Tuesday, March 23, 2021

 On behalf of the organizing committee,

Renaud Alexandre
Section de Lexicographie et de Sémantique (Comité Du Cange)
Institut de Recherche et d'Histoire des Textes (CNRS)

=======================================================

Voces 2021. Latin Middle Ages through Key Words: Feast, Holiday, Celebration

Workshop – 29-30 September 2021

https://glossaria.eu/voces/

Medieval society is inseparable from both the written and spoken words that brought it to life. It is through those words that the people of the Middle Ages shared their beliefs, their ideas and their experiences. Words were used to share knowledge, spread the Gospel, but also to stigmatize the Other, exclude heterodoxy, and call for war. Controlling word senses was one of the major means to sustain power, to take possession of goods and to control access to knowledge. That could lead to verbal jousting or even real conflicts.

Modern scholars that are trying to reconstruct the meaning of medieval words in their relationship with historical, social or psychological reality, are facing multiple problems. Firstly, they have to handle the inherent vagueness and ambiguity of the Latin language that prevent them from pinpointing the exact meaning of most frequent words. Secondly, they have to measure the pragmatic functions of those terms, which served not only to talk about objects but also to make things. Finally, they have to establish the link between words and cultural, social or political reality.

The conference cycle Voces. Latin Middle Ages through Key Words, co-organised by the IRHT (CNRS) and Institute of Polish Language (PAN) aims to take a closer look at Latin words that have played an important role in the medieval culture. Every two year we propose to focus on a different major medieval concept and its linguistic expressions.

The conference aims to bring together historians, linguists, philosophers and philologists from various theoretical background (historical semantics, Begriffsgeschichte, cognitive semantics, histoire des mentalités etc.) and who use various methodology (corpus studies, lexical analysis, etc.). Papers dealing with medieval key words or concepts in a broad context of social, political and religious life are particularly encouraged.

Voces 2021. Feast, Holiday, Celebration

This year’s edition concurs with the 100th anniversary of the Medieval Latin Dictionary, a project of the International Academic Union which was to bring together the post-war European scientific community around the impossible task of describing medieval Latin vocabulary. Originally scheduled for 2020, the conference was to focus on the concepts of FEAST, CELEBRATION and HOLIDAY and their vocabulary. Despite the current health crisis, the organizers have decided to stick to this topic. Depending on circumstances, the conference will be held either in hybrid mode with the in-person event at the Campus Condorcet, Paris-Aubervilliers, or fully online.

As still today, the feasts deeply structured social and private life of medieval people. The recurring religious holidays reminded believers of their relationship to the Absolute and gave meaning to the medieval sense of time. Private celebrations, limited to friends and family, were used to underline the events of people’s lives. Public holidays, on the other hand, created and sustained social coherence, by highlighting common values and cultural norms that are usually implicit.

Suggested topics

We invite papers that discuss a chosen term or concept, to illustrate how the concepts were understood and represented in medieval cultural, religious, social and political life.

  1. The concepts of FEAST, CELEBRATION and HOLIDAY and their linguistic representations: festumsollemnitasferia etc.; Latin vs. vernacular terms; the metaphors of FEASTING etc.; the vocabulary and the social reality of FEASTING etc.
  2. Religious holidays: Church holidays, ceremonies, saints day; was there boundary between religious and political, social or individual celebrations?
  3. Structuring lives of individuals: birth, wedding and funeral; celebrating individual experience.
  4. Celebration as social practice: urban vs. rural vs. courtly celebrations; bonding through celebration; carnival and social hierarchy.
  5. The materiality of celebration: drinking and eating; games and activities; loca celebrandi.
  6. Theoretical issues
    • Latin vocabulary and categories of medieval thought: a simple link?
    • lexical borrowing and semantic change: new words = new worlds?
    • medieval Latin and individuals: cognition, experience, emotions
    • scientific vs. folk knowledge
    • ideology, power, violence, memory
    • negotiating meaning in interpretative communities

Submission

We welcome two forms of submissions:

  • Long papers (30 minutes, 15 minutes discussion), that go beyond a single text or author, and provide either wider
  •  (historical, social, cultural etc.) context for the discussion or pose important theoretical and methodological questions
  •  (historical change, methodological issues etc.);
  • Short papers (15 minutes, 5 minutes discussion), which are more limited in scope, but still bring forward links between
  •  vocabulary, conceptualization and socio-cultural reality of the Middle Ages.

Paper lanLanguage: English, French, German, Spanish.

Abstracts should be submitted via the EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=voces21) by 15 May 2021

 (23:59 CEST):

  • long papers: 500 words (without references)
  • short papers: 250 words (without references)

Submissions should clearly state the paper topic, briefly discuss existing research and explain whythe analysis of the

suggested term or field is important to our understanding of medieval social practices.

The proceedings of the conference will be published in a special issue of the Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi

 (Bulletin Du Cange).

Organizing Committee: Bruno BON (IRHT-CNRS), Anita GUERREAU-JALABERT (IRHT-CNRS), 

Krzysztof NOWAK (IJP-PAN), Nathalie PICQUE (IRHT-CNRS).

Program Committee: TBA.

=======================================================

VOCES. Le Moyen Âge latin à travers ses mots-clés : Fêtes et célébrations

Journées d’étude – 29 et 30 septembre 2021

https://glossaria.eu/voces/

La société médiévale est inséparable des mots qui l’ont fait vivre, à l’oral comme à l’écrit. C’est à travers eux que les femmes et les hommes du Moyen Âge ont partagé leurs croyances, leurs idées et leurs expériences. Les mots servaient à partager le savoir et à prêcher l’Évangile, mais aussi à stigmatiser l’Autre, exclure l’hétérodoxie ou appeler à la guerre. La maîtrise du sens des mots était l’un des principaux moyens de conserver le pouvoir, de s’approprier des richesses, ou de contrôler l’accès au savoir. Cela pouvait conduire à des joutes verbales, voire à de réels conflits.

Les chercheurs contemporains qui tentent de reconstruire le sens des mots médiévaux et leurs relations avec la réalité historique, sociale ou psychologique qu’ils sont censés représenter sont confrontés à de nombreuses difficultés. Tout d’abord, ils se heurtent à l’ambiguïté et à l’ellipse inhérentes à la langue, qui interdisent de fixer un sens univoque à la plupart des mots fréquents. Ensuite, ils doivent mesurer les fonctions pragmatiques de ces vocables, qui servent non seulement à dire, mais aussi à faire. Enfin, il leur faut établir le lien entre les mots employés et la réalité culturelle, sociale ou politique.

Le cycle de conférences « Voces. Le Moyen-Âge à travers ses mots-clés », lancé par l’Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes (CNRS) et l’Institut de la Langue Polonaise (PAN), se propose d’examiner attentivement les mots qui ont joué un rôle important dans l’Europe latine médiévale. Tous les deux ans, nous nous concentrerons sur un concept central pour le Moyen Âge latin et ses expressions linguistiques.

La conférence vise à rassembler des historiens, des linguistes, des philosophes et des philologues de divers horizons théoriques (sémantique historique, Begriffsgeschichte, sémantique cognitive, histoire des mentalités, etc.), et qui utilisent des méthodes variées (étude de corpus, analyse lexicale, etc.). Sont particulièrement encouragées les contributions qui traitent de mots ou de concepts clés du Moyen Âge dans un contexte assez large de la vie sociale, politique et religieuse.

L’édition de cette année concorde avec le 100e anniversaire du « Dictionnaire du Latin Médiéval », projet de l’Union Académique Internationale qui devait réunir la communauté scientifique européenne de l’après-guerre autour de la tâche impossible de décrire le vocabulaire latin médiéval. Initialement prévue en 2020, la conférence devait se consacrer au concept de la fête et son vocabulaire. Malgré la crise sanitaire actuelle, les organisateurs ont décidé de s’en tenir à ce thème. Sous réserve de l’évolution de la situation sanitaire, la conférence se réunira à Paris sur le Campus Condorcet (Paris-Aubervilliers), en mode hybride : communications possibles en visioconférence.

Comme encore aujourd’hui, les fêtes structuraient profondément la vie sociale et privée du Moyen Âge. Les fêtes religieuses récurrentes rappelaient aux croyants leur relation à l’Absolu et donnaient son sens au temps médiéval. Les fêtes privées, limitées aux amis et à la famille, marquaient les événements de la vie de chacun. Les fêtes publiques, quant à elles, produisaient et soutenaient la cohésion sociale, en rendant visibles des valeurs et des normes culturelles qui ne sont généralement qu’implicites

Thèmes suggérés

Les contributions discuteront d’un terme ou d’un concept choisi, pour illustrer comment la fête était perçue et représentée dans la vie culturelle, religieuse, sociale et politique du Moyen Âge :

  • le concept de FÊTE et sa représentation linguistique : festumsollemnitasferia, etc. ; termes latins vs. vernaculaires ; métaphores de la fête ; vocabulaire de la fête et réalité sociale.
  • les fêtes religieuses : fêtes ecclésiastiques, cérémonies, fêtes des saints ; fêtes religieuses vs. fêtes politiques, sociales, individuelles ;
  • structuration de la vie : naissance, mariage, funérailles ; les fêtes dans l’expérience individuelle ;
  • la pratique sociale de la fête : fêtes urbaines, fêtes rurales, fêtes de cour ; créer des liens par la fête ; carnaval et hiérarchie sociale ;
  • matérialité de la fête : boire et manger ; jeux et activités ; loca celebrandi ;
  • questions théoriques : vocabulaire latin vs. catégories de la pensée médiévale ; emprunts lexicaux et changement sémantique ; le latin médiéval et l’individu ; le latin médiéval et les savoirs ; idéologie, pouvoir, violence, mémoire, etc. ; négocier le sens dans les communautés interprétatives

Modalités de soumission

Deux types de contributions sont attendus :

  • des communications longues (30 min. + 15 min. de discussion) ne se limitent pas à un seul texte ou un seul auteur, et fournissent un contexte assez large (historique, social, culturel) pour la discussion, ou posent des questions théoriques importantes (changement historique, problèmes méthodologiques) ;
  • des communications courtes (15 min. + 5 min. de discussion) sont plus limitées dans leur portée, mais mettent en avant les liens entre le vocabulaire ou la conceptualisation et la réalité socioculturelle du Moyen Âge.

Langues de la conférence : allemand, anglais, castillan, français.

Les soumissions pourront être déposées jusqu’au 15/05/2021 à minuit sur : https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=voces21

Communications longues : max. 500 mots (sans références)
Communications courtes : max. 250 mots (sans références)

Les soumissions doivent présenter clairement la problématique, discuter brièvement les recherches existantes et expliquer en quoi l’analyse du terme ou du champ proposé est importante pour la compréhension des pratiques sociales médiévales.

Les actes de la conférence seront publiés dans la revue Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi (Bulletin Du Cange).

Organisation : Bruno Bon (IRHT-CNRS), Anita Guerreau-Jalabert (IRHT-CNRS), Krzysztof Nowak (IJP-PAN), Nathalie Picque (IRHT-CNRS).

Comité scientifique : à suivre.



Tuesday, March 2, 2021

 CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS

Medieval Eastern Mediterranean Cities as Places of Artistic Interchange

A SOAS University of London / Getty Foundation Online Seminar Programme

The School of Arts at SOAS University of London is pleased to announce the launch of a new

 research seminar programme for young and early career researchers in the art and 

archaeology of the medieval eastern Mediterranean, supported by the Getty Foundation as part of its Connecting Art Histories initiative.

We invite research students at an advanced stage of their studies and early-career academic 

researchers and tutors working in historical research institutes (such as archaeology centres, 

museums, and government and non-governmental agencies dealing with history, art or 

archaeology) to join us in a collaborative online learning programme comprising eight seminar discussions taking place between March and May 2021.

The project is open to people from the countries of the eastern Mediterranean region 

and the Middle East and all the seminars will take place online.

Medieval Eastern Mediterranean Cities as Places of Artistic Interchange is an online seminar

programme for emerging academics which focuses on the role played by cities in the medieval 

eastern Mediterranean, from the 12th to the 14th centuries CE, in the production, consumption,

 transformation and understanding of works of art and architecture.

This seminar pairs cities, scholars and the site-specific questions that arise from them to 

explore these and other aspects of artistic and cultural interchange in the medieval eastern 

Mediterranean region, with a particular focus on new research in lesser-known cities to highlight recent archaeological and other scholarly discoveries.

The project is open to early career academic researchers (who have received their doctorates

 in the last three years) and tutors, research students (PhD students) at an advanced stage of 

their studies and those working in historical research institutes (such as archaeology centres, 

museums, government and non-governmental agencies dealing with history, art or archaeology) who are from the countries of the eastern Mediterranean region and the Middle East. 

The target audience for this seminar programme is young professionals with advanced degrees

(or equivalent work experience) in art history and/or archaeology of the period from the 12th to

the 14th centuries who are from the countries of the eastern Mediterranean or Middle East.

Participants selected to take part in the programme will receive £2000 each (British pounds) to

be used for research purposes. This includes the purchasing of books or other scholarly 

resources, upgrading of internet access, purchase of headphones, and the like.

The deadline for applications is 17:00 hours GMT on 8 March 2021.

For full details and to apply please visit our website at https://www.soasresearch.org/gettyartisticinterchange

Organised in association with the Getty Foundation

 

Lead academic organisers:

Professor Scott Redford (SOAS University of London)

Professor Maria Georgopoulou (American School of Classical Studies at Athens)

Professor Robert Ousterhout (University of Pennsylvania)

 

Programme officer:

Dr Michael Paraskos (Imperial College London)



Tuesday, February 2, 2021

 With apologies for the cross-posting. Please share with anyone who might be interested.


Dear colleagues,

Just a reminder that applications for the Wallace Johnson First Book Program are due February 15th

(NB: Recognizing that the pandemic has slowed everything down, applicants who foresee difficulties submitting all of their materials by February 15th should contact me and we’ll make other arrangements. Just about everything is off-kilter this year.)

The Wallace Johnson First Book Program provides support and mentorship to early career scholars working towards the publication of their first book on the law and legal culture of the early middle ages. The program has been developed specifically to aid untenured scholars or those in non-tenurable positions (including adjuncts and full-time term faculty) and is not limited to a specific discipline, field, or methodology. For the purposes of this program, "law" is broadly defined and need not be limited to legislation, legal documentation, or specific forms of legal process. Although applicants’ research must concern law and/or legal culture, they need not self-identify as legal scholars.

The program includes:
• a series of online workshops on the writing and publication process during which participants meet with
senior scholars and have the opportunity to discuss their projects with commissioning editors
• pairing with a senior scholar as a mentor who, over the course of a year, will help the participant pursue book
contracts and shape their projects for publication
• periodic web "meet ups," both one-on-one with mentors and as a group, that will enable participants to
workshop chapters and proposals
 An $800 stipend to support research-related expenses

The program has been developed specifically to aid untenured scholars or those in non-tenurable positions (including adjuncts and full-time term faculty) and is not limited to a specific discipline, field, or methodology. For the purposes of this program, "law" is broadly defined and need not be limited to legislation, legal documentation, or specific forms of legal process. Although applicants’ research must concern law, they need not self-identify as legal scholars.

As the Johnson Program is intended to cast a wide net, please do forward this announcement to other ListServs, post it on social media, and pass it along to anyone who might be interested. More information, especially concerning application procedures and the 2021 selection committee, can be found at https://wmich.edu/medieval/johnson-program. If you have any questions, please do feel free to contact me (andrew.rabin@louisville.edu) or Jana Schulman (jana.schulman@wmich.edu).

At a time when the field of medieval studies is seeking new ways to support younger scholars, the program offers a wonderful opportunity to aid those at the beginning of their careers, advance research on early medieval law and legal culture, and to develop connections across disciplines. I’m very excited about the Johnson Program and I look forward to seeing what it will look like as we move into our second year.

Thursday, January 21, 2021

EXTENDED DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACT SUBMISSION--JANUARY 31st, 2021 

 41stAnnual Medieval and Renaissance Forum: Scent and Fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance Friday and Saturday April 16-17, 2021 

 Call for Papers and Sessions 

 We are delighted to announce that the 41stMedieval and Renaissance Forum: Scent and Fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance will take place virtually on Friday, April 16 and Saturday April 17, 2021. We welcome abstracts (one page or less) or panel proposals that discuss smell and fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Papers and sessions, however, need not be confined to this theme but may cover other aspects of medieval and Renaissance life, literature, languages, art, philosophy, theology, history, and music. This year’s keynote speaker is Deirdre Larkin, Managing Horticulturist at The Cloisters Museum and Gardens from 2007 to 2013,who will speak on “Every Fragrant Herb: The Medieval Garden and the Gardens of The Cloisters.” Deirdre Larkin is a horticulturist and historian of plants and gardens. She holds an MA in the history of religions from Princeton University and received her horticultural training at the New York Botanical Garden. She was associated with the Gardens of The Cloisters for more than twenty years and was responsible for all aspects of their development, design, and interpretation. Ms. Larkin was the originator of and principal contributor to the Medieval Garden Enclosed blog, published on the MMA website from 2008 through 2013. Ms. Larkin lectures frequently for museums, historical societies, and horticultural organizations. In 2017, she was a Mellon Visiting Scholar at the Humanities Institute of the New York Botanical Garden, where she researched the fortunes and reputations of medieval European plants now naturalized in North America. Her gardens in upstate New York serve as a laboratory for further investigations in the field. Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome. Please indicate your status (undergraduate, graduate, or faculty), affiliation (if relevant), and full contact information (including email address) on your proposal. Graduate students will be eligible for consideration for the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award. More information about this new award will be available soon.

 We welcome undergraduate sessions but ask that students obtain a faculty member's approval and sponsorship. 

 Please submit abstracts and full contact information on the google form available at https://forms.gle/CHdqrEK8pVps7Wa89. Abstract deadline: January 31, 2021 Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2021 

 As always, we look forward to seeing (virtually) returning and first-time participants in April!

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

 Greetings from Rare Book School! We are pleased to announce that we are now accepting applications for our Summer 2021 courses. 

 

“The most generous, intense, and collaborative learning experience I have ever had.” – 2019 Rare Book School student

 

Expand your understanding of book history during a Rare Book School course this summer. Our five-day intensive courses on the history of manuscript, print, and digital materials will be offered online and, conditions permitting, in person. A decision about in-person courses will be made no later than March 1. If courses move to an online format, more online courses will be announced.

 

Among our thirty-four courses, we are pleased to offer several pertinent to those involved in medieval studies and the study of rare books, manuscripts, special collections, and librarianship in special collections. These include: 

 

--M-70: The Handwriting & Culture of Early Modern English Manuscripts, taught by Heather Wolfe

--B-10: Introduction to the History of Bookbinding, taught by Karen Limper-Herz

--H-120: Textual Mobilities: Works, Books & Reading Across Early Modern Europe, taught by Roger Chartier & John H. Pollack 

Explore our full schedule here: https://rarebookschool.org/schedule/.

 

To be considered in the first round of admissions decisions, course applications should be submitted no later than March 3. Applications received after that date will be reviewed on a rolling basis, however, please note that some classes do reach capacity during the first round of admissions. Visit our website at www.rarebookschool.org for course details, instructions for applying, and evaluations by past students. Contact us at rbsprograms@virginia.edu with questions. 

 

Please share this information with colleagues, students, and friends.

 

We hope to see you at Rare Book School soon! 

 

With best regards,

The RBS Programs Team


Wednesday, January 13, 2021

 

97th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America

University of Virginia, Charlottesville
9-13 March, 2022

Call for Papers

The 97th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place on the campus of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville. The meeting is jointly hosted by the Medieval Academy of America and the Program in Medieval Studies at the University of Virginia, with the generous support and collaboration of colleagues from Virginia Tech, the College of William & Mary, and Washington and Lee University. The conference program will feature a diverse range of sessions highlighting innovative scholarship across the many disciplines contributing to medieval studies. 

The Program Committee invites proposals for papers on all topics and in all disciplines and periods of medieval studies and medievalism studies. Any member of the Medieval Academy may submit a paper proposal; others may submit proposals as well but must become members in order to present papers at the meeting. Special consideration will be given to individuals whose field would not normally involve membership in the Medieval Academy. We are particularly interested in receiving submissions from those working outside of traditional academic positions, including independent scholars, emeritus or adjunct faculty, university administrators, those working in academic-adjacent institutions (libraries, archives, museums, scholarly societies, or cultural research centers), editors and publishers, and other fellow medievalists.

Plenary addresses will be delivered by Roland Betancourt, Professor of Art History, University of California, Irvine; Seeta Chaganti, Professor of English, University of California, Davis; and Thomas E. A. Dale, Professor of Art History, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and incoming president of the Academy.

Click here for the full Call for Papers.

We look forward to seeing you in Charlottesville next year!

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

41stAnnual Medieval and Renaissance Forum:    
Scent and Fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance  
Friday and Saturday April 16-17, 2021 
  
Call for Papers and Sessions 
We are delighted to announce that the 41stMedieval and Renaissance Forum: Scent and Fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance will take place virtually on Friday, April 16 and Saturday April 17, 2021.   
 
We welcome abstracts (one page or less) or panel proposals that discuss smell and fragrance in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. 
 
Papers and sessions, however, need not be confined to this theme but may cover other aspects of medieval and Renaissance life, literature, languages, art, philosophy, theology, history, and music.  
 
This year’s keynote speaker is Deirdre Larkin, Managing Horticulturist at The Cloisters Museum and Gardens from 2007 to 2013,who will speak on “Every Fragrant Herb: The Medieval Garden and the Gardens of The Cloisters.” 
 
Deirdre Larkin is a horticulturist and historian of plants and gardens. She holds an MA in the history of religions from Princeton University and received her horticultural training at the New York Botanical Garden. She was associated with the Gardens of The Cloisters for more than twenty years and was responsible for all aspects of their development, design, and interpretation. Ms. Larkin was the originator of and principal contributor to the Medieval Garden Enclosed blog, published on the MMA website from 2008 through 2013. Ms. Larkin lectures frequently for museums, historical societies, and horticultural organizations. In 2017, she was a Mellon Visiting Scholar at the Humanities Institute of the New York Botanical Garden, where she researched the fortunes and reputations of medieval European plants now naturalized in North America. Her gardens in upstate New York serve as a laboratory for further investigations in the field.  
Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome. Please indicate your status (undergraduate, graduate, or faculty), affiliation (if relevant), and full contact information (including email address) on your proposal.  
 
Graduate students will be eligible for consideration for the South Wind Graduate Student Paper Award. More information about this new award will be available soon.  
 
We welcome undergraduate sessions but ask that students obtain a faculty member's approval and sponsorship.   
 
Please submit abstracts and full contact information on the google form available at https://forms.gle/CHdqrEK8pVps7Wa89. 
  
Abstract deadline: January 15, 2021 
 
Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2021 
 
As always, we look forward to seeing (virtually) returning and first-time participants in April!