Online Lecture: Between Byzantium and Modernity: Portraits of Civic Virtue in Late Ottoman Lesvos

Online Lecture: Between Byzantium and Modernity: Portraits of Civic Virtue in Late Ottoman Lesvos

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is pleased to announce the 2024–2025 edition of its annual lecture with the Harvard University Standing Committee on Medieval Studies.

Between Byzantium and Modernity: Portraits of Civic Virtue in Late Ottoman Lesvos
Dimitris Krallis, Simon Fraser University
Friday, February 28, 2025 | 12:00 PM (EST, UTC -5) | Zoom

In a rich family archive from the Island of Lesvos that dates to the 19th and early 20th centuries, various documents outline fascinating ways in which members of the family in question negotiated modernity and the transition from Ottoman rule to Greek nationhood. This talk will introduce the archive itself to the audience and consider the ways in which Byzantine notions of domestic and civic virtue lingered and competed with new ideas that sought to shape the private and public spheres of communities in the North Aegean.

Dimitris Krallis is Professor in the Department of Global Humanities and Director of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Centre for Hellenic Studies at Simon Fraser University.

Advance registration required. Register: https://maryjahariscenter.org/events/between-byzantium-and-modernity

Contact Brandie Ratliff (mjcbac@hchc.edu), Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, with any questions.

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Call for Papers – Medieval + Monsters in Comics

Medieval + Monsters in Comics

Online Sponsored Session Proposed for Medieval + Monsters: Medieval Association of the Midwest (MAM), Mid-America Medieval Association (MAMA), Illinois Medieval Association (IMA) Joint Conference with The Newberry Library
Hosted at Dominican University & the Newberry Library
17-18 October 2025

The Medieval Comics Project and the Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular/American Culture Association seek proposals of 250 words for a proposed online panel devoted to the theme of the medieval and the monstrous in sequential art, comics, manga, and related media.

Topics might include:

  • Adaptations of medieval monsters in modern comics/manga/related media
  • Monsters in sequential art of the medieval era
  • Monsters in marginalia in medieval manuscripts (akin to modern panel comics)
  • New monsters in comics/manga/related media set in the medieval era
  • The use of horror in comics/manga/related media set in the medieval era
  • The use of monstrosity to represent issues of class/gender/race in comic/manga versions of the Middle Ages

Please send submissions (250-word proposal plus a short biographical statement) to the session organizers (Michael A. Torregrossa, Karen Casey Casebier, and Benjamin H. Hoover) at Comics.Get.Medieval@gmail.com by 15 March 2025.

For more information on the Medieval Comics Project, please see our blog at https://medieval-comics-project.blogspot.com/.

For more information on the Monsters & the Monstrous Area of the Northeast Popular/American Culture Association, please see our blog at https://popularpreternaturaliana.blogspot.com/.

Further details on the conference itself can be accessed at https://www.dom.edu/medieval-monsters-conference.

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Collecting the Medieval Book in America

Collecting the Medieval Book in America
Wednesday 2/26 • 4-7 P.M.
University of Syracuse, Bird Library, Room 114 + Zoom

4:00 p.m.-5:15 p.m: Panel Discussion
With panelists Brian Brege (SU History), Juilee Decker (RIT), Irene Malfatto (Bruce McKittrick Rare Books/Independent Scholar), and Anna Siebach-Larsen (University of Rochester)

5:45 p.m. – 7 p.m: Keynote
“Since the Census: A Century of Manuscript Collecting in North America” with Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director of the Medieval Academy of America

Registration: https://calendar.syracuse.edu/events/2025-feb-25/collecting-the-medieval-book-in-america-a-keynote-lecture-by-lisa-fagin-davis-and-panel-discussion/

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2025 Medieval Academy of America Publication Prizes

2025 MAA Publication Prizes

We are very pleased to announce the winners of the 2025 Medieval Academy of America Publication Prizes. Please join us at the upcoming Annual Meeting as we honor these scholars and their work. The prizes will be presented during the Presidential Plenary Session on Saturday 22 March at 10:30 AM.

The Haskins Medal
Rita Copeland
Emotion and the History of Rhetoric in the Middle Ages
(Oxford Univ. Press, 2022)

The John Nicholas Brown Prize
Janna Coomans
Community, Urban Health and Environment in the Late Medieval Low Countries
(Cambridge Univ. Press, 2021)

The Article Prize in Critical Race Studies
Mohamad Ballan
“Borderland Anxieties: Lisān al-Dīn ibn al-Khat ̣ īb (d. 1374) and the Politics of Genealogy in Late Medieval Granada,”
Speculum 98, no. 2 (2023): 447-495

The Digital Humanities and Multimedia Studies Prize
Wendy Belcher
Princeton Ethiopian, Eritrean, and Egyptian Miracles of Mary Project
https://pemm.princeton.edu/en-us

The Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize
Grace Delmolino
“Fraudulent Counsel: Legal Temporality and the Poetics of Liability in Dante’s Inferno, Boniface VIII’s Liber Sextus, and Gratian’s De penitentia,”
Speculum 98, no. 3 (2023): 727-762

The Karen Gould Prize in Art History
Jennifer Regan Borland
Visualizing Household Health: Medieval Women, Art, and Knowledge in the Régime du corps
(The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2022)

The Monica H. Green Prize
Kristopher Kersey
Facing Images: Medieval Japanese Art and the Problem of Modernity
(The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2024)

The Jerome E. Singerman Prize
Adrienne Williams Boyarin
The Christian Jew and the Unmarked Jewess: the Polemics of Sameness in Medieval English Anti-Judaism
(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2021)

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Jobs For Medievalists

Kenrick-Glennon Seminary in Saint Louis, MO seeks a candidate to fill a position in History.

Position is full-time salary and benefits, with a very competitive salary scale. Rank to be determined based on the successful applicant’s qualifications.

Kenrick-Glennon Seminary, located in the Archdiocese of St. Louis, prepares men for priesthood in the Roman Catholic Church in dioceses throughout the Midwest and Great Plains.

Candidate will teach 2/3 load, including History courses in both the Philosophy and Theology curricula: History for Philosophy I & II; Medieval & Reformation; Modern & Contemporary; Catholic Church in the U.S.

Candidate must be committed to the teachings of the Catholic Church – willing to make the Profession of Faith and take the Oath of Fidelity – and to priestly formation in the Catholic tradition. Since courses are being taught in the context of an integral program of priestly formation, we expect teachers to be able to contribute to the human, spiritual, intellectual, and pastoral growth of each seminarian.

PhD in History or Historical Theology required. Area of Specialization open. Women and minorities are encouraged to apply.

For full consideration send CV with references and Cover Letter (2-3 pages) by March 7 to: rotter@kenrick.edu.

 

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Call for Papers – Wallace Johnson First Book Mentorship Program

The 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. In conversation with peers and with the advice of senior scholars, participants will develop and revise book proposals and sample chapters, and they will meet with guest editors to learn about approaching and working with publishers.

The program has been developed specifically to aid pre-tenure and untenured scholars, as well as those in non-tenurable positions (including adjuncts and full-time term faculty) and is not limited to a specific discipline, region 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. We welcome proposals on legal history, literature and law, law in/and artistic production, philosophies of law, law and theology, or any other type of project that concerns the legal culture of the Middle Ages. Although applicants’ research must concern law, they need not self-identify as legal scholars. 

Applications are due by Tuesday, April 1st 2025.

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

• A stipend to support research-related expenses 

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, can be found at https://wmich.edu/medieval/research/johnson-program. If you have any questions, please do feel free to contact me (andrew.rabin@louisville.edu) or Robert Berkhofer (robert.berkhofer@wmich.edu).

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2025 International Congress on Medieval Studies

Registration for the 60th International Congress on Medieval Studies is now open! Come to Kalamazoo and help shape the future of the past. All medievalists are welcome.

ICMS 2025 will take place Thursday, May 8, through Saturday, May 10. Find the registration link and more information on our website at https://wmich.edu/medievalcongress.

You can participate in our Sponsor a Medievalist program, which provides subsidized registration for graduate students, early career researchers, and medievalists without institutional support or with other needs. Help keep the Congress accessible for everyone! Donations are made through Congress registration.

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MAA News – From the Executive Director: Summer Programming Preview

We all know that training for medievalists is becoming more challenging, with cuts to language instruction and the inaccessibility of courses in paleography and other research methodologies. Professional development for PhD students has been severely impacted by cuts to funding and staffing. To try to fill some of these gaps, the MAA is offering several exciting learning opportunities for medievalists this summer:

1) The Mentorship Program Committee is thrilled to be able to offer a third installment of our Summer Research Program, which will bring together twelve students and a group of mentors for an online program dedicated to targeted grant- and abstract-writing. Thanks to the success of the recent two-year fundraising Campaign, all participants will receive a $1,500 honorarium and a free one-year MAA membership (or renewal). See below, and click here for more information.

2) Under President Sara Lipton’s leadership, and thanks to a generous anonymous donation, we are debuting three MAA Summer Skills Workshops this year: Old French (instructor: Terry Cullen, Vassar University), Latin Paleography (instructor: Sean Gilsdorf, Harvard University), and Medieval Latin (instructor: Diane Warne Anderson, Univ. of Massachusetts, Boston)! Fees will be only $125 for each five-week course, making this an extraordinarily affordable opportunity to learn from these experts! More information about these online workshops will be available soon.

3) As always, we offer significant funding opportunities for other summer programs through the MAA/CARA Summer Scholarships program. See below, and click here for more information.

We are able to offer these programs thanks to the support and generosity of our members. Thank you for helping us help medievalists!

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MAA News – 100th Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America

Discounted hotel rooms are going fast…register today!

Registration is open for the Centennial Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America, which will take place on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts on 20-22 March 2025. This year’s Centennial program, hosted by Harvard University in collaboration with Boston College, Boston University, Brandeis University, Fitchburg State University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stonehill College, Tufts University, and Wellesley College, will bring together nearly 500 scholars from three continents, 23 countries, over 200 academic institutions, and a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds for 114 paper sessions, four plenary lectures, and a host of associated workshops and events, addressing the medieval world from the North Atlantic to the Sea of Japan as well as the histories and possible futures of Medieval Studies itself. While this will be an in-person meeting, our plenary lectures—given by Kristina Richardson (Professor of History and Middle Eastern and South Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Virginia), Sara Lipton (President of the Medieval Academy of America and Professor of History at Stony Brook University), Wendy Belcher (Professor of Comparative Literature and African American Studies at Princeton University), and a diverse group of medieval scholars and administrators—will be live streamed.

We are excited to welcome you to Cambridge, and look forward to meeting you, learning from you, and celebrating our shared commitment to Medieval Studies. In an effort to make the Centennial meeting accessible to as many scholars as possible, the general registration fee will be $100 for members ($125 for non-members), with the registration fee for members who are graduate students, contingent faculty, or independent scholars set at $50 ($75 non-member). These rates will increase by $50 on Monday, 17 February, so be sure to register early!

Click here for more information and to register!

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MAA News – Centennial Spotlight

Every month, we’ll be spotlighting two MAA Centennial Grant Projects. These twenty-one projects span the continent and reflect some of the best that Medieval Studies has to offer. We are so pleased to be able to support these symposia, performances, and digital initiatives as part of our Centennial celebrations.

Virginia: Public Medieval: A Workshop for Graduate Students, ECRs, and Underemployed Medievalists (Virginia Tech). Spearheaded by mentors Sarah Bond, Matt Gabriele, Eleanor Janega, David Perry, and Cord Whitaker, the October 2024 workshop focused on public writing and outreach.

New Jersey: The Middle Ages for Educators Open Access Resource (OAR) Sweet Sixteen Playoffs, Sixteen digital humanities projects faced off in this challenge, and after a few rounds of voting, we’re down to the Final Four. Join us at the MAA Annual Meeting as our judges select the top two competitors, and cast your vote for the champion!

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