Jobs for Medievalists

Full-Time Lecturer in Medieval and Renaissance Studies – Marco Institute, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

The Marco Institute for Medieval and Renaissance Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, invites applications for a full-time 9-month lecturer to teach interdisciplinary undergraduate courses in Medieval and Renaissance Studies (MRST) to begin August 1, 2024. Appointment to this position can initially be for up to two years, with the possibility of continued renewal based on performance and funding thereafter. The College has a promotion ladder which includes longer appointment periods. The position comes with full benefits and annual funds available to assist with research, travel, and professional development. The teaching load is two sections of one course per semester (12 hours per week), with a graduate teaching assistant. The position is 75% teaching and 25% service to the Marco Institute and MRST programs (major, minor, outreach).

PhD in any field related to Medieval and/or Renaissance Studies (e.g., History, Literature, Languages, Religious Studies, Musicology, Art History) is required by the time of appointment. Candidates must be able to demonstrate excellence in teaching at the college level, familiarity with current student-oriented pedagogy, including in a large classroom, and with the use of technology to enhance learning. The program seeks candidates with expertise in teaching an expansive global, interdisciplinary perspective in premodern studies. Review of applications will begin on March 25, 2024, and will continue until the position is filled. The University of Tennessee is seeking candidates with the ability to contribute in meaningful ways to achieving the intercultural goals of the University.

For full information, visit: https://apply.interfolio.com/142323

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Call for Papers – Afro-Eurasian Origins of Print: A Material, Social and Theoretical History

Hosted by Susan Dackerman, Independent Scholar, and Caroline Fowler, Starr Director of the Research and Academic Program, Clark Art Institute

September 18–21, 2024, Williamstown, MA AND New Haven, CT
May 2025, South Korea

The Research and Academic Program of the Clark Art Institute is sponsoring a travelling seminar on the global origins and transmission of print. The project has the ambitious goal of re-thinking the history of pre-modern print, offering a more unified and inclusive history of the transformative technology. While often Johannes Gutenberg is heralded as the inventor of printing with movable type in Mainz, Germany in the mid 1450s, printing had been practiced in Asia (movable type and woodblock) and North Africa (woodblock) for centuries prior. Indeed, this seminar maintains that early printing in Europe should be narrated as a late stage in an inter-connected, inter-continental, inter-faith course of development rather than as an exceptional moment of discovery driven by Christian European practitioners. This seminar will work to redress the dominant western narrative of print as a European invention and proffer in its place an inclusive Afro-Eurasian account of reproductive technologies. The investigation will encompass innovations in printing text and images from before 1500 across three continents, focusing on the use of mechanical reproduction to produce multiples impressions.

We are bringing together a group of specialists of Asian, Islamic, and late-medieval European print to look closely at works on paper at institutions in the United States, Asia, and Europe. We will address critical issues around Eurocentric narratives in the history and curatorial strategies of print, creating cross-disciplinary dialogue around concepts of knowledge production, repetition, reproduction, transmission, and imprint. The seminar will benefit the participants by both expanding their familiarity, vocabulary, and understanding of print beyond their field of specialization while also offering an intellectual groundwork by which to consider re-narrating dominant histories of print, especially the prevailing European account, to include Afro-Eurasian traditions. Whereas often histories of print are siloed into geographic and chronological specialties, this series of seminars will offer participants the opportunity to work in conversation across place and time to create a more complex history of print.

PROGRAM STRUCTURE

The travelling seminar will first convene September 18–21, 2024 in Williamstown, MA and New Haven, CT to explore collections and begin establishing material and conceptual arenas of exploration. Visits to collections at the Clark Art Institute, Williams College, and Yale University will enable to group to examine examples of early European and Asian print technology. In May 2025, the Working Group will travel to South Korea for a week to visit collections, and final dates will be determined based on participants’ availability for future travel to Munich and Mainz, Germany.

The Clark Art Institute will sponsor the travel, including airfare, accommodations, and meals.

HOW TO APPLY

This program is open to all scholars across rank and specialization, from pre-doctoral scholars to tenured professors and senior curators. We will bring together a group of people across geographic specializations and career stage. Ideally, however, the candidates should be scholars of print with a focus on (or knowledge of) print materials pre-1550.

To apply, please submit the following to Susan Dackerman and Caroline Fowler at cfowler@clarkart.edu:

  • Two-page statement of interest, including a description of relevant research previously undertaken and proposed research to explore within the travelling seminars
  • A current C.V.
  • A notice of availability to travel to New England in September 2024 and to Korea in May 2025

PLEASE SUBMIT ALL MATERIAL BY APRIL 1, 2024

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Response to Letter of Concern

To the Members of the Medieval Academy of America:

The Officers and Governance of the Medieval Academy of America have received a Letter of Concern signed by several dozen members regarding the question of remuneration for the position of Speculum Editor. We would like to share our response with you.

Dear Colleagues and Friends,

Thank you for bringing to our attention your concerns about the proposed structure of the Speculum Editor-in-Chief position — specifically, the fact that the ad specifies that the position will not be remunerated.

We would like to start by saying that we hear and understand these concerns. We hope with this message to explain why the ad was configured in this way and to outline our priorities regarding Speculum and the MAA, but also and more importantly, we want to assure you of our flexibility and willingness to reconsider the parameters of the position. We are confident that we all share the same goals: to preserve the rigor and quality of Speculum while supporting the full spectrum of MAA members and protecting the future of medieval studies.

The position description reflected the current editorial situation, which has differed from previous configurations. When the position of Editor-in-Chief was last advertised, in 2018, the ad copy specified that:

“In addition to a curriculum vitae, the cover letter should include ideas about future directions for the journal, and discussion of how s/he envisions setting up the position, either in the MAA office, now in Cambridge, MA, or by moving the operation to a university campus. If the latter, s/he will describe possible institutional support. The search committee wants to identify the best pool of candidates, and the MAA is willing to be flexible in finding ways to accommodate the various modes of professional life encountered in the searching process. However, wherever the ultimate location of the Editor, there will need to be access to a major research library and to graduate students who can be hired for assistance.”

The partnership with Catholic University came about because Katherine Jansen was selected by the search committee, and Kate was able to negotiate favorable conditions with her employer. That partnership has proven to very beneficial to the MAA – first and foremost because Kate has been a spectacular editor, but also because the financial support provided by Catholic University allowed the MAA to balance its budget for the first time in many years, and to fund a variety of programs designed to support graduate students, junior scholars, and independent scholars. The savings were not solely related to the Editor-in-Chief’s salary, but also because the partnership allowed the MAA to move from very its expensive Cambridge headquarters to smaller and less expensive space in Boston. Moreover, the fact that Kate elected to use the $100,000+/year still provided to Speculum by the MAA to support five staff members – Managing Editor, Assistant Editor, Copy Editor, Proofreader, and Administrative Assistant – meant that we were able to offer graduate students and less-senior scholars financial support and valuable experience.

Continuing to seek out an analogous partnership seemed to us (Robin, Sara, Peggy, and Lisa) to be the most prudent and beneficial course of action. But we have no wish to be inflexible. We are more than willing to have open discussion about other possible configurations with the Council, concerned members, and with prospective applicants for the position.

In your letter, you offer three suggestions for moving forward:

1. Funding for the Speculum editor’s position [should] be given priority in the next fiscal year’s budget.
2. Commensurate funds [should] be raised through a concerted campaign to sustain a salaried editor position.
3. Publication of the journal [should] be suspended until such funds are available.

Regarding the first suggestion: this is something that we are very willing to consider! The goal will be to work together to identify and (hopefully) agree on priorities, since any funds used to remunerate an Editor-in-Chief would have to be taken from somewhere (and someone) else. One possibility would be to invite prospective editors to propose a different allocation of the $100,000+ per annum that the MAA currently invests in the Speculum staff (most of whom are early-career medievalists). Reallocating the funds currently used, at the request of a former Editor-in-Chief, to pay for Speculum Board members to attend the Annual Meeting is another possibility (though we would note that junior scholars on the Board have said that help in attending the Annual Meeting was a major draw of serving).

[Sara would like to add a personal note here: in the “statement” I offered when I was nominated to be an officer, I wrote that my top concern would be to work to ensure that up-and-coming generations of medievalists will have a future in medieval studies, broadly construed. That is a priority that I will advocate for in all discussions of allocating MAA resources.]

Regarding the second suggestion: we absolutely would welcome such an initiative! We are happy to consult with the Council about making support for the publication of Speculum, up to and including the funding of a fully-paid editorship, an explicit fundraising target once the current Matching Campaign, whose goals have already been enumerated, ends in late 2024. It does not seem likely, however, that sufficient funds could be raised by January 2025, when as per Kate’s schedule the editorial transition must begin.

Regarding the third suggestion: this is not a move we are prepared to contemplate. Speculum is hugely important to all MAA members and to medievalists around the world. It allows scholars at all career levels and with a wide range of employment situations and affiliations to share their scholarship with colleagues and benefit from the highest quality editorial and peer input. It offers stellar scholarship to a wide readership (including, thanks to new initiatives, the general public). Publishing in Speculum and/or being reviewed in Speculum can be central to beginning scholars’ efforts to gain employment, to boosting junior TT scholars’ prospects for tenure, and to affirming the quality and credentials of independent scholars. We cannot justify depriving our members and the broader medievalist community of these benefits because the MAA (unfortunately, but together with almost every other academic society we have consulted) is financially and spatially unable to craft an editorial position that is equally accessible to every individual who might wish to apply.

We hope that this has reassured you of our openness and flexibility. We look forward to continuing this discussion as a Q&A agenda item at the upcoming Business Meeting at Notre Dame (Friday, 15 March, 1 PM, in the Smith Ballroom), and potentially also via remote sessions to be scheduled. There is probably no simple solution, but we think that in consultation with the Council, concerned members, and prospective editors we should be able to find a reasonable way forward.

Warm regards,

Robin Fleming, President
Sara Lipton, President-elect and Chair, Speculum Editor search committee
Peggy McCracken, First Vice President-elect and member, Speculum Editor search committee
Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director

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Call for Papers – Connecting Late Antiquities (Bonn, February 3-5, 2025)

On behalf of Professors Julia Hillner (BCDSS) and Richard Flower (University of Exeter), we cordially invite colleagues to submit paper proposals for our conference on Connecting Late Antiquities, to be held at the University of Bonn, 3-5 February 2025.

We have a limited number of slots for papers of up to 20 minutes in length and therefore invite colleagues to submit abstracts of max. 300 words (plus a brief bio) on any aspect of Late Antique prosopography.

Connecting Late Antiquities, generously sponsored by Germany’s Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council, is a collaborative project to create open, digital prosopographical resources for the Roman and post-Imperial territories between the third and seventh centuries. Its main aim is to digitise, unite, and link existing resources to make them more accessible and enhance their reach and utility. The enterprise will dramatically improve access to information about late-antique people for all scholars of this period and allow the easy integration of prosopographical material with online geographical, textual, epigraphic, and papyrological resources.

Technological developments have provided new opportunities for prosopography, including allowing for both constant updating and an expansion beyond the traditional focus on the higher echelons of society. The Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire and Prosopography of the Byzantine World projects provide excellent examples of the greater possibilities allowed by this approach. Connecting Late Antiquities will draw together material from a variety of major printed prosopographies and specialist digital databases, as well as incorporating entries for ‘non-elite’ individuals who are attested in ancient sources but have not been included in earlier publications. This approach will allow more extensive research into understudied figures and their social connections.

We have a limited number of slots for papers of up to 20 minutes in length and therefore invite colleagues to submit abstracts of max. 300 words (plus a brief bio) on any aspect of Late Antique prosopography.

We particularly welcome submissions suggesting new discoveries and approaches within the following themes:

  • Prosopography and the rise of literature in Late Antique local languages, both western (e.g. Irish, Pictish, Welsh) and eastern (e.g. Armenian, Coptic, Syriac).
  • Prosopography and the ‘usual suspects’ (aristocracies, rulers, office-holders, etc.).
  • Prosopography and the ‘unusual suspects’ (e.g. anonymous individuals, marginalised individuals, religious minorities, non-privileged groups).
  • Prosopography and gender.
  • Prosopography and the challenges, limits, and opportunities of digital humanities.
  • Methodological avenues to overcome traditional prosopographical segregations (e.g. clerical/secular, elite/lower-status, human/non-human).

Confirmed roundtable participants and speakers include Yanne Broux, Niels Gaul, Rodrigo Laham Cohen, Hartmut Leppin, Ralph Mathisen, Muriel Moser, Silvia Orlandi, Arietta Papaconstantinou, Claire Sotinel, Scott Vanderbilt, and Lieve Van Hoof.

We are hoping to cover three nights of accommodation in Bonn, travel expenses, plus all lunches and one conference dinner.

Please send your abstract plus bio to Jeroen Wijnendaele (jwijnend@uni-bonn.de) and Jessica van ’t Westeinde (jwestend@uni-bonn.de) no later than the 1st of May 2024.

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Call for Applications – Workshop on the Public Medieval (October 2024) at Virginia Tech

The Medieval Academy of America’s jobs report from May 2023, coupled with the complementary data presented in the American Historical Association’s jobs report of September 2023, demonstrate well the (potential) grim future of medieval studies in the United States. But trends are not destiny. Students continue to fill our courses across all disciplines, and (at least anecdotally) public demand for premodern or premodern-adjacent fantasy content – films, tv, books – seems to be growing. Moreover, there’s a strong case to be made that knowing more both about the medieval world and how stories about that period have been deployed in modernity, are becoming increasingly necessary. The MAA has a moment to make that case with its Centennial, both in the earned media that will accrue to medieval studies with the celebration, and in the decentralized slate of activities across the country that will accompany the year-long event.

To that end, Virginia Tech (in partnership with the University of Virginia, and with support from a Centennial Grant from the Medieval Academy of America) is hosting a 2-day workshop in October 2024 to mentor colleagues so that they can do public-facing work. This can include, but is not limited too, planning events on their home campuses in support of the 2025 MAA Centennial celebration, positioning themselves to write pieces for newspapers and magazines, and working with other cultural institutions, among others.

Graduate students, early career researchers, and underemployed MedievALLists, are especially encouraged to apply but all scholars in any discipline working on the medieval world, broadly defined, are welcome.

The event will be held Thursday October 3 – Saturday October 5, 2024 on the campus of Virginia Tech (Blacksburg, VA).

DETAILS:

  • To allow for close collaboration between mentors and participants, spaces are limited to 15 participants.
  • All participants will receive a $750 stipend to defray travel and lodging. Food will be provided at the event itself.
  • Topics covered will include considerations on doing public writing and event planning from experienced mentors. Time will also be dedicated to workshopping an idea in a small group, and in collaboration with a dedicated mentor (see below).

MENTORS:

Please apply here.

To apply, you’ll be required to submit a current CV, as well as a statement about what proposed public-facing work you’d be interested in doing in the coming year. Applications are due no later than 11:59pm on May 1, 2024.  Accepted participants will be notified on around June 1, 2024.

See more at www.publicmedieval.org. Please share widely and direct any questions to the organizer, Prof. Matthew Gabriele (gabriele@vt.edu).

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MAA News – Editor of Speculum Call for Applications

With the retirement of Editor Katherine Jansen forthcoming in 2025, the Medieval Academy of America seeks to appoint an Editor, or co-Editors, for Speculum.

The position is configured as part-time, requiring between 20 and 30 hours per week, with some seasonal variation. The Editor is appointed for a five-year term, subject to acceptable yearly performance reviews, with the possibility of a second five-year term by mutual agreement. The Editor should be an established scholar with academic credentials in some field(s) of medieval studies, broadly defined, with demonstrated organizational and decision-making skills. Experience in journal, book, or series editing will be helpful but not necessary. The term of appointment begins in January of 2025. Terms and conditions are to be negotiated. Please note: the MAA does not offer remuneration for this position, aside from a summer stipend if the Editor is a faculty member, although the MAA may be able to continue offering support for otherwise staffing the journal (currently a Managing Editor and Associate Editor). It is understood that the Editor will negotiate terms of support with a host institution and these terms should be explicitly described as part of the application dossier. Interested parties should plan to attend an online information session in late May; details will be announced soon.

Follow these links for the full announcement and job description.

Announcement: https://www.themedievalacademyblog.org/editor-of-speculum-call-for-applications/

Job Description and Application Portal: https://www.medievalacademy.org/general/custom.asp?page=EdJobDescription

Questions should be addressed to EditorSearch@TheMedievalAcademy.org

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MAA News – 2024 Annual Meeting Livestreamed Content

We are very pleased to announce that (pending permission from presenters) the 2024 Annual Meeting plenary sessions as well as the Business Meeting will be livestreamed on the University of Notre Dame platform (times are US Eastern):

https://medieval.nd.edu/news-events/events/medieval-academy-of-america-2024/live-streams/

Recordings will be available after the meeting.

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MAA News – Call for Papers: The Medieval Academy at 100

The 2025 Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America
Harvard University, Cambridge MA
20-22 March 2025

The Centennial Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America will take place on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, hosted by Harvard University, Boston College, Boston University, Brandeis University, Fitchburg State University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stonehill College, Tufts University, and Wellesley College. While the conference will take place in person, the plenary lectures and some other events also will be live streamed. Plenary addresses will be delivered by Kristina Richardson (Professor of History and Middle Eastern and South Asian Languages and Cultures, University of Virginia), Sara Lipton (Incoming President of the Medieval Academy of America and Professor of History, Stony Brook University), and Wendy Belcher (Professor of Comparative Literature and African American Studies, Princeton University). The Annual Meeting will be followed by the Sunday annual meeting of the Medieval Academy’s Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA).

The conference sessions, receptions, and pre-conference programs will take place at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Harvard campus is accessible by taxi and public transit from Boston’s Logan Airport as well as from the South and Back Bay Amtrak stations. In addition to Harvard’s own museums and libraries, visitors can take advantage of greater Boston’s rich dining, entertainment, and cultural resources, including the Museum of Fine Arts, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and the Boston Public Library, all easily reached by the MBTA subway from Harvard Square.

Click here for additional information and the full Call for Papers

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MAA News – Annual Meeting Paper Prizes

The 2024 Inclusivity & Diversity Travel Grant has been awarded to Alexandra Montero Peters (Texas State University), “Imagining India, Imagining Race: Arabic Geographies and Castilian Histories as Sources for Medieval Muslim-Christian Intellectual Exchange.” This paper will be presented in Session 26 on Friday, 15 March, at 2:30 PM.

Student Awards:
Best Student Paper: Anna Gili (University of Padova), “The Material Transmission of the Kitāb al-Malakī and its Two Latin Translations: A Comparative Study.” This paper will be presented in Session 46 on Saturday, 16 March, at 8:30 AM.

Commendations
Emilie Lucia Bowerman (Dartmouth College), “The Cult of the Cross in the Hispanic Rite, 4th to 8th Centuries”; Claire Dillon (Columbia University), “A Global Mediterranean? Tracing the Fragmented Histories of Silk in Medieval Sicily”; Joshua P. Lee (University of California, Berkeley), “Frá mǫnnum undarligum ok buningi þeira:; Exploring Medieval Icelandic Conceptions of Cardinal Directionality, Alterity, and ‘Mythical Space’ in Four Old Norse Texts”; Meghan C. Lescault (University of Toronto), “Subject to Interpretation: The Ambiguous Position of the Chapter of Nivelles in Canon Law”; Jane Maschue (Catholic University of America), “The Mysterious Epitaph of a Spurious Wife: The Addition of Elpis to the Story of Boethius”

We hope you will make an effort to attend the Annual Meeting sessions where these emerging scholars will present their award-winning work. Please join us as well at the Opening Plenary on Thursday, 14 March, at 1:30 PM as we honor them publicly for this achievement.

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MAA News – 2024 CARA Annual Meeting

The Committee on Centers and Regional Associations (CARA) invites you to the annual CARA Meeting on Sunday, 17 March 2024, after the conclusion of the MAA Annual Meeting at the University of Notre Dame: Sunday, 17 March 2024, 8:30 AM – 12:30 PM (breakfast and lunch included), The University of Notre Dame, Private Dining Room, Morris Inn.

*What’s In a Name? Advantages and Challenges of the ‘Medieval’ Today*

The word “medieval” has a variety of meanings and implications in academic as well as popular discourse. How does using this rubric for the object of your teaching and research help or hinder you in appealing to students, engaging with colleagues, or gaining institutional support for your work? What are the implications of interpreting non-European societies as “medieval” (as “global Medieval Studies” implies)? If terms like “medieval” or “Medieval Studies” are problematic, then what alternatives might there be—and what shortcomings might they have? This year’s CARA meeting invites colleagues engaging with these questions to explore how we define ourselves and our field, and discuss the value as well as the difficulties of “the medieval” and “the Middle Ages” today.

Click here for the full program.

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