Seattle. Trained as a historian of Late Antiquity, his publications include: The Legend of Mar Qardagh: Narrative and Christian Heroism in Late Antique Iraq (2006); “From Nisibis to Xi’an: The Church of the East in Late Antique Eurasia” (2012); and “Luminous Markers: Pearls and Royal Authority in Late Antique Iran and Eurasia” (2018). Current projects include Witness to the Mongols: A Global History Sourcebook (co-authored with Stefan Kamola) and a history of cattle in the Ancient World.

Advance registration required. Register: https://eastofbyzantium.org/upcoming-events/

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, with any questions.

An East of Byzantium lecture. EAST OF BYZANTIUM is a partnership between the Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies at Harvard University and the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture that explores the cultures of the eastern frontier of the Byzantine empire in the late antique and medieval periods.

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