Revealing Records V – Call for Papers
Revealing Records V will be held at King’s College London on 24th May 2013. This postgraduate conference series brings together researchers working with a wide range of sources from across the medieval world; papers that adopt an interdisciplinary approach, drawing upon palaeography, archaeology or other related disciplines are particularly welcome.
Postgraduate students who are interested in giving a paper should send an abstract of no more than 200 words, providing their name, institution, contact information, paper title and synopsis by Friday 14th December 2012.
For more information or to submit an abstract, please contact: revealingrecords@gmail.com
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Heroic Age 15
The editorial staff of The Heroic Age is pleased to announce the release of Issue 15. Issue 15 contains articles on Late Antiquity, Arthuriana, and Folklore, as well as an edition of the Annales Cambriae from the time of St. Patrick through 682. The issue can be found at http://www.heroicage.org/issues/15/toc.php. The editorial staff would like to thank all our contributors, staff, and volunteer copy-editors. We would also like to thank Memorial University of Newfoundland for continuing to host The Heroic Age.
Larry Swain
EIC, Heroic Age
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Call for Papers for the International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, MI, May 9-12, 2013
Session Sponsored by the Anglo-Saxon Hagiography Society (ASHS): Anonymous Anglo-Saxon Prose Saints' Lives We invite paper abstracts for a session dedicated to anonymous Anglo-Saxon
hagiographical prose in either Old English or Anglo-Latin. There is a long tradition of studying vernacular saints’ lives in Anglo-Saxon Studies, but a disproportionate amount of scholarly attention has been given to verse hagiographies and to those by Ælfric of Eynsham, the most famous named author of Old English prose saints’ lives. Even though 40% of the extant prose corpus is non-Ælfrician, there remains a considerable gap in scholarship when it comes to anonymous Old English prose; similarly, Anglo-Latin saints’ lives have received little attention. These texts warrant close study, not only because they remain understudied, but also because they can provide valuable insight into Anglo-Saxon religious culture and its concerns when approached as independent literary products in their own right.
Please submit abstracts of no more than 500 words
and the Participant Information Form
(available at http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html) by September
15 to the session organizers: Robin Norris (robin_norris@carleton.ca) and Johanna Kramer
(kramerji@missouri.edu). If preferred, hard copies may be sent to
Johanna Kramer, Dept. of English, 114 Tate Hall, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211.
Monsters
MONSTERS I: Haunting the Middle Ages Organizer: Asa Simon Mittman, California State University-Chico; Sarah Alison Miller, Duquesne University This panel proposes to explore those monstrous figures that haunt the borders between the living and the dead: ghosts, revenants, animated corpses and skeletons. What do these figures reveal about the porous boundaries between life and death, soul and body? What do they communicate about the relationship between haunting, trauma and memory? How is haunting associated with space, whether that space be a geographical location, a physical structure, a fantasized realm, or human consciousness? How were these figures depicted in art and material culture? How might monster studies be considered a haunted domain? How might the Middle Ages be considered a haunted age? Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be sent to Asa Simon Mittman (asmittman@csuchico.edu) or Sarah Alison Miller (millers2578@duq.edu). Also, please include a completed Participant Information Form: http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF). Deadline for submissions to this session: September 15. Any papers not included in this session will be forwarded to the Congress Committee for possible inclusion in the General Sessions. Note, paper proposals will appear on the Mearcstapa blog: http://medievalmonsters.blogspot.com/ MONSTERS II: Down to the skin: Images of Flaying in the Middle Ages Organizers: Larissa Tracy, Longwood University and Asa Simon Mittman, California State University-Chico Presider: Larissa Tracy >From images of Saint Bartholomew holding his skin in his arms, to scenes of demons flaying the damned within the mouth of hell, to grisly execution in Havelok the Dane, to laws that prescribed it as a punishment for treason, this session explores the gruesome, even monstrous, practice of skin removalflayingin the Middle Ages. This session proposes to examine the widely diverse examples of this grisly practice, and explore the layered responses to skin-removal in art, history, literature, manuscript studies and law. How common was this punishment in practice? How does art reflect spiritual response? How is flaying, in any form, used to further political or religious goals? The papers in this session will literally get beneath the skin of medieval sensibilities regarding punishment and sacrifice in a nuanced discussion of medieval flaying. Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be sent to Asa Simon Mittman (asmittman@csuchico.edu) or Larissa (Kat) Tracy (kattracy@comcast.net). Also, please include a completed Participant Information Form: http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/submissions/index.html#PIF). Deadline for submissions to this session: September 15. Any papers not included in this session will be forwarded to the Congress Committee for possible inclusion in the General Sessions. Note, paper proposals will appear on the Mearcstapa blog: http://medievalmonsters.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________
Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in the Reception of the Ancient World
Annual Meeting of Postgraduates in the Reception of the Ancient World
AMPRAW 2012
10th – 11th December 2012 at the University of Birmingham
We are now welcoming abstracts (of 200 words) for proposed papers of 20 minutes.
We welcome proposals for all areas of research in the reception of the ancient world, including work-in-progress.
Confirmed Guest Speakers:
Keynote: Dr Elena Theodorakopoulos (Birmingham) and Dr Fiona Cox (Exeter)
Practitioner-led Workshops:
Josephine Balmer (Author, Translator)
Gwyneth Lewis (Poet and Writer)
Dr Tony Keen (Associate Lecturer at the Open University)
AMPRAW
is an opportunity for postgraduates working in the reception of the
ancient world, from a variety of disciplines, to present research papers
to their academic peers. New for AMPRAW 2012 postgraduate papers will
be supplemented with practitioner-led workshops enabling early career
researchers to actually speak to and hear from the kinds of people on
whom their research is based.
Details to Register will be sent out in July 2012.
Please see our website for updates www.ampraw2012.wordpress.com
Best wishes,
The AMPRAW 2012 Committee
Polly Toney, Sarah Wilkowski, Holly Ranger.
34th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum
34th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum
Plymouth State University
Plymouth, NH, USA
Friday and Saturday April 19-20, 2013
“Travel, Contact, Exchange”
Keynote speaker: David Simon, Art History, Colby College
We invite abstracts in medieval and Early Modern studies that consider how travel, contact, and
exchange functioned in personal, political, religious, and aesthetic realms.
● How, when, where, and why did cultural exchange happen?
● What are the roles of storytelling or souvenirs in experiences of pilgrimage or Crusade?
● What is exchanged, lost, or left behind in moments of contact?
● How do such moments of contact and exchange hold meaning today?
Papers need not be confined to the theme but may cover many aspects of medieval and Renaissance
life, literature, languages, art, philosophy, theology, history and music.
Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome.
Undergraduate student papers or sessions require faculty sponsorship.
This year’s keynote speaker is David L. Simon. He is Jetté Professor of Art at Colby College, where he has
received the Basset Award for excellence in teaching. He holds graduate degrees from Boston University
and the Courtauld Institute of Art of the University of London. Among his publications are the catalogue
of Spanish and southern French Romanesque sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The
Cloisters and studies on Romanesque architecture and sculpture in Aragon and Navarra, Spain. He is coauthor
of recent editions of Janson’s History of Art: The Western Tradition and Janson’s Basic History of
Western Art. Since 2007 he has co-directed an annual summer course and conference on Romanesque
art for the University of Zaragoza, Spain.
For more information visit www.plymouth.edu/medieval
Please submit abstracts and full contact information to Dr. Karolyn Kinane, Director or
Jini Rae Sparkman, Assistant Director: PSUForum@gmail.com.
Abstract deadline: Monday January 14, 2013
Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2013
--
Medieval and Renaissance Forum
Plymouth State University
MSC 40
17 High Street
Plymouth, NH 03264
www.plymouth.edu/medieval
603-535-2402
PSUForum@gmail.com
Plymouth State University
Plymouth, NH, USA
Friday and Saturday April 19-20, 2013
“Travel, Contact, Exchange”
Keynote speaker: David Simon, Art History, Colby College
We invite abstracts in medieval and Early Modern studies that consider how travel, contact, and
exchange functioned in personal, political, religious, and aesthetic realms.
● How, when, where, and why did cultural exchange happen?
● What are the roles of storytelling or souvenirs in experiences of pilgrimage or Crusade?
● What is exchanged, lost, or left behind in moments of contact?
● How do such moments of contact and exchange hold meaning today?
Papers need not be confined to the theme but may cover many aspects of medieval and Renaissance
life, literature, languages, art, philosophy, theology, history and music.
Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome.
Undergraduate student papers or sessions require faculty sponsorship.
This year’s keynote speaker is David L. Simon. He is Jetté Professor of Art at Colby College, where he has
received the Basset Award for excellence in teaching. He holds graduate degrees from Boston University
and the Courtauld Institute of Art of the University of London. Among his publications are the catalogue
of Spanish and southern French Romanesque sculpture in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and The
Cloisters and studies on Romanesque architecture and sculpture in Aragon and Navarra, Spain. He is coauthor
of recent editions of Janson’s History of Art: The Western Tradition and Janson’s Basic History of
Western Art. Since 2007 he has co-directed an annual summer course and conference on Romanesque
art for the University of Zaragoza, Spain.
For more information visit www.plymouth.edu/medieval
Please submit abstracts and full contact information to Dr. Karolyn Kinane, Director or
Jini Rae Sparkman, Assistant Director: PSUForum@gmail.com.
Abstract deadline: Monday January 14, 2013
Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2013
--
Medieval and Renaissance Forum
Plymouth State University
MSC 40
17 High Street
Plymouth, NH 03264
www.plymouth.edu/medieval
603-535-2402
PSUForum@gmail.com
Sunday, August 26, 2012
CFP
Call for Papers: Anglo-Saxon and
Old Saxon Cross-Cultural
Connections (1)
This session
builds on a previous session in 2012 comparing the Heliand and
Beowulf. Two similar
cultures that in part at least grew out of the same roots in the late
Roman period and certainly at various points in time influenced one
another. Yet, other than studies in comparative metrics, there has
been very little comparative study of these two cultures or much of
any depth on their mutual influence nor how they developed
differently after the migration of some Saxons to England. Such
comparative analysis is long overdue and promises to yield a greater
understanding of the medieval Northwest in Europe.
Send abstracts to: lswain@bemidjistate.edu
Send abstracts to: lswain@bemidjistate.edu
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