Sunday, October 23, 2011
Hortulus Journal CFP: Space and Place in the Medieval Imagination
Subject:
Hortulus Journal CFP: Space and Place in the Medieval Imagination
From:
"Hortulus"
Date:
10/17/11 11:33 PM
To:
med-grad@groups.sas.upenn.edu
Hortulus: The Online Graduate Journal of Medieval Studies
Special Call For Papers for Issue on Medieval Space and Place
SUBMISSION DEADLINE FOR VOLUME 7, Issue 1: 1 March 2012
Hortulus: The Online Graduate Journal of Medieval Studies is a refereed
journal devoted to the literature, history, and culture of the medieval
world. Published electronically twice a year, its mission is to present a
forum in which graduate students from around the globe may share their
ideas. Article submissions on the selected theme are welcome in any
discipline and period of Medieval Studies. We are also interested in book
reviews on recent works: interested reviewers should send a query,
indicating the book they would like to review.
Our upcoming issue will be devoted to representations and interpretations
of spatial order, and place as a socially constructed category, in the
art, chronicles, letters, literature, and music of the Middle Ages. Place
and space theories have manifested themselves in Medieval Studies recently
in a number of ways, from analysis of specific spaces and places, such as
gardens, forests, cities, and the court, to spatially theorized topics
such as travel narratives, nationalism, and the open- or closedness of
specific medieval cultural areas. Over an array of subjects, the spatial
turn challenges scholars to re-think how humans create the world around
them, through both physical and mental processes. Articles should explore
the meaning of space/place in the past by situating it in its precise
historical context.
Possible article topics include, but are not limited to:
Medieval representations of spatial order
The sense of place in the construction of social identities
Mapping and spatial imagination
Topographies of meaningful places
Beyond the binary of center/periphery
Spatial policies of separation: ethnicity, religion, or gender
Travel and the sense of place
Creating landscape
The idea of place in medieval religious culture
Pilgrimage
Workplaces
Intimate space, public place
Liminality and proximity as social categories
The 2011 issue of Hortulus: The Online Graduate Journal of Medieval
Studies will be published in May of 2012. All graduate students are
welcome to submit their articles and book reviews or send their queries
via email to submit@hortulus.net before March 1, 2012.
Hortulus: The Online Graduate Journal of Medieval Studies,www.hortulus.net
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