Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Middle Ages. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Middle Ages. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Παρασκευή 31 Δεκεμβρίου 2010

 

CEU Department of Medieval Studies

 

Robert Bartlett: Saint-Making in the Middle Ages

 
 
 
Date: 
January 12, 2011 - 15:30 - 17:10
Building: 
Nador u. 9, Faculty Tower
Room: 
409
Event type:
Event audience: 
External presenters: 
Robert Bartlett
CEU host unit(s): 
Department of Medieval Studies
CEU contact person: 
Annabella Pál
Robert Bartlett is Bishop Wardlaw Professor of Mediaeval History at the University of
St Andrews in Scotland and a Fellow of the British Academy. He received his university education at Cambridge, Oxford and Princeton, taught earlier at the universities of Edinburgh and Chicago and has held fellowships at the universities of Michigan, Princeton, Göttingen and Tel Aviv, and at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. His books are: Gerald of Wales, 1146-1223 (Oxford, 1982, reissued Stroud 2006), Trial by Fire and Water: The Medieval Judicial Ordeal (Oxford, 1986), The Making of Europe: Conquest, Colonization and Cultural Change 950-1350 (London and Princeton, 1993), England under the Norman and Angevin Kings 1075-1225 (Oxford, 2000), The Hanged Man: A Story of Miracle, Memory and Colonialism in the Middle Ages (Princeton, 2004) and The Natural and the Supernatural in the Middle Ages (Cambridge, 2008). The Making of Europe won the Wolfson Literary Prize for History and has been translated into German, Estonian, Polish, Japanese, Spanish, and Russian.

Galina Tirnanić: Suffering Iconoclasm: icons, martyrs, and relics in Constantinople

 

Date: 
January 20, 2011 - 17:30 - 19:30
Building: 
Nador u. 9, Monument Building
Room: 
Popper
Event type: 
Event audience: 
CEU organizer(s): 
Tijana Krstić
CEU contact person: 
Cristian Daniel

 


Παρασκευή 4 Ιουνίου 2010

CONFERENCES FOR SUMMER 2010



4–5 June 2010. "Litterature et folklore dans le recit medieval," an international colloquium to be held in Budapest, Hungary. Le Centre Interuniversitaire d'Études Françaises et le Département d'Études Françaises de l'Université ELTE, avec le concours de l'Université Paris III - Sorbonne Nouvelle, se proposent d'organiser un colloque international de Littérature française du Moyen Age, dont le thème sera la reprise et l'adaptation de motifs folkloriques dans le récit médiéval.

La littérature de l'Europe médiévale, savante ou moins savante, religieuse ou laïque, "vaine et plaisante" ou édifiante, entretient des rapports étroits avec le folklore, dont on pourrait dire qu'il l'irrigue profondément. Des personnages surnaturels, fées, géants, monstres divers, mais encore des scénarios d'origine folklorique sont entrés de plein droit ou subrepticement dans le récit littéraire médiéval.

Ce colloque s'intéresse non à élucider les sources folkloriques de tel ou tel texte mais à retracer le cheminement complexe des motifs. Il s'agira d'examiner comment un motif folklorique est repris et adapté dans des contextes littéraires variés. On pourra suivre par exemple le transfert et l'évolution d'un motif d'une culture ou d'une langue à une autre; ou à l'intérieur de la même aire linguistique, l'adaptation d'un même motif folklorique en vers et en prose, d'un siècle à un autre (début du moyen âge/ fin du moyen âge), d'un genre à l'autre (roman/ hagiographie/ épopée...).

UNIVERSITÉ EÖTVÖS LORÁND, CENTRE INTERUNIVERSITAIRE D'ÉTUDES FRANÇAISES, DÉPARTEMENT D'ÉTUDES FRANÇAISES, H-1088 Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/f., Hungary (+36-1-485-52-74; fax: +36-1-485-52-75; cief@ludens.elte.hu)

4–6 June 2010. "Displaying Word and Image," the International Association of Word and Image Studies (IAWIS/AIERTI) Focus Conference, at the University of Ulster, School of Art and Design, Belfast, U.K. This conference will bring together word and image, as well as literary scholarship, art history and theory, art practice, curatorial practice, museology, and visual culture, in order to address the interrelationship between word & image and display.

Relevant questions will be, e.g., how does the art exhibition function as mediator of literature? Which approaches to Word and Image are specific to curators or museum practitioners? How do Word and Image studies theorize, inform or imply display? We also wish to investigate the use of text/writing in and surrounding exhibitions, and the semiotics of museums' visual identities. How do competencies interact in the tri-disciplinary field between (1) art/art history/theory, (2) museum studies/curatorial practice and (3) literary studies? How are competencies acquired, and how do policies and funding structures enable work in this field?

We seek with this conference to (in)form a network that will investigate literary art exhibitions and work on relevant outputs. A publication on the conference theme is being planned.

Contact: Dr Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes (m.lermhayes@ulster.ac.uk) or Dr Karen Brown (karen.brown@ucd.ie).

5 June 2010. "Imagining Inquisition in Medieval England" to be held at Queen Mary College, London. Inquisitio (‘inquiry’, ‘investigation’) in the later medieval period was one means of investigating crime in general and heresy in particular. Scholarship on medieval inquisition, ranging from Edward Peters’s, Inquisition (1989), to John Arnold’s Inquisition and Power (2001) and Christine Caldwell Ames’s Righteous Persecution (2009), has done much to illuminate its role in continental Europe, not only in combating heresy but also in shaping individuals and communities. However, the place of inquisition in England has not been so clearly established. As has often been noted by historians of the Middle Ages, England occupied a unique position in relation to ecclesiastical developments in medieval Europe, being somewhat outside the immediate influence of Rome and the continent. Our aim is to investigate the role of inquisitio in medieval England and the medieval English imagination, not only by exploring inquisition’s specific legal and pastoral applications, but by examining its more general role as a dialogic mode of inquiry and means of discerning truth. This workshop, which is part of a research project on inquisition and confession in medieval England, is an opportunity to reconsider the standard history and role of inquisitio in medieval England and to explore it not merely as part of a developing ‘Inquisition’ but as part of a broader development in the medieval English consciousness.

Call for papers: We particularly welcome interdisciplinary proposals that address the following questions:

• How do both the historical practice and the constructed idea of inquisition in England differ from those in continental Europe during this period?

• Where are inquisitional discourses located? What are the sources for inquisitional discourse outside of the context of heresy, and in fictional contexts in particular?

• How is inquisition imagined? Can we make claims (as we have for confession) for the role of inquisition in a) creating a sense of self, and b) for generating poetry in later medieval England? What impact do legal and pastoral developments have on fictional inquisition and on literary activity?

• How is the relationship between inquisition and truth imagined in medieval English literature, law, and pastoralia?

• What is the extent of the role of inquisition in legal and pastoral contexts in medieval England? What are its goals? How do they differ from and/or collapse into those of confession?

• Are there medieval roots to the post-medieval concept of "The Inquisition"? To what extent does this concept differ (if at all) from medieval discourses and ideas concerning inquisition?

Proposals for papers should be sent to Mary Flannery (m.flannery@qmul.ac.uk) or Katie Walter (katie.walter@rub.de) by 15 January 2010.

8 June 2010. "Late Medieval Episcopal Humanism," in the Queen Mary Seminar series, at Queen Mary College, London.

Professor Andrew Cole (Princeton), will talk on 'Acting on Advice: Scenes of Episcopal Humanism in the work of Thomas Chaundler'. Andrew Cole is the author of Literature and Heresy in the Age of Chaucer and the forthcoming From Modern to Medieval: Hegel, the Dialectic and Other Stories. He also co-edited the forthcoming book The Legitimacy of the Middle Ages: On the Unwritten History of Theory and is co-editor of The Yearbook of Langland Studies. He is spending spring 2010 at All Souls in Oxford.

There will be responses from Dr Warren Boutcher (QM), Professor Virginia Davis (QM), and Dr Daniel Wakelin (Cambridge), as a prelude to further questions and discussion. The seminar will be followed by a wine reception.

Queen Mary contacts: Professor Miri Rubin, History (m.e.rubin@qmul.ac.uk) Professor Julia Boffey, English (j.boffey@qmul.ac.uk)

10–12 June 2010. "Studium Conference: Sacred Space, Sacred Memory: Bishop-Saints and their Cities," an international conference to be held in Tours, France. The keynote speaker will be Maureen Miller (Univ. of California Berkeley).

The history of many European cities was shaped by one or more saintly figures whose ties to the city—real or imagined—had both spiritual and tangible consequences. The topography of the city, its economy, its institutions, its liturgy, its reputation, and even its inhabitants’ sense of civic pride, could all be shaped by and were dependent upon an idiosyncratic understanding of the saint’s association with the city. The figure of the bishop-saint, moreover, bestowed with extraordinary spiritual and temporal prerogatives, represents a distinctive type which this conference seeks to address. What was his impact on religious, political, and cultural practices and institutions in a given city? What are some of the privileges associated with promoting his cult? In what ways do local claims on the bishop-saint evince tensions on a regional/national level or between elites and the masses? Possible perspectives on these and other related issues may include, but are not restricted to, liturgy, music, hagiography, art history, theology, history, and paleography.

Call for papers: The conference organizers are soliciting abstracts for individual papers and proposals for complete sessions for its 2010 Conference, and are inviting scholars from a wide variety of disciplines to offer their perspectives on issues coinciding with the Conference’s theme. Ideally, papers will deal with different parts of Europe and address periods ranging from the Middle Ages to the present. Abstracts in French or English of 300 words or less for a 20-minute paper should be e-mailed no later than 30 January, 2010. Authors of accepted papers will be responsible for their own travel costs and conference registration fee (reduced for students and post-docs). Contact: Christine Bousquet (Christine.bousquet@univ-tours.fr) or Yossi Maurey (ymaurey@mscc.huji.ac.il).

10–13 June 2010. "Mapping Late Medieval Lives of Christ," at Queen's University, in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The culmination of the AHRC-funded "Geographies of Orthodoxy" project, the "Mapping Late Medieval Lives of Christ" conference hosts leading international scholars who will be exploring all aspects of late medieval Christological piety, with a particular emphasis on the cultural manifestations of the pseudo-Bonaventuran tradition, in a variety of European contexts. Registration for the conference is now open and a draft programme is online (http://www.qub.ac.uk/geographies-of-orthodoxy/discuss/conference-mapping-late-medieval-lives-of-christ/).

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16–17 June 2010. "The Digital Middle Ages: Teaching And Research," the Third International MARGOT Conference (Moyen Age et Renaissance Groupe de recherches - Ordinateurs et Textes), will be held at Barnard College, Columbia University New York. This conference is co-sponsored by the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.

Plenary speakers: David Trotter (Aberystwyth University, Wales) and John Unsworth (Univ. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) For full program information and registration see the conference website (http://margot.uwaterloo.ca/DMAConference/index.html).

18–19 June 2010. "Rethinking Medieval Liturgy: New Approaches across Disciplines," in London. The workshop will take place in London at the Lock-keepers Cottage, Queen Mary, University of London, E1 4NS.

The study of medieval liturgy has undergone a remarkable transformation in recent years. As the lines between various kinds of cultural studies have become increasingly blurred, musicologists, art historians, literary scholars, and historians have realised its centrality and importance. Liturgy provides fundamental insights into the experience of worship and devotion in the middle ages, as the medium through which religious ideas were transmitted. There is now a need, we believe, to find coherent expression and a voice for the emerging generation of students of the liturgy, by breaking institutional and disciplinary boundaries, and by bringing so-called para-liturgical genres, such as drama, hagiography, and sermons, as well as art and architecture, back into their liturgical contexts.

To this purpose, we are holding a two-day international workshop for post-graduate students from a variety of disciplines on the subject of medieval liturgy. It will include a training session in recent developments of liturgical studies, led by acclaimed professor Susan Boynton of the Department of Music at Columbia University.

Call for papers: Proposals are invited from researchers who are engaged in or have recently finished their post-graduate studies. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

- Theories of ritual and their application to medieval liturgy

- Musicology and music history

- Art and architecture as related to liturgy

- Worship and devotion as cultural phenomena

- Liturgy in the history of religious institutions

- Christianization and reform

- Liturgy and material culture - The social role of liturgy

- Hagiography, sermons and drama in their liturgical contexts

- Manuscripts and the representation of liturgical texts

Papers will be 20 min. in length. Individual paper proposals (papers and proposals should be in English) to a maximum of 300 words should be sent by 1 March 2010 to: Kati Ihnat, Queen Mary, University of London (kati_ihnat@yahoo.ca) or Erik Niblaeus, Kings College London (erik.niblaeus@kcl.ac.uk).

18–19 June 2010. "Studies in Cotton Nero A X (the Gawain-Manuscript)," the 10th Annual Summer Conference organized by LOMERS (London Old and Middle English Research Seminar).

Speakers will include Alcuin Blamires, Helen Cooper, Tony Davenport, Rosalind Field, Susanna Fein, Julian Harrison, Derek Pearsall, Ad Putter

Call for papers: Proposals are invited for 20 minute papers on relevant topics such as: Workshop, Palaeography; Codicology; Patronage; Reception; History and Context; Texts; Illustrations; Authorship(s); Literary Contexts; Textual Editing . . . Please send abstracts of no more than 200 words by the end of February to Ruth Kennedy (r.kennedy@rhul.ac.uk).

Proceedings will be edited by Ruth Kennedy and Simon Meecham-Jones. For previous proceedings see: http://us.macmillan.com/author/ruthkennedy.

18–19 June 2010. "Rethinking Medieval Liturgy: New Approaches across Disciplines," in London. The workshop will take place in London at the Lock-keepers Cottage, Queen Mary, University of London, E1 4NS, from Friday June 18 (10am) to Saturday June 19 (5pm) 2010. Application for AHRC funding pending.

The study of medieval liturgy has undergone a remarkable transformation in recent years. As the lines between various kinds of cultural studies have become increasingly blurred, musicologists, art historians, literary scholars, and historians have realised its centrality and importance. Liturgy provides fundamental insights into the experience of worship and devotion in the middle ages, as the medium through which religious ideas were transmitted. There is now a need, we believe, to find coherent expression and a voice for the emerging generation of students of the liturgy, by breaking institutional and disciplinary boundaries, and by bringing so-called para-liturgical genres, such as drama, hagiography, and sermons, as well as art and architecture, back into their liturgical contexts.

To this purpose, we are holding a two-day international workshop for post-graduate students from a variety of disciplines on the subject of medieval liturgy. It will include a training session in recent developments of liturgical studies, led by acclaimed professor Susan Boynton of the Department of Music at Columbia University. Call for papers: Proposals are invited from researchers who are engaged in or have recently finished their post-graduate studies.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

- Theories of ritual and their application to medieval liturgy

- Musicology and music history - Art and architecture as related to liturgy

- Worship and devotion as cultural phenomena

- Liturgy in the history of religious institutions

- Christianization and reform

- Liturgy and material culture

- The social role of liturgy

- Hagiography, sermons and drama in their liturgical contexts

- Manuscripts and the representation of liturgical texts

Papers will be 20 min. in length. Individual paper proposals (papers and proposals should be in English) to a maximum of 300 words should be sent by 1 March, 2010 to: Kati Ihnat, Queen Mary, University of London (kati_ihnat@yahoo.ca) or Erik Niblaeus, Kings College London (erik.niblaeus@kcl.ac.uk).

23–27 June 2010. "Perceptions of Place: English place-name study and regional variety," an international conference to be held in association with the English Place-Name Society at the Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham, in England.

Speakers include:

• Professor Thomas Clancy (Glasgow) on English place-names in the Scottish border region

• Professor Richard Coates (UWE) on place-names and linguistics

• Professor Klaus Dietz (Freie Universität Berlin) on place-names and English historical dialectology

• Professor Gillian Fellows-Jensen (Copenhagen) on the Scandinavian background to English place-names

• Professor Carole Hough (Glasgow) on women in English place-names

• Professor John Insley (Heidelberg) on personal names in place-names

• Dr Kay Muir (Northern Ireland Place-Name Project) on English place-names in Ireland

• Dr Oliver Padel (EPNS president) on the Celtic element in English place-names

• Dr Matthew Townend (York) on the Scandinavian element in English place-names

Contact: Perceptions of Place, Institute for Name-Studies, School of English, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD (rebecca.peck@nottingham.ac.uk). Further details on arrangements and costs will be available on the conference website (http://ww.nottingham.ac.uk/english/ins/).

24–26 June 2010. "Translatio," the 7th Annual Symposium of the International Medieval Society, Paris (IMS), in collaboration with the Laboratoire de médiévistique occidentale de Paris (LAMOP).

Keynote speakers: Rita Copeland, University of Pennsylvania, and Serge Lusignan, Université de Montréal & LAMOP.

The medieval term translatio brings into contact linguistic, material, and cultural fields. It was attached to a group of related concepts: the physical displacement of objects, the rewriting of a text in a new language, or the transfer of meaning proper to metaphor. Eventually, writers of the Latin West began to employ the concepts of translatio studii et imperii in an attempt to define their conflicted relationship with the authority and learning of Classical, Muslim, and Byzantine cultures; the term thus expressed their understanding of cultural contact and exchange. Recent work has shown how these various iterations of translatio can indicate complex acts of cultural negotiation or appropriation, which repositioneded the opposing forces of old and new, the other and the self.

The present symposium will bring together scholars from diverse disciplines, in order to study the various modes and meanings of translatio. Papers might address such topics as: the adaptation of texts from one language into another in literary or musical sources; the transfer of themes from one medium to another (among, for example, texts, music, painting, sculpture, or textiles); the use of spolia in building or orfèvrerie; the translation of relics; the exploitation of Classical themes or narratives by medieval political figures or historiographers; the controversies over Biblical translation; the function of translatio as metaphor in religious or secular writing; the appropriation of words from one language into another.

Call for papers: The International Medieval Society of Paris (IMS-Paris) is soliciting abstracts for individual papers and proposals for complete sessions for its 2010 Symposium, which will explore the practice and function of translatio in medieval France. The International Medieval Society of Paris (IMS-Paris) is soliciting abstracts for individual papers and proposals for complete sessions for its 2010 Symposium, which will explore the practice and function of translatio in medieval France. Papers should address France, Francia, or post-Roman Gaul in some way, but they need not be exclusively limited to this geographic area.

We encourage submissions from a variety of disciplines, including but not limited to: Anthropology * Archaeology * Art History * Classical Studies * Comparative Literature * Gender Studies * History * History of Medicine * History of Science * Linguistics * Literary Studies * Musicology * Philosophy * Religious Studies * Theology * Urban Studies. Abstracts of no more than 300 words for a 20-minute paper should be e-mailed to contact@ims-paris.org no later than 1 February 2010. In addition to the abstract, please submit full contact information, a CV, and a tentative assessment of any audiovisual equipment required for your presentation.

The IMS will review submissions and respond via e-mail by 15 February 2010. Titles of accepted papers will be made available on the IMS website. Authors of accepted papers will be responsible for their own travel costs and conference registration fee (35 euros, reduced for students). The registration fee will be waived for IMS members. The IMS-Paris is an interdisciplinary and bilingual (French/English) organization founded to serve as a center for medievalists who research, work, study, or travel to France. For more information about the IMS and the schedule of last year’s Symposium, please see our website: www.ims-paris.org.

28–30 June 2010. "Orthodox Constructions of the West," a conference hosted by the Christian Orthodox Studies program at Fordham University, and co-sponsored by the Center for Medieval Studies, at the Rose Hill campus. Contact George Demacopoulos (demacopoulos@fordham.edu) or Aristotle Papanilolaou (papanilolaou@fordham.edu).

8–10 July 2010, "Central Asian Islamic Manuscripts and Manuscript Collections," the Sixth Islamic Manuscript Conference, organized by the Islamic Manuscript Association, will be held at Queens' College, University of Cambridge, England. The Conference will be hosted by the Thesaurus Islamicus Foundation, the Cambridge Central Asia Forum, and the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Centre of Islamic Studies, University of Cambridge.

Call for papers: The Association invites the submission of abstracts on topics related to the study of Islamic manuscripts—particularly codicology—and the care and management of Islamic manuscript collections. Preference will be shown to submissions pertaining to the Conference's theme. The Conference will be organised around the Association's four key working areas: cataloguing, conservation, digitisation, and research and publishing; and papers falling into these broad categories will be included in the relevant panel. The Association will also consider submissions on topics that do not fall directly under the purviews of the working groups but are yet concerned with scholarship on Islamic manuscripts or the care and management of Islamic manuscript collections. Please note that the total number of papers accepted will not exceed 25 and that preference will be given to speakers who have not presented papers at the Association's previous conferences.

The invitation is open to members and non-members of the Association. The languages of the Conference will be Arabic and English and submissions will be accepted in both languages. The deadline for submissions is 31 January 2010. Late submissions will not be considered. The duration of each conference paper is 30 minutes inclusive of 10 minutes of questions and answers.

Please send an abstract of 500 words, a resume, and the cover sheet (available at http://www.islamicmanuscript.org/conferences/2010conference/CallForPapers.html) to the Association's Executive Committee: The Islamic Manuscript Association Ltd, c/o 33 Trumpington Street, Cambridge CB2 1QY, United Kingdom (fax: +44 (0)1223 302 218; ima@islamicmanuscript.org; http://www.islamicmanuscript.org/conferences/2010conference/SixthIslamicManuscriptConference.htm).

12–14 July, 2010. "Form and Function in the Late Medieval Bible," a conference hosted by the Centre for the History of the Book, at the University of Edinburgh, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

At the beginning of the thirteenth century a new type of Bible emerged from Paris and southern England and spread rapidly throughout Western Europe. Innovations in script and parchment enabled the creation of single-volume Bibles, some of which could easily fit a modern pocket; other features, such as the modern chapter division, introduced unprecedented ease of usage. These Bibles became the template for Gutenberg's celebrated 42-line version and have had an influence on printed Bibles ever since. Today, hundreds of these manuscripts survive, bearing witness to one of the most popular books of the Middle Ages. The ubiquity of these Bibles has only recently been met by scholarly interest, and questions remain regarding their evolution as well as their place within the medieval university, pulpit and priory.

The conference will bring together experts in medieval liturgy and sermons, art, religion and manuscripts, to examine the material culture of the Late Medieval Bible and its setting. Presentations, discussions and two workshops would draw on the wealth of manuscripts in the University Library and the NLS in analysing variants of text and layout, imagery and addenda. Speakers will include: • Nicole Bériou (Université Lumière Lyon 2) • Laura Light (Independent Scholar, Boston) • John Lowden (Courtauld Institute of Art, London) • Eyal Poleg (CHB, University of Edinburgh) • Diane J. Reilly (Indiana University, Bloomington) • Paul Saenger (The Newberry Library, Chicago) • Paul Antonio (Calligrapher, London).

Call for papers: Papers are invited on any aspect of the late medieval Bible (c.1230–c.1450) and its place within medieval religion, culture and society; sessions will address the evolution of the late medieval Bible, its layout, addenda and art, as well as its connection to exegesis, preaching and liturgy. Proposals (up to 300 words) should be e-mailed to L.M.B@ed.ac.uk or sent to the Centre for the History of the Book, 22a Buccleuch Place, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9LN, Scotland, by December 20.

A small number of postgraduate bursaries will be made available towards defraying costs of travel and registration. The date of the conference is planned to enable attendees to take part in the CHB's Material Cultures 2010 conference, 16–18 July.

12–15 July 2010. The 17th International Medieval Congress (IMC) will be held at Leeds, England. Contact: International Medieval Congress Administration, Institute for Medieval Studies, Parkinson Bldg. 1.03, Univ. of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, U.K. (+44-113-343-3614; fax: +44-113-343-3616; imc@leeds.ac.uk; http://www.leeds.ac.uk/ims/imc).

15–19 July 2010. The Seventeenth Biennial Congress of the New Chaucer Society will take place in Siena, Italy, in 2010. In keeping with the suggestions made at the 2003 Glasgow Congress, there is no single theme for the Congress. The overall structure reflects areas of inquiry that emerged from members' initial proposals for sessions. Sessions will consequently follow several threads: Chaucerian Temporalities; Medievalisms; Found in Translation: Italy and England in the Age of Chaucer; Transnationalism; Insular Multilingualisms; Political Languages; Visual Cultures; Religious Practice, Institutions, and Theology: Chaucerian Contexts; Bodies; Animal Discourses; Philosophy and Science; and Manuscripts and Printed Books. In addition, there will be a number of non-aligned panels and sessions, and several plenary sessions.

Call for papers: paper sessions will comprise three or four fifteen-minute papers. At least one paper will be given by a graduate student or research student. Panel sessions will comprise seven or eight five-minute presentations. For both paper and panel sessions, organizers will enforce time limits to allow for discussion.

The NCS Constitution requires that Congress participants (except for invited speakers from other fields) be members with their dues paid. We encourage you to share information about the Congress with other interested people who may not be NCS members at present—graduate students, new colleagues, and others working outside the field who may find sessions related to their specialisms. (Graduate students and research students may join NCS at a reduced membership rate.) Finally, a tight limit has been set on prior invitations to participate in any session. The overwhelming majority of participants in the Congress will be those who respond to this call.

NCS members who wish to give papers or participate in panels at the Congress should send a one-paragraph abstract to the organizer(s), to arrive before 15 July 2009, preferably at the e-mail addresses given below in the session description. Please indicate any specific audio-visual needs. Session organizers will select papers and panels soon afterwards, in consultation with the Program Chairs. The Program Committee will form additional sessions as interests arise. Names of Congress participants will be announced in an upcoming Chaucer Newsletter. Members may apply to participate in more than one session, but they may finally take part in only one.

The program committee is composed of Thomas Hahn (Chair), Marion Turner, David Wallace, Jessica Brantley, Orietta Da Rold, and Stefania D'Agata D'Ottavi (Chair of the Local Arrangements Committee) with Richard Firth Green (NCS President) and David Lawton (NCS Executive Director) ex officio. For more information, visit the NCS website (http://artsci.wustl.edu/~chaucer/congress/congress2010call.php).

17–19 July 2010. "Authority and Gender in Medieval and Renaissance Chronicles," the second biennial Cambridge International Chronicles Symposium (CICS) will be held at the University of Cambridge. The new symposium will comprise keynote addresses, panel discussions, a tour of Cambridge College Libraries, formal conference dinner, publications fair and wine reception. Refreshments and lunches are provided for conference guests and college accommodation is available. As on the previous occasion, a limited number of small bursaries will be awarded.

Call for papers: the organizers are accepting proposals from scholars in the disciplines including but not limited to English, History, Literature, Philosophy, and Religious Studies. Topics for discussion could include:

-Kingship and queenship, earls and ealdormen;

-Abbots and abbesses, monks and nuns;

- Ecclesiastical and secular authorities;

- Institutional authority;

- National authority and identity;

- Masculine, feminine, and neuter: linguistic authority;

- Auctors and Auctoritas;

- Textual authority, witnesses, and scribal traditions;

- Kinglists and genealogies;

- Nuns in the scriptorium;

- Female voices, male scribes—authority and authorship;

-Gender and legal practices;

- Moral authority;

- Ritual and authority;

Establishment of authority: feuds, force, and warfare;

- The construction of gender in chronicles.

Abstract (of approximately 250 words) are due no later than 15 December 2009. In special cases, papers will be commissioned for publication without presentation at the conference (contact the organisers for more information). Please check the website for regular updates (CambridgeICS@gmail.com; http://www.asnc.cam.ac.uk/diary/cics/index.html).

19–23 July 2010. "1212–1214: El trienio que hizo a Europa." XXXVII Semana de Estudios Medievales de Estella, at the Palacio de los Reyes de Navarra, in Estella, Spain.

Speakers will be

* Prof. Dr. D. William Chester Jordan University of Princeton

* Prof. Dr. D. Jacques Verger Université de Paris-Sorbonne

* Prof. Dra. Dña. Maria Ginatempo Università degli Studi di Siena

* Prof. Dr. D. Laurent Macé Université de Toulouse

* Prof. Dr. D. José Manuel Nieto Soria Universidad Complutense de Madrid

* Prof. Dr. D. Francisco García Fitz Universidad de Extremadura

* Prof. Dra. Dña. María Joao Branco Universidade Aberta de Lisboa

* Prof. Dr. D. Martín Alvira Cabrer Universidad Complutense de Madrid

* Prof. Dr. D. Pascual Martínez Sopena Universidad de Valladolid

* Prof. Dr. D. Agostino Paravicini Bagliani Università della Svizzera italiana. Lugano

* Prof. Dr. D. Nicholas Vincent University of East Anglia

* Prof. Dra. Dña. Eloísa Ramírez Vaquero Universidad Pública de Navarra

* Prof. Dra. Dña. Monique Bourin Université de Nantes

* Prof. Dr. D. Luigi Provero Università di Torino

Contact: +848-424-681/86; athrebas@cfnavarra.es; mperezom@navarra.es; http://www.cfnavarra.es/medieval/

19–24 July 2010. The 13th Colloquium of SITM (Société internationale pour l'étude du théâtre médiéval) will meet in Giessen, Germany. Papers will be in English, French, or German. Contact: Prof. Dr. Cora Dietl, Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen, Institut für Germanistik, Otto-Behaghel-Straße 10 B, 35394 Gießen, Germany (http://www.uni-giessen.de/~g91159/sitm.htm).

21–24 August 2010. "Music for the Office and Its Sources in the Low Countries (1050–1550)," an international conference in Antwerp, Belgium. The conference, supported by the International Musicological Society Study Group "Cantus Planus", will take place during the yearly festival Laus Polyphoniae (Flanders Festival Antwerp), and in close collaboration with the festival program.

The office is the most substantial portion of the liturgy: in all types of communities and services, whether of monastic, cathedral, or courtly signature, it formed a crucial part of their musical culture. Because the Low Countries knew an unprecedented variety of communities and institutions, the contexts in which the office was celebrated in the region were equally varied. Indeed, the wealth of sources for the office from the Low Countries has led many scholars to study selected aspects of the celebration of the office in the region, such as prose or versified historiae, tropes and prosulas, motets composed for Vespers and Salve services, and 'paraliturgical' pieces. The conference sets out to explore the variety of the extant repertory and its sources, by bringing together new research into the music for the office in, or related to, the Low Countries (understood to include Northern France and the Meuse-Rhineland), and studying plainchant as well as polyphony and their interrelations.

Call for papers: Scholars and performers studying chant and/or polyphony from analytical, historical, liturgical, or interdisciplinary perspectives are invited to send proposals of no longer than 350 words to Pieter Mannaerts (pieter.mannaerts@arts.kuleuven.be) before 15 February 2010. Notification of acceptance will be given by 15 March 2010. The final conference program will be published around 1 April 2010, on the website of the Alamire Foundation (http://www.arts.kuleuven.be/alamire). A selection of conference papers will be published in the internationally peer-reviewed Journal of the Alamire Foundation in 2012.

23–27 July 2010. "In Principio Fuit Interpres," the international Cardiff Conference on the Theory and Practice of Translation in the Middle Ages, at the Università degli Studi di Padova, in Padua, Italy.

Linguistic and literary traditions include translation in their myth of origin–thus the linguistic and scholar Gianfranco Folena proposed to substitute the motto In principio fuit poëta with the humbler In principio fuit interpres. Following his suggestion, we welcome papers addressing translation in the Middle Ages, marking the relationship between classical, Middle Eastern, and vernacular languages, and studying translation as the representation of ideas and texts in different media.

Plenary speakers: Roger Ellis, Domenico Pezzini, David Wallace.

Contact: Alessandra Petrina and Monica Santini, Dipartimento di Lingue e Lett. Anglo-Germaniche e Slave, Via Beato Pellegrino, 26, 35100 Padua, Italy (or to both: alessandra.petrina@unipd.it and monica.santini@unipd.it).

25–30 July 2010. The Thirteenth Triennial Congress of the International Courtly Literature Society (ICLS) will take place in Montreal, Canada. The Congress's overarching theme is "Courtly Cultures on the Move," and speakers are especially invited to consider the theme in relation to three areas:

transmission and reception of courtliness;

books and courtly culture; and

languages of courtliness.

The organizers also welcome proposals for thematic sessions organized by individuals or groups.

Call for papers: Please submit a title and a 250-word abstract by 15 December 2009 to the program committee (icls2010@listes.umontreal.ca). Papers may be given in any of the official languages of the ICLS: French, English, or German. All speakers must be members of the ICLS and should indicate their branch affiliation in their abstract. Anyone not yet a member should contact the secretary of the appropriate national branch to join. For more information, see the conference website (http://www.icls2010.ca/en/home.html).

17–19 August 2010. "New techniques for old documents: Scientific examination methods in the service of preservation and book history." The IFLA Preservation and Conservation Section and The Rare Books and Manuscripts section invite speakers to present papers for a satellite meeting in conjunction to the IFLA World Library and Information Conference 2010. The satellite conference takes place at Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Within this theme we welcome papers on scientific techniques such as DNA, infrared spectroscopy, imaging techniques and micro x-ray fluorescence. All these techniques may be used in conservation treatments and material bibliographic issues such as the determination of animals for leathers, provenance through DNA-analysis, measuring paper strength, examination of pigments and inks for palimpsests and other documents, and ICR - (Intelligent Character recognition) for the recognition of hand-written text. We would like to encourage a multi-disciplinary meeting and therefore, relevant papers from both scientists, conservators, book-historians and others who may add interesting and new knowledge within the overall topic, are welcome to submit abstracts for a paper.

The conference will be a two-day meeting, including social events. Visits are planned for August 19. Please note that speakers will have to cover their own expenses for travel and accommodation. However, IFLA satellite conferences normally attract a worldwide audience with many opportunities for discussions and interesting meetings.

Call for papers: Please send an abstract of no more than 350 words by e-mail only, to Per Culhed (Per.Cullhed@ub.uu.se) and Raphaele Mouren (Raphaele.Mouren@enssib.fr) before 1 March 2010. The submissions will be examined during March and prospective speakers will be notified on 6 April. The abstract should include the following: name of the speaker, institutional affiliation and address, title of the paper, and short biography.

21–24 August 2010. "Music for the Office and Its Sources in the Low Countries (1050–1550)," At the Conference Center Elzenveld, Antwerp, Belgium.

The office is the most substantial portion of the liturgy, and has incited medieval and Renaissance composers to contribute to its musical splendour for at least half a millennium. In all types of communities and services, whether of monastic, cathedral, or courtly signature, the office formed a crucial part of their musical culture. Because the Low Countries knew an unprecedented variety of communities and institutions, the contexts in which the office was celebrated in the region were equally varied. Indeed, the wealth of sources for the office from the Low Countries has led many scholars to study selected aspects of the celebration of the office in the region, such as prose or versified historiae, tropes and prosulas, motets composed for Vespers and Salve services, and 'paraliturgical' pieces.

This conference sets out to explore the variety of the extant repertory and its sources, by bringing together new research into the music for the office in, or related to, the Low Countries (understood to include Northern France and the Meuse-Rhineland), and studying plainchant as well as polyphony and their interrelations.

Scholars and performers studying chant and/or polyphony from analytical, historical, liturgical, or interdisciplinary perspectives are invited to send proposals of no longer than 350 words to before 15 February 2010. Notification of acceptance will be given by 15 March 2010. The final conference program will be published around 1 April 2010, on the website of the Alamire Foundation (www.arts.kuleuven.be/alamire). The program committee is currently being composed, and will be announced within the coming weeks.

All International Musicological Society languages may be used (English, French, German, Italian, Spanish); the principal conference language will be English.

The conference, supported by the International Musicological Society Study Group "Cantus Planus," will take place during the yearly festival Laus Polyphoniae (Flanders Festival Antwerp), and in close collaboration with the festival program. Participants will have a unique opportunity of hearing concerts related to the conference theme, which will thus include both chant and polyphony from Low Countries sources. A selection of conference papers will be published in the internationally peer-reviewed Journal of the Alamire Foundation in 2012 (www.arts.kuleuven.be/alamire).

Παρασκευή 19 Φεβρουαρίου 2010

Course and Workshop at CEU

Monasticism and Hagiography in Late Antiquity







Basic information
Level: 
Master's
CEU code: 
MS 5299
CEU credits: 
2
ECTS credits: 
4
Academic year: 
2009/2010
Semester: 
Winter
Start and end dates: 
11 Jan 2010 - 31 Mar 2010




CEU Information
CEU Instructor(s): 
Marianne Sághy





Course description
Brief course description: 
This seminar introduces students to recent scholarship and critical theory concerning the ascetic movement and its literary output. How did different communities define and institutionalize holiness? How did the charismatic ideal of holy man came to be appropriated by a Christian official, the bishop? The unveiling of hagiographical texts will helps us discover the functions of the saints and of their cult in various Christian communities.
Learning Outcomes: 
Familiarity with the sources, with hagiographic discourse and with the theoretical models of the social function of asceticism. Christian hagiography is a traditionalist genre constantly rewriting its own foundational discourses, therefore the understanding of the basic principles of textual interpretation and hagiographic research offers the key for the study of the entire literary genre from late antiquity to our own times. Students will learn how to use spiritual literature as an historical source, how to use critical theory in the interpretation of hagiographical texts, how to distinguish between rhetorics and propaganda, how to analyze the authorial intentions informing the text and how to read hagiography as a manifesto of social and spiritual ideals.
Assessment : 
Oral presentation of a chosen topic (50%), active participation in class (50%).
1., The Holy Man in Action
 Athanasius of Alexandria, „Life of St. Antony of Egypt.” Tr. D. Brakke. Medieval Hagiography. Ed. Thomas Head. New York-London: Routledge, 2001, 1-30.
2., Text and Theory: The Making of a Genre I.
Cox, Patricia: Biography in Late Antiquity. A Quest for the Holy Man. Berkeley- Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1983, ch. I. 
Van Uytfanghe, Marc. „L’hagiographie: un ’genre’ chrétien ou antique tardif?” Analecta Bollandiana 111 (1993): 135-188.
3., Text and Theory: The Making of a Genre II.
 Wilson, Anna: „Biographical Models: the Constantinian Period and Beyond.” Constantine: History, Historiography, and Legend. S. N. C. Lieu – D. Montserrat eds. London: Routledge, 1998, pp.107-135.
Cameron, Averil. „Form and Meaning: the Vita Constantini and the Vita Antonii.Greek Biography and Panegyrics in Late Antiquity. Eds. P. Rousseau – T. Hägg. Berkeley-Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2000: 72-88.
 4., Iconicity
 Francis, James A. “Living Icons: Tracing a Motif in Verbal and Visual Representation from the Second to Fourth Centuries C.E.” American Journal of Philology 124 (2003): 575-600.
 5., Spiritual Deserts and Representations of the Body
Goehring, James E., „The Dark Side of Landscape: Ideology and Power in the Christian Myth of the Desert.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 33 (2003): 437-452.
Brown, Peter, “The Desert Fathers: Anthony to Climacus.” The Body and Society. Men, Women and and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity. New York: Columbia University Press, 1988, pp. 214-240.
6., Social Function
Brown, Peter, „The Rise and Function of the Holy Man in Late Antiquity.” Journal of Roman Studies 61 (1971), 80-101 = Society and the Holy in Late Antiquity, Berkeley-Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1982, 103-152.
Rousseau, Philip, „The Historiography of Asceticism.” The Past Before Us. The Challenge of Historiographies of Late Antiquity. Eds. C. Straw- R. Lim. Turnhout: Brepols, 2004: 89-101.
5., Romancing the Hermit: Jerome
 Saint Jerome: The Life of Saint Paul the First Hermit. Tr. I. S. Kozik, The First Desert Hero: Sat. Jerome’s Vita Pauli. New York, Paulist Press, 1968.
http://home.newadvent.org/fathers/3008.htm
Rebenich, Stefan, Jerome. London: Routledge, 2002, 12-21.
6., Urban, Female, and Wandering Ascetes
Saint Jerome: Letter XXII (To Eustochium). Select letters of St. Jerome. Eds. Goold, George P. - Wright, F. A. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991, pp. 53-159.
Caner, Daniel. Wandering, begging monks : spiritual authority and the promotion of monasticism in late antiquity. Berkeley : University of California Press, 2002.
7., Dead Saints?
Trout, Dennis E. „Damasus and the Invention of Early Christian Rome.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 33:3 (2003), 517-536.
8., Explaining the Cult of the Saints
 Peter Brown, . Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1981.
Hayward, Paul Antony: „Demystifying the Role of Sanctity in Western Christendom.” The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Eds. J. Howard-Johnston – P. A. Hayward. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002, 115-142. 
9., Charisma and the Mitre
Rapp, Claudia, . Berkeley:  University of California Press, 2005.
10., Holy Bishops I: Ambrose of Milan
Paulinus of Milan, Life of Ambrose. Soldiers of Christ : Saints and Saints' lives from Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Ed. Th. F. X. Noble. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1995.
McLynn, Neil Brendan, . Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994, ch. 8, pp. 361-377.
11., Holy Bishops II: Augustine of Hippo
Possidius: Life of Augustine. Ed. Th. F. X. Noble. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1995.
Peter Brown: Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.
Elm,  Eva, Die Macht der Weisheit: Das Bild des Bischofs in der Vita Augustini des Possidius und anderen spatantiken und fruhmittelalterlichen Bischofsviten, Leiden: Brill, 2003.
12., Holy Bishops III: Martin of Tours
Sulpicius Severus,  The Life of Saint Martin. Tr.  Th. F. X. Head. . Ed. Th. F. X. Noble. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1995.
Stancliffe, Clare. .  Oxford: Clarendon Press,1983.


Intricate Interfaith Networks: The Variety of Jewish-Christian Contacts in the Middle Ages


Date: 
22 Feb 2010 - 9:00am - 23 Feb 2010 - 4:00pm
Building: 
Nador u. 9, Monument Building
Room: 
Gellner room
Event type: 
workshop
Event audience: 
Public to outside CEU





Contact details
CEU contact person: 
Gerhard Jaritz
E-mail: 
jaritzg@ceu.hu
Phone: 
327-3048





Organizers and Presenters
CEU organizers: 
Gerhard Jaritz
CEU organizer: 
Department of Medieval Studies
Christians and Jews populated medieval Europe from the English Channel and the Atlantic Ocean to the Baltic Sea and from the North Sea to the Mediterranean. Within these broad geographical limits groups and individuals set up an intricate network system of commerce, trade, finance as well as the exchange of professional knowledge from philosophical concepts to domestic medical know-how.
Recent scholarship has shown that the denomi¬national divide, although ever present and at times even violently so, did not stop people from forming ties and expanding in more intricate ways and forms than previously thought. At times, these networks functioned with what seems to be a disregard to the denominational and religious difference. This is by no means a simple and self evident statement. The theologi¬cal background regarding “other” faiths within each respective religion, strong social, religious and authoritative circles criticizing such contacts if not discouraging them altogether created a formidable opposition to these contacts and networks.
The workshop intends to address this situation from various angles and disciplinary approaches and to suggest possible avenues for explaining the phenomenon.


Intricate Interfaith Networks


 
      

The Variety of Jewish-Christian Contacts
in the Middle Ages




International Workshop in Medieval Studies
February 22 – 23, 2010
Central European University
Nádor utca 9
1051 Budapest
Gellner Room

Workshop organizers:

Ephraim Shoham Steiner (Beer Sheva)
Gerhard Jaritz (Budapest/Krems)


Information and workshop office:
Department of Medieval Studies
Central European University
1051 Budapest
Hungary


Tel.: +36 1 327-3051
Fax: +36 1 327-3055
Email: medstud@ceu.hu
 





PROGRAM
    
     Monday, February 22, 2010

      9:00   Welcome and Opening

      9:30  JONATHAN ELUKIN (Hartford):
                  Jews as Medieval Europeans

     10:30  Coffee

     11:00  CRISTIAN GASPAR (Budapest):
                  The Saint Who Worshiped the Jews and
                  Ignored the Mother of God: Tolerance and
                  Its Limits in the Vita S. Nicolai Peregrini
                  [BHL 6223]    

               PIERO CAPELLI (Venice):
               Nicolas Donin and Other Jewish Converts
                  in Jewish-Christian Public Disputations
                  in the Middle Ages

                  MARTHA KEIL (St. Pölten):
               What Were They Talking about?
                  The Question of Everyday Conversations
                  between Jews and Christians in Late
                  Medieval Towns
     12:30   Lunch     14:30   FLOCEL SABATÉ (LLeida):                  Jewish Neighborhood in Christian Towns 
                 (14th/15th-c. Catalonia)

                  EVELINE BRUGGER (St. Pölten):
               Neighbors, Business Partners, Victims:
                  Jewish-Christian Interaction in Austrian
                  Towns during the Persecutions of the
                  Fourteenth Century            


  15:30   Coffee

  16:00   KATALIN SZENDE (Budapest):
                 From Court Jews to Town Jews.
                 Changing Roles of Hungary's Jewish
                 Population in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth
                 Centuries

                 ETLEVA LALA (Elbasan/Budapest):
                 Christian-Jewish Communication Patterns
                  in Albanian Coastal Towns (13th-15th c.)

                 GERHARD JARITZ (Budapest/Krems):
                 Christian and Jewish Sumptuary Laws

    17:30   Book presentations 

   Tuesday, February 23, 2010

    9:30   LILACH ASSAF (Constance):
                 The Language of Names: Jewish Onomastics
                 in Late Medieval Germany, Identity and
                 Cultural Exchange

                 RAINER BARZEN (Trier):
                 Their Own Poor and the Poor of the Others

    10:30   Coffee

    11:00   EPHRAIM SHOHAM STEINER
                (Beer Sheva):
                   “This should not be shown to a gentile.”
                   Medico-magical Marginal Entries in
                   Medieval Franco-German Hebrew
                   Manuscripts and Their Social Significance

                TAMAS VISI (Olomouc):
                   The University, the Astronomical Clock,
                   and the Jews: The Formation of an
                   Ashkenazi Philosophical School in Early
                   Fifteenth-Century Prague           


     12:00     Lunch

     14:00    KATRIN KOGMAN-APPEL
                  (Beer Sheva):
                     Between the Italian Renaissance and
                     Southern German Book Art: Joel ben
                     Simeon and Cultural Exchange in the
                     Fifteenth Century

                      ZSÓFIA BUDA (Budapest):
                   Jewish and Christian Contribution
                      in Medieval Jewish Book Art – the
                      Hamburg Miscellany

      15:00     Coffee

       15:30     Summary and Final Discussion





 

Δευτέρα 1 Φεβρουαρίου 2010

The 25th International Conference on Medievalism: July 8-10, 2010 Leiden University

Conferences

The 25th International Conference on Medievalism: July 8-10, 2010
Leiden University
(Netherlands, 2010)
XXVe Conférence Internationale sur le Médiévalisme, organisée en partenariat avec Modernités médiévales
Dialogues transatlantiques : Parler du Moyen Age

Appel à communications Studies in Medievalism, en collaboration avec Modernités médiévales, invite à envoyer des propositions d’ateliers et de communications en vue de son colloque pluridisciplinaire annuel, qui aura lieu du 8 au 10 juillet 2010 à l’université de Groningen (Pays-Bas). Les communications porteront sur le médiévalisme, dans ses versants recherche et enseignement ; et plus précisément sur le double thème de cette année : « Dialogues transatlantiques / Parler du Moyen Age ». Ce thème est inspire par le cadre européen du colloque, et l’héritage de Paul Zumthor, élu à Groningen en 1948, pour son premier poste universitaire. D’une part, son livre, Parler du Moyen Age (1980) est l’un des ouvrages de référence du médiévalisme. D’autre part, Zumthor est le symbole même du dialogue transatlantique qui fonde les études médiévalistes : d’origine suisse, il a exercé en Europe avant de partir en Amérique du Nord. Alors que le « Moyen Age » sert à designer une période de l’histoire européenne, ce sont en effet des chercheurs et des artistes d’Amérique du Nord, en particulier, qui ont élaboré de nouvelles manières d’envisager cette période, en littérature, en peinture, dans la musique, le cinéma et d’autres médias. Enfin, l’œuvre de Zumthor témoigne de l’importance que revêt la réflexion théorique sur les concepts du Moyen Age et du médiéval.

Conférences plénières par Joep Leerssen (université d’Amsterdam), Richard Utz (Western Michigan University) and Michèle Gally (université Aix-Marseille).

Les communications (en anglais ou en français) pourront envisager les questions et sujets suivants (sans en exclure d’autres, en relation avec la question du médiévalisme)


• De quel « Moyen Age » parle-t-on, lorsque l’on parle du Moyen Age ? Comment est défini ce qui est « médiéval » ?
• Que peut apporter la « théorie européenne » aux chercheurs en médiévalisme d’Amérique du Nord ?
• Comment le Moyen Age européen est-il repensé dans d’autres traditions  ?
(par ex. : dans le western, les dessins animés japonais)?
• Variations sur le Gothique américain (architecture, peinture, musique)
• Echos médiévalistes du colonialisme : quelle théorie pour les médiévalismes (post)coloniaux ?
• Médiévalismes d’Amérique du Sud, d’Amadis à Borges : miroirs et contrepoints de l’Europe ?
• Appropriations du médiévalisme par les féministes américaines
• Médiévalisme et traductions (en particulier, français / anglais)
• Rôle des médiateurs culturels entre l’Europe et l’Amérique
• Médiévalisme et voyages / tourisme transatlantiques

Publication :
Une sélection de communications paraîtra dans The Year’s Work in Medievalism et/ou Studies in Medievalism ainsi que dans un volume en français.
Date butoir : 15 novembre
Merci d’envoyer une proposition d’environ 300 mots (20 à 30 lignes) à Alicia C. Montoya et Vincent Ferré:
A.C.Montoya@rug.nl / ferre@fabula.org

The annual International Conference on Medievalism (ICOM; known as the General Conference on Medievalism until 1993) began with two meetings at the University of Notre Dame in 1986 and 1987. Subsequent conferences were organized through the Newberry Library and Northeastern Illinois University (Chicago, Illinois: 1988), the United States Military Academy (1989), Burg Kaprun (jointly with the 5th Symposium on Mittelalter-Rezeption, Austria: 1990), the University of Delaware (1991), the University of South Florida (1992), the University of Leeds (UK: 1993), Montana State University (1994), the Higgins Armory Museum (Worcester, Massachusetts: 1995), Kalamazoo College (1996), Christ Church College (Canterbury, UK: 1997), University of Rochester (1998), Montana State University (1999), Hope College (Michigan: 2000), Buffalo State College (2001), the University of Northern Iowa (2002), St. Louis University (2003), University of New Brunswick (Canada: 2004), Towson University (Baltimore, Maryland: 2005), Ohio State University (Columbus, Ohio: 2006), University of Western Ontario (London, Ontario, Canada: 2007), Wesleyan College (Macon, Georgia, 2008), and Siena College (Loudonville, New York, 2009).

The conference organizers and the editorial boards of YWIM and SIM thank everyone who participated in making these conferences successful.
Additionally, Studies in Medievalism usually sponsors sessions at the International Congresses on Medieval Studies (Western Michigan University; Kalamazoo, Michigan) and the International Medieval Congress at the University of Leeds (UK). Conference proceedings, including papers from the annual ICOM and the Kalamazoo and Leeds sessions, have been published in The Year's Work in Medievalism.

Παρασκευή 8 Ιανουαρίου 2010

16th annual postgraduate medieval conference

Postgraduate Conference

BIRTHA Medieval Postgraduate Conference 2010: Language & Silence

26th-27th February 2010

The University of Bristol hosts the longest-running international medieval postgraduate conference in the UK. Each year we offer medievalists the opportunity to present their research, discuss ideas, and foster links bridging disciplinary and geographical boundaries. This year the conference is in its 16th year, and we are inviting proposals for papers from postgraduates and early career scholars on the theme of ‘Language and Silence’.
Issues of language and silence permeate both religious and political life in the Middle Ages: from attempts to engage with and communicate spiritual experience, to the complex negotiations involved in balancing the demands of the solitary religious life with the needs of the community, to the political pressures on everyday language in times when charges of heresy are a real concern. In private life, too, the ability or authority to speak was governed by a complex array of theological, philosophical and social codes. This conference aims to address issues such as these in the context of medieval life, and also some of the broader issues of language, and its absence, raised by such debate.


Source: http://www.bristol.ac.uk/medievalcentre/postgraduate-conference/index_html


.


26-27 February 2010. 'Language and Silence', the 16th annual postgraduate medieval conference, to be held at the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol. The University of Bristol hosts the longest-running international medieval postgraduate conference in the UK . Each year we offer medievalists the opportunity to present their research, discuss ideas, and foster links bridging disciplinary and geographical boundaries. This year we invite proposals for papers from postgraduates and early career scholars on the theme of ‘Language and Silence'. Issues of language and silence permeate both religious and political life in the Middle Ages: from attempts to engage with and communicate spiritual experience, to the complex negotiations involved in balancing the demands of the solitary religious life with the needs of the community, to the political pressures on everyday language in times when charges of heresy are a real concern. In private life, too, the ability or authority to speak was governed by a complex array of theological, philosophical and social codes. This conference aims to address issues such as these in the context of medieval life, and also some of the broader issues of language, and its absence, raised by such debate. Call for papers deadline: 8 January 2010. Further information: Edwina Thorn, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol, Graduate School of Arts, 7 Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1TB, UK; Edwina.Thorn@bristol.ac.uk

Source: http://www.leeds.ac.uk/ims/med_online/calendar2010.html

Language & Silence - 16th Annual Postgraduate Medieval Conference

Date:
26 February 2010 - 27 February 2010
Master Class with Professor Bernard McGinn (University of Chicago), ‘Communicating the Incommunicable: Mystical Ineffability from Origen to Catherine of Siena’
The University of Bristol hosts the longest-running international medieval postgraduate conference in the UK. Each year we offer medievalists the opportunity to present their research, discuss ideas, and foster links bridging disciplinary and geographical boundaries. This year we invite proposals for papers from postgraduates and early career scholars on the theme of ‘Language and Silence’.
Issues of language and silence permeate both religious and political life in the Middle Ages: from attempts to engage with and communicate spiritual experience, to the complex negotiations involved in balancing the demands of the solitary religious life with the needs of the community, to the political pressures on everyday language in times when charges of heresy are a real concern. In private life, too, the ability or authority to speak was governed by a complex array of theological, philosophical and social codes. This conference aims to address issues such as these in the context of medieval life, and also some of the broader issues of language, and its absence, raised by such debate.
Topics may include but are not limited to:
  • The said and the unsaid
  • Ineffability, inexpressibility and the limitations of language
  • The suppression of speech or ideas, whether psychological, social, political or religious
  • Interactions between language and silence in the religious life
  • The interaction between verbal and non-verbal languages
  • Interpretation and the construction of meaning
  • Texts that display a foregrounding of language
  • Issues of language and identity.
Papers should be no more than 20 minutes long.
Abstracts of 250-300 words should be sent by email (by preference) to: Edwina Thorn (Edwina.Thorn@bristol.ac.uk) or to Edwina Thorn, Centre for Medieval Studies, University of Bristol, Graduate School of Arts, 7 Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1TB, UK.
Deadline for receipt of abstracts: January 8th, 2010.
The conference is free of charge, and some bursaries to help cover travel costs might be available for presenters travelling long distances to attend. Further details (e.g. full programme, registration details and information about accommodation) will be posted online as they become available.
URL:
http://www.bristol.ac.uk/medievalcentre/
Conference organiser(s):
Edwina Thorn
Location:
University of Bristol

Event deadlines

Call for papers deadline:
8 January 2010

Contact details

Edwina Thorn

Source: http://www.history.ac.uk/events/conferences/1000