Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Renaissance. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Renaissance. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Τρίτη 2 Φεβρουαρίου 2010

MEDIEVALISTS EVENTS FOR FEBRUARY IN USA

11–13 February 2010. "Humanity and the Natural World in the Middle Ages and Renaissance," the 16th Annual ACMRS Conference, at Arizona State University, in Tempe, Arizona.
Call for papers: We welcome papers that explore any topic related to the study and teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and especially those that focus on this year's theme of humanity and the natural world, both in literal and metaphorical manifestations.
Selected papers related to the conference theme will be considered for publication in the conference volume of the Arizona Studies in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance series, published by Brepols Publishers (Belgium).
Before the conference, ACMRS will host a workshop on manuscript studies to be led by Timothy Graham, Director of the Institute for Medieval Studies at the University of New Mexico. The workshop will be Thursday afternoon, February 11, and participation will be limited to 25 participants, who will be determined by the order in which registrations are received. Email acmrs@asu.edu with "conference workshop" as the subject line to be added to the list. The cost of the workshop is $25 and is in addition to the regular conference registration fee.
The conference registration fee is $95 ($45 for students and emeriti/ae faculty) and includes welcoming and farewell receptions, two days of concurrent sessions (Friday and Saturday), and keynote address. Please note that there will be an opening reception Thursday evening, but there will be no sessions that day.
The deadline for proposals is 9:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time on 16 November 2009. Proposals must include audio/visual requirements and any other special requests. Subsequent a/v requests may not be honored without additional charge. In order to streamline the committee review process, submissions will only be accepted at http://link.library.utoronto.ca/acmrs/conference/ from 1 June through 16 November 2009. Questions? Call 480-965-9323 or e-mail acmrs@asu.edu.
17–20 February 2010. "Crusades: Medieval Worlds in Conflict," the Second International Symposium on Crusade Studies will be held at Saint Louis University in St. Louis, Missouri. The focus will be on the “worlds” of the Mediterranean and the impact of the crusades on them.
Plenary speakers include Michael Angold (University of Edinburgh), Ronnie Ellenblum (Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Eva Haverkamp (Rice University), Ahmet T. Karamustafa (Washington University), Christopher MacEvitt (Dartmouth College), Suleiman Mourad (Smith College), Jonathan Phillips (Royal Holloway, University of London), and John H. Pryor (University of Sydney).
Phase I of the symposium will take place on the evenings of 7, 18, and 19 February, when two distinguished speakers will deliver plenary lectures of general interest followed by questions and discussion. Phase II will begin on Friday, 19 February. It will consist of scholarly papers of twenty minutes in length delivered in concurrent and plenary sessions.
Call for papers: Twenty minute scholarly papers will be delivered on 19 and 20 February in concurrent and plenary sessions. All topics relating to the crusading movement are welcome. Phase II will conclude with a plenary roundtable discussion, reception, and a banquet. Abstracts should be submitted by mail, fax, or e-mail by 1 December 2009. Contact: Second International Symposium on Crusade Studies, Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Saint Louis Univ., 3800 Lindell Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63108 (314-977-7180; fax: 314-977-1603; cmrs@slu.edu; http://crusades.slu.edu/symposium/).
The International Symposium on Crusade Studies is a quadrennial activity of the Crusades Studies Forum at Saint Louis University. It is sponsored by grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at Saint Louis University.
18–20 February 2010. "The Ends of Romance?" the 25th annual conference of the Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM) will be held jointly with the Illinois Medieval Association (IMA), at Dominican University in River Forest, Illinois. The Keynote speakers will be Robert Hanning (Columbia University, Emeritus) and Tom Hanks (Baylor University).
Contact: Mickey Sweeney, English, Dominican University, 7900 West Division, River Forest, IL 60305 (708-524-6940; msweeney@dom.edu; http://domin.dom.edu/imam).
19 February 2010. "Fear and Loathing: Encountering the Other in Anglo-Saxon England," the Sixth Annual ASSC Graduate Student Conference, sponsored by the Anglo-Saxon Studies Colloquium (ASSC), Columbia University, and the Harvard Committee on Medieval Studies, to be held at Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Harvard University, in partnership with the Anglo-Saxon Studies Colloquium invites submissions for the Sixth Annual Graduate Student Conference of the ASSC. The theme of this year's conference will explore various instances of fear and loathing in the literatures and cultures of early medieval Northern Europe (Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Scandinavian). This could include fears and anxieties produced by encounters with cultural outsiders as well as internal conflicts within a single society or individual. (HarvardAngloSaxon@gmail.com; ASSC@columbia.edu; http://www.columbia.edu/cu/assc.)
19–20 February 2010. "Authorship" is the theme of the Eighteenth Annual Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque Interdisciplinary Symposium, organized by the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at the University of Miami, in Coral Gables. The two keynote speakers are Jane Tylus, Professor of Italian Studies and Comparative Literature, New York University and William E. Wallace, Barbara Murphy Distinguished Professor of Art History, Washington University in St. Louis. The Symposium Co-organizers are Perri Lee Roberts, Senior Associate Dean for the Arts and Humanities and Maria Galli Stampino, Department of Modern Languages and Literatures.
Call for papers: the organizers invite papers on the many facets of authorship in the pre- and early-modern periods. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: anonymity; workshop or group works; collective or collaborative authorship; relationships between sponsors and authors; writing vs. dictating; writings on creative endeavors; the author's voice in a text; anthologies; collections of written works; citations; silvae; salon and academy writing; implied author, implied readers; actors as authors; improvisation. Papers should not exceed 20 minutes. Acceptances will be confirmed no later than 1 December 2009. A one-page abstract and brief c.v. should be sent no later than 1 November 2009 to Michelle Prats, Dept. of Modern Languages and Literatures, Univ. of Miami, P.O. Box 248093, Coral Gables, Florida 33124-2074 (m.prats@miami.edu; http://www.as.miami.edu/mll/events/). Electronic submissions are encouraged.
19–20 February 2010: "The Past's Digital Presence: Database, Archive, and Knowledge Work in the Humanities," a Graduate Student Symposium at Yale University.
How is digital technology changing methods of scholarly research with pre-digital sources in the humanities? If the "medium is the message," then how does the message change when primary sources are translated into digital media? What kinds of new research opportunities do databases unlock and what do they make obsolete? What is the future of the rare book and manuscript library and its use? What biases are inherent in the widespread use of digitized material? How can we correct for them? Amidst numerous benefits in accessibility, cost, and convenience, what concerns have been overlooked?
Keynote Speaker: Peter Stallybrass, University of Pennsylvania Colloquium Guest Speaker: Jacqueline Goldsby, University of Chicago
Call for papers: we invite graduate students to submit paper proposals for an interdisciplinary symposium that will address how databases and other digital technologies are making an impact on our research in the humanities. The graduate student panels will be moderated by a Yale faculty member or library curator with a panel respondent.
Potential paper topics include:
· The Future of the History of the Book
· Public Humanities
· Determining Irrelevance in the Archive
· Defining the Key-Word
· The Material Object in Archival Research
· Local Knowledge, Global Access
· Digital Afterlives
· Foucault, Derrida, and the Archive
· Database Access Across the Profession
· Mapping and Map-Based Platforms
· Interactive Research
Please e-mail a one-page proposal along with a c.v. to pdp@yale.edu. Deadline for submissions is 10 September 2009. Accepted panelists will be notified by 1 October 2009. We ask that all graduate-student panelists pre-circulate their paper among their panels by 20 January 2010. Please contact Molly Farrell and Heather Klemann (pdp@yale.edu) with any additional inquiries. For more information about conference events, please visit our forthcoming website (http://digitalhumanities.yale.edu/pdp [October]).20 February 2010. "Symposium on Disease and Disability in the Middle Ages and Renaissance." At the Newberry Library, Chicago (http://www.newberry.org/renaissance/conf-inst/diseasedisability.html).
Everyone who registers in advance for the conference will receive a voucher for one free admission to "Music Hath Charms: Disease and Disability in Music," a concert performed by The Newberry Consort at 7 p.m., after the symposium's afternoon session, at the Newberry Library.
Funds may be available for graduate students and faculty of Consortium institutions to travel to the Newberry Library to attend this program. Contact your Representative Council member or the Center for Renaissance Studies.
This conference will include a continental breakfast, as well as a reception at the end of the day. While there is no fee to attend this event, participants must register in advance by calling the Center for Renaissance Studies at 312.255.3514 or e-mailing (renaissance@newberry.org).
25–27 February 2010. "Les Bibles atlantiques: Le manuscrit biblique à l'époque de la réforme ecclésiastique du XIe siècle," an international colloquium to be held at the University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Les Facultés de Théologie et des Lettres de l'Université de Genève, en collaboration avec la Maison de l'Histoire de L'Université de Genève, la Bibliothèque de Genève, le Centro Storico Benedettino Italiano et la Faculté de Lettres de l'Université de Cassino (Italie), organise un Colloque international sur les Bibles atlantiques. Le Colloque international de Genève représentera la première occasion pour faire le bilan historiographique des recherches consacrées à la production, la circulation et l'emploi des Bibles atlantiques; il constituera également un moment précieux d'échanges et de confrontation entre les spécialistes et tous ceux qui, dans leurs recherches d'archives et dans les fonds médiévaux, se sont rapprochés de ces manuscrits.
Les Bibles atlantiques, produites entre la moitié du XIe et la moitié du XIIe siècle dans la région de Rome, constituent un genre particulier du manuscrit biblique. La production et la circulation de ces manuscrits bibliques, présentant des caractères spécifiques et un degré plutôt élevé d'uniformité de tous les caractères matériels et textuels, s'inscrivent dans le mouvement de renouveau moral et spirituel de l'Eglise au XIe siècle que les historiens appellent couramment la Réforme grégorienne. Avec leurs caractéristiques matérielles et textuelles, les Bibles atlantiques semblent bien répondre à l'exigence des réformateurs romains de définir un modèle qui puisse s'imposer par l'autorité théologique du contenu et par la monumentalité de l'aspect extérieur.
Comme les études les plus récentes l'ont montré, les problématiques liées à la réalisation des Bibles atlantiques, ainsi qu'au contexte de la production, de la circulation et de l'utilisation de ces livres, demandent nécessairement une étude interdisciplinaire de spécialistes en histoire médiévale, en philologie et histoire de la Vulgate, en science de la Liturgie et en histoire du livre manuscrit.
Après la grande exposition de l'année 2000, une rencontre sur les Bibles atlantiques entre les spécialistes s'impose, afin que chacun dans son domaine spécifique puisse croiser les approches sur ces objets monumentaux. Ainsi, cette manifestation permettra d'aborder le phénomène des Bibles atlantiques selon différentes perspectives d'analyse combinant histoire culturelle, religieuse et matérielle avec le contexte historique et la liturgie. De même, les aspects textuels, codicologiques, paléographies et ornementaux du manuscrit seront largement traités.
Les variétés et le caractère interdisciplinaire des recherches des intervenants au Colloque international de Genève de 2010 permettront d'approfondir les connaissances sur les Bibles atlantiques ainsi que sur le contexte historique et culturel dans lequel ce genre du manuscrit biblique a été conçu, réalisé et diffusé.
Dans le courant de l'historiographie matérielle, d'abord, les méthodes et les procédés techniques adoptés pour la réalisation de ces livres géants devront être élucidés. Les systèmes de distribution des tâches du travail de copie et d'exécution de l'ornementation visant à optimiser les temps de travail des copistes et des enlumineurs seront également abordés. Les centres de production de ces manuscrits en Italie et dans les autres régions de l'Empire seront identifiés et localisés, pour ainsi vérifier l'existence d'un véritable réseau qui aurait garantit la circulation de connaissances, savoirs faire, techniques de construction, mais aussi de modèles du manuscrit biblique. La réalisation d'un manuscrit géant contenant le texte complet de la Vulgate a nécessairement posé plusieurs problèmes d'ordre technique, ainsi que des contraintes liées à d'organisation et à la distribution du travail entre les différents artisans du livre, qui auraient vraisemblablement opéré en équipe et sur plusieurs exemplaires à la fois. L'analyse comparative de ces exemplaires permettra de repérer l'emploi de procédés et de techniques analogues adoptés dans des régions différentes.
Dans le domaine de la philologie et de l'histoire de la Vulgate au Moyen Age, le Colloque international de Genève permettra de combler, au moins en partie, une lacune concernant justement le XIe siècle qui a pourtant vu nombre d'innovations en matière de production du livre et de révision du texte biblique. En effet, si d'importantes recherches ont été consacrées à l'histoire de la Bible du IXe siècle, l'histoire du texte de la Vulgate entre le Xe et le XIIe siècle a été à peine abordée. Par le biais de l'étude de la recension des Bibles atlantiques, nous pourrons contribuer à mieux connaître quels étaient les textes de la Bible latine qui circulaient effectivement à Rome au XIe siècle et qui ont été utilisés en tant que sources pour la rédaction des ces manuscrits. En particulier, un aspect qui sera forcement abordé concerne l'établissement du texte biblique à copier, dans une époque où le Canon des Ecritures Saintes n'avait pas encore été établi d'une manière définitive : le choix des livres considérés comme canoniques et l'ordre de ceux-ci ne sont que certains éléments du travail d'édition accomplie sur la Vulgate de ces manuscrits par les réformateurs romains.
D'ailleurs, ces Bibles monumentales, conçues en tant qu'emblème de la réforme ecclésiastique, connaissent également une utilisation pratique dans les communautés monastiques et canoniales auxquelles elles étaient destinées dès l'origine. L'emploi liturgique des Bibles atlantiques dans la célébration quotidienne de l'Office divin est ainsi un aspect sur lequel des recherches complémentaires sont nécessaires. De plus, à partir de ces manuscrits et de leur circulation, certains aspects de la vie religieuse locale, tels que les rapports hiérarchiques entre les hauts prélats et le clergé, ainsi que l'activité pastorale des évêques qui figurent parmi les promoteurs de la réforme et, en même temps, parmi les commanditaires des Bibles atlantiques, seront reconstitués.
Enfin, ce Colloque permettra de s'interroger sur les rapports entre la production des Bibles atlantiques italiennes et la production contemporaine d'autres manuscrits bibliques réalisés dans d'autres régions de l'Empire, comme les Bibles géantes d'Echternach, de Lobbes et d'Admont qui, toujours liées au milieu de la réforme ecclésiastique du XIe siècle, présentent, elles aussi, des dimensions monumentales.
Le Comité scientifique lance un Appel à contribution adressé tout spécialement aux jeunes chercheurs (Doctorants ou équivalents) pour une conférence concernant le sujet traité dans le Colloque international de Genève. Les conférences pourront être rédigées en français (de préférence), en italien, en anglais ou en allemand. Les propositions (1000 signes au maximum) sont à retourner à Mme Nadia Togni par courrier électronique avant le 30 septembre 2009. Une réponse sera donnée à partir du 15 octobre 2009. Contact: Nadia Togni, Faculté de théologie - Uni Bastions - 5, rue De-Candolle - CH-1211 Genève 4 (Nadia.Togni@unige.ch).
27 February 2010. "Monastic and Religious Life in the Middle Ages," the 34th annual meeting of the Mid-American Medieval Association will be held at Conception Abbey, near Maryville, Missouri. Papers on any medieval topic will be considered.
The keynote speaker will be William Courtenay, Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin, Madison; his topic is "Medieval Universities as Religious Communities."
Call for papers: Please send a one-page abstract to Brother Thomas Sullivan (660-944-2860; fax 660-944-2800; thomassull@gmail.com). The abstracts are due no later than 15 December 2009. Graduate students are eligible for the Jim Falls Paper Prize and must submit a copy of their completed paper electronically to Jim Falls at fallsj@umkc.edu no later than 1 February 2010. For updates, info on registration and more, check the MAMA website (http://www.midamericamedievalassociation.org; http://www.conceptionabbey.org/).

Source: http://www.medievalacademy.org/calendar/calendar_conferences.htm

Κυριακή 24 Ιανουαρίου 2010

OXFORD CENTRE for LATE ANTIQUITY


Leverhulme Lectures

Thomas Mathews (New York University):

Byzantine Icons as a link in a chain of cultic panel paintings stretching from Antiquity to the Renaissance


Mondays 4–6pm, Lecture Room 1, Oriental Institute

18 January (Week 1)
An introduction to the corpus of panel paintings of the gods from Roman Egypt
25 January (Week 2)
Archeological evidence from the Fayum of the context of paintings in Karanis, Tebtynis and Theadelphia
1 February (Week 3)
The pagan religious tradition of making votive offerings of images, and its survival in Roman culture
8 February (Week 4)
The earliest evidence of Christian cultic images in the 2nd and 3rd  centuries


15 February (Week 5)
Icons in church and the Eusebian theological dilemma of representations of Christ
22 February (Week 6)
The early Christian icons of St. Catherine’s, Sinai: Votive offerings and dedications

1 March (Week 7)
The survival of pagan icons into the eighth century, and the confusion of pagan and Christian images
8 March (Week 8)
Icons as carriers of important themes in European art: the mother goddess, the enthroned god; sacra conversazione triptychs; the hierarchically organized double-register image

Παρασκευή 8 Ιανουαρίου 2010

The Ends of Romance? Illinois Medieval Association & Medieval Association of the Midwest Conference February 18-20, 2010 0 Keynote speakers: Prof. Tom Hanks, Baylor University Prof. Robert Hanning, Columbia University Dominican University, River Forest, IL

"The Ends of Romance" - February 18-20, 2010 at Dominican University, River Forest, IL




Illinois Medieval Association & Medieval Association of the Midwest
contact email:
msweeney@dom.edu
cfp categories:
medieval
renaissance
The Illinois Medieval Association and Medieval Association of the Midwest invites proposals for papers on the theme of "The Ends of Romance?". We are thinking about this topic in the broadest of terms and invite proposals from history, music, art history, theology, English, and language studies as well as any other areas of interest.
The romances have often been considered to be an access point into the cultures of the medieval world, and we would be interested in examining why, how, and if we should be having such critical discussions. As a second strand to the conference we will also be examining penitential/ sacramental thinking and how it relates to these themes in the middle ages.

Conference Website with a form for the "CFP" and information on fees, housing, travel, etc: http://domin.dom.edu/imam/
Our two keynote addresses will be given by:
Prudential Penitence:
Robert Hanning, Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, will examine the nature and implications of the medieval adaptation of aural confession by the Church, which required from her members exercise of ethical and rhetorical practice originating in classical antiquity. Then, he will explore some of the ways in which "prudential penitence" was appropriated by authors such as Geoffrey Chaucer and Giovanni Boccaccio as a component of some of their most trenchant and most amusing fictions about both clergy and laity. His forthcoming book, Serious Play: Crises of Desire and Authority in the Poetry of Ovid, Chaucer, and Ariosto is to be published by the Columbia University Press. This event co-sponsored by the Department of English and the Illinois Medieval Association conference.
Malory and the Christian Happy Ending:
D. Thomas Hanks, Jr., is Professor of English Literature at Baylor University. He will speaking about Malory's Morte Darthur which partakes of the nature of a "fairy story," as J. R. R. Tolkien defines fairy stories. As such, it embodies a Secondary World which includes magic, perilous realms, unexpected magical dangers (e.g., Morgan), as well as the sun, the moon, the stars above, and ordinary humans going about their business as best they can (to paraphrase Tolkien's On Fairy Stories). It also contains what Tolkien calls a "eucatastrophe"-a happy ending which partakes of the nature of what Malory would have seen as the evangelion-a specifically Christian happy ending.
Papers delivered at the conference are eligible for publication in Essays In Medieval Studies (IMA) or Enarratio (MAM).

 Schedule

Opening night of the conference: Thursday, February 18, 2010

Registration 6:00pm-7:00pm Parmer Hall /Dominican University Keynote Address I
Prudential Penitence: Robert Hanning,
7:00 pm / Bluhm Lecture Hall - Parmer Hall /Dominican University
Robert Hanning, Professor Emeritus of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, will examine the nature and implications of the medieval adaptation of aural confession by the Church, which required from her members exercise of ethical and rhetorical practice originating in classical antiquity. Then, he will explore some of the ways in which "prudential penitence" was appropriated by authors such as Geoffrey Chaucer and Giovanni Boccaccio as a component of some of their most trenchant and most amusing fictions about both clergy and laity. His forthcoming book, Serious Play: Crises of Desire and Authority in the Poetry of Ovid, Chaucer, and Ariosto is to be published by the Columbia University Press. This event co-sponsored by the Department of English and the Illinois Medieval Association conference.
Reception to follow

Friday February 19, 2010

8:00–12:00 pm Registration Parmer Hall/ Dominican University
8:00–9:00 am Continental Breakfast
9:00–10:30 am Sessions
10:30–11:00 am Coffee
11:00–12:30 pm Sessions
12:45–2:00 pm Lunch
2:00–3:30 pm Sessions
3:30–4:00 pm Coffee
4:00–5:30 pm Sessions
6:00 pm Those signed-up for Chicago Symphony Hall event will meet at the front of Dominican’s Parmer Hall
to catch bus; for more information see the Registration page.

Saturday February 20, 2010

9:00-9:30 am Coffee and Continental Breakfast Keynote Address II:
Malory and the Christian Happy Ending: Thomas Hanks
9:30 am Bluhm Lecture Hall /Parmer Hall /Dominican University
D. Thomas Hanks, Jr., is Professor of English Literature at Baylor University. He will speaking about Malory's Morte Darthur which partakes of the nature of a "fairy story," as J. R. R. Tolkien defines fairy stories. As such, it embodies a Secondary World which includes magic, perilous realms, unexpected magical dangers (e.g., Morgan), as well as the sun, the moon, the stars above, and ordinary humans going about their business as best they can (to paraphrase Tolkien's On Fairy Stories). It also contains what Tolkien calls a “eucatastrophe”–a happy ending which partakes of the nature of what Malory would have seen as the evangelion–a specifically Christian happy ending.

Source: http://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/node/34646

Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies Conference Submission System Humanity and the Natural World in the Middle Ages and Renaissance



Humanity and the Natural World
in the Middle Ages and Renaissance

11 - 13 February 2010 in Tempe, Arizona

ACMRS invites session and paper proposals for its annual
interdisciplinary conference to be held February 11 - 13, 2010 in Tempe,
Arizona. We welcome papers that explore any topic related to the study
and teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and especially those
that focus on this year\'s theme of humanity and the natural world, both
in literal and metaphorical manifestations.

Selected papers related to the conference theme will be considered for
publication in the conference volume of the Arizona Studies in the
Middle Ages and the Renaissance series, published by Brepols Publishers
(Belgium).

The conference keynote speaker will be Pamela O. Long, an independent
historian who has published widely in late medieval and Renaissance
history of science and technology, and intellectual history. Her recent
works includes Obelisk: A History (co-authored with Brian Curran,
Anthony Grafton, and Benjamin Weiss, MIT Press, 2009); and a three
volume edition, translation, and group of studies of a book written by a
fifteenth century oarsman: The Book of Michael of Rhodes: A
Fifteenth-Century Maritime Manuscript (co-edited with David McGee and
Alan Stahl, MIT Press, 2009). She is at work on a cultural history of
engineering in late sixteenth-century Rome.

Before the conference, ACMRS will host a workshop on manuscript studies
to be led by Timothy Graham, Director of the Institute for Medieval
Studies at the University of New Mexico. The workshop will be Thursday
afternoon, February 11, and participation will be limited to 25
participants, who will be determined by the order in which registrations
are received. Email acmrs@asu.edu with \"conference workshop\" as the
subject line to be added to the list. The cost of the workshop is $25
and is in addition to the regular conference registration fee.

The conference registration fee is $95 ($45 for students and emeriti/ae
faculty) and includes welcoming and farewell receptions, two days of
concurrent sessions (Friday and Saturday), and keynote address. Please
note that there will be an opening reception Thursday evening, but there
will be no sessions that day.

The deadline for proposals is 9:00 p.m. Mountain Standard Time on 16
October 2009. Proposals must include audio/visual requirements and any
other special requests. In order to streamline the committee review
process, submissions will only be accepted at
http://link.library.utoronto.ca/acmrs/conference/ from 1 June through 16
October 2009. Questions? Call 480-965-9323 or email acmrs@asu.edu .

Source: http://www.scholares.net/index.php?Entry-20091003185120-_Call_for_Papers_-_Humanity_and_the_Natu...