Friday, August 27, 2010

Call for Papers: “Reading the Middle Ages”

Call for Papers



“Reading the Middle Ages”



The Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley

invite submissions for the

UC Berkeley conference on the practice of reading in the Middle Ages



25-27 March 2011

UC Berkeley



Keynote Address by

Rita Copeland

Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn

Endowed Term Professor in the Humanities

at the University of Pennsylvania


Our knowledge of late antique and medieval culture derives primarily from the way in which we read today the manuscripts, images, and artifacts that were created and read in the past. The various intersecting and discrete social strata spanning the Middle Ages each practiced radically different methods of reading, in the broadest possible sense of the term. From the monasteries where the writings and stories of the classical period were transmitted and preserved, to the stained-glass windows greeting worshipers of even the lowest social classes, each reading practice provides us with invaluable information about what the people we study may have valued as well as how they lived and communicated with one another.



This conference will take up the variety of reading practices at play in the Middle Ages as the cornerstone to an exploration of medieval culture. However, proposals are encouraged to push our modern conceptions of reading into new territory, finding medieval reading practiced in ways we would not expect, challenging the way in which we read now, and asking questions of our relationship to medieval texts. Above all, we invite papers from a wide range of disciplines, especially ones that do not limit themselves to a treatment of literary or textual reading, but instead reach beyond the scope of the manuscript page to archeology and the reading of time through physical remains, art and the reading of images, et cetera.



We look forward to welcoming you to our beautiful campus for what promises to be an exciting and intellectually stimulating weekend.



Please send 300-word abstracts for twenty-minute papers to Graduate Medievalists at Berkeley ( graduatemedievalists@gmail.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ) by Friday, 12 November 2010.



For more information on the conference and GMB, please visit www.graduatemedievalists.org



Sincerely,

Lauren Chiarulli, R.D. Perry, and Benjamin Saltzman

GMB Co-chairs

Conference Organizing Committee

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