Reminder – Editorial Assistant for Speculum

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT for SPECULUM

speculumQUALIFICATIONS

Applicants must have strong computer and editorial skills, together with a background in any area of the humanities with a particular specialty in Medieval Studies, and must be available to start work in the fall of 2015 in Cambridge, MA. Strict attention to detail and excellent communication skills are particularly important. Reading ability in French, German, Spanish, Arabic, Latin and/or Italian is also highly desirable.

JOB DESCRIPTION

This internship will provide experience with the book review process of Speculum, the journal of the Medieval Academy of America. Duties include: sorting books; mailing books to reviewers; compiling information in a database from print books and online resources; transmitting information to the book review editors; receiving, organizing, and proofreading reviews for publication; and using an Excel-based management system (or other appropriate software).

This is a two-stage part-time paid internship. For the first three months the intern will sort and mail the review books while training under the current senior intern (12 hours per week). In January the intern will share the duties of the senior intern, including managing the database of reviews, working with the Book Review Editors, and coordinating and proofreading the reviews (up to 28 hours per week at a higher rate).

The position will begin in September 2015 and run for one year, with a possible renewal for a second year.

Preference will be given to applicants residing in the Boston area during the tenure of the job.

Submit cover letter, together with resume and up-to-date contact information for two referees to Sarah Spence, Editor, Speculum, sspence@themedievalacademy.org. Applications completed by June 15 will be given full consideration.

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Call for Papers – New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies

The twentieth biennial New College Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Studies will take place 10–13 March 2016 in Sarasota, Florida. The program committee invites 250-word abstracts of proposed twenty-minute papers on topics in European and Mediterranean history, literature, art, music and religion from the fourth to the seventeenth centuries. In celebration of the conference’s twentieth anniversary, abstracts are particularly solicited for a thread of special sessions reflecting the conference’s traditional interdisciplinary focus: that is, papers that blur methodological, chronological, and geographical boundaries, or that combine subjects and/or approaches in unexpected ways. As always, planned sessions are also welcome. The deadline for all abstracts is 15 September 2015; for submission guidelines or to submit an abstract, please go to http://www.newcollegeconference.org/cfp.

Further anniversary events will include a retrospective panel on the conference’s forty-year history and a Saturday evening banquet. In addition, the second Snyder Prize (named in honor of the conference’s founder Lee Snyder, who died in 2012), will be given to the best paper presented at the conference by a junior scholar. The prize carries an honorarium of $400.

The Conference is held on the campus of New College of Florida, the honors college of the Florida state system. The college, located on Sarasota Bay, is adjacent to the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, which will offer tours arranged for conference participants. Sarasota is noted for its beautiful public beaches, theater, food, art and music. Average temperatures in March are a pleasant high of 77F (25C) and a low of 57F (14C).

More information will be posted on the conference website as it becomes available, including plenary speakers, conference events, and area attractions. Please send any inquiries to info@newcollegeconference.org.

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Call for Papers – Animal Languages: Interspecies Communication in the Middle Ages

Call For Papers

Animal Languages:
Interspecies Communication in the Middle Ages

Editor:
Alison Langdon
Western Kentucky University

Until relatively recently, scholars have tended to focus on the symbolic valence of nonhuman animals, to read their behavior and characteristics as representative of explicitly human interests and concerns. With the advent of critical animal studies, new work has begun to critique traditional humanist scholarship by challenging any absolute distinction between the categories of “human” and “animal.” This has led to new readings of animals in the medieval world as living creatures rather than merely figurative representations of human experience and values.

Language provides a particularly rich locus for this exploration. Drawing on a tradition stretching back to Genesis, many medieval writers identified the capacity for language as evidence of possession of reason, that faculty which was seen to separate humans from all the rest of God’s creation. At the same time, many animals were understood to possess language of their own and in some cases to participate in human language. Although medieval philosophers generally deny intention and significance in animal vocalizations, a range of medieval textual traditions suggests that animals were commonly seen to communicate within and between species.

This interdisciplinary volume seeks articles of 6,000-9,000 words from all fields of medieval studies exploring language, broadly construed, as part of the continued interrogation of the boundaries of human and nonhuman animals in the Middle Ages. How, when, and with whom did animals talk in the medieval world? What kinds of communicative strategies did medieval people recognize in the animal world, and how were they interpreted? How was human meaning imposed on animal vocalizations? How does the use of animals as symbolic language in verbal and visual texts draw upon empirical understanding of nonhuman communication (body language, etc.)? How might nonhuman animals remind us of the embodied nature of language itself?

Proposals of 300-500 words should be submitted by e-mail to Dr. Alison Langdon at the following address: alison.langdon@wku.edu. Deadline for proposals is August 1, 2015. Notification of accepted proposals will be made by August 15, 2015, with complete chapters due by June 1, 2016. The volume has been invited for submission to Ashgate and Amsterdam University Press.

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Jobs for Medievalists

https://academicpositions.harvard.edu/postings/6223Lc

Title Lecturer in Medieval Literature
School Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Department/Area English
Position Description The Department of English seeks applications for a lecturer in Medieval Literature. The appointment is expected to begin on August 1. The lecturer will be responsible for three courses, one of which will be the required survey “Arrivals: British Literature 700–1700,” and another two to be determined after consulting with the Curriculum Committee; one of those two may be an introductory Old English course. The position is for one year.Keywords:
faculty, instructor

Boston, Cambridge, Massachusetts, MA, Northeast, New England

Fields: Old English, Middle English, Medieval Drama, early British Literature.

Basic Qualifications Doctorate in English or related discipline ordinarily required by the time the appointment begins.
Additional Qualifications Competence in teaching Old English. Demonstrated excellence in teaching is desired.
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Jobs for Medievalists

Cambridge University Library has just advertised three senior positions available within the Special Collections Division:

Head of Rare Books (salary range £38,511-£48,743)

Keeper of Manuscripts and University Archives (salary range £38,511-£48,743)

Deputy Head of Rare Books (salary range £34,233-£45,954)

Full particulars for all of these posts can be found at:

http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/job

Applications close on Friday 26th June. Informal enquiries for the Rare Books posts are welcomed by Ed Potten (ejp62@cam.ac.uk) and for the Manuscripts and University Archives posts, by Jill Whitelock and Ben Outhwaite (jw330@cam.ac.uk and bmo10@cam.ac.uk).

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MAA News – 2015-16 Rome Prize

romeprizeThe 2015-16 Rome Prizes in Medieval Studies were recently awarded by the American Academy in Rome to two members of the Medieval Academy:

Eric Knibbs (Assistant Professor, Department of History, Williams College) was awarded the Millicent Mercer Johnsen Post-Doctoral Rome Prize, for a project titled “The Forging of Pseudo-Isidore.”

John Lansdowne (Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University) was awarded the Marian and Andrew Heiskell/Samuel H. Kress Foundation Pre-Doctoral Rome Prize, the first of a two-year Fellowship for dissertation research. His thesis is titled “Image Made Flesh: The Mosaic Man of Sorrows at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme in Rome.”

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MAA News – MAA Grants Awarded

Golden Haggadah, Spain. c. 1320, British Library, Add. MS 27210, f. 15r, detail.

Golden Haggadah, Spain. c. 1320, British Library, Add. MS 27210, f. 15r, detail.

We are thrilled to announce the winners of the 2015 Dissertation Grants and the 2015 Schallek Awards.

Dissertation Grants:

The nine endowed and named Medieval Academy Dissertation Grants support advanced graduate students in medieval studies.

Hannah Elmer (Columbia University), “Sites of Life: Resuscitating and Baptizing Dead Infants in Central Europe, 1400-1600” (John Boswell Dissertation Grant)

Elizabeth Fischer (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), “The Representation of Space in Early Carolingian Gospel Books” (Grace Frank Dissertation Grant)

Bibiana Gattozzi (Princeton University), “The Hymns of Medieval Southern Italy: Music, Politics, and the Transformation of Local Liturgical Song” (E. K. Rand Dissertation Grant)

Justin Hastings (Loyola University Chicago), “‘Englishing’ Horace: the Influence of the Horatian Tradition on Old and Middle English Poetry” (Robert and Janet Lumiansky Dissertation Grant)

Alexandra M. Locking (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), “From Humble Handmaiden to Ruling Lady: Aristocratic Women in Ecclesiastical Reform and the Evolution of Female Lordship, 1049-1122 CE” (Helen Maud Cam Dissertation Grant)

Phillip Mazero (St. Louis University), “Frontier Politics: Veneto-Byzantine Relations, Civic Identity, and Imperial Hegemony, 697-1126” (Frederic C. Lane Dissertation Grant)

Christopher Mielke (Central European University), “Every Hyacinth the Garden Wears: The Archaeology of Medieval Queenship in Hungary (1000-1395)” (Charles T. Wood Dissertation Grant)

Sharon Rhodes (University of Rochester), “Turning the Tide: Fathoming the Flood in Old English Literature” (Hope Emily Allen Dissertation Grant)

Michelle Urberg (University of Chicago), “The New Vineyard: Origins, Development, and Flourishing of Birgittine Musico-Devotional Practices (c. 1350-1545)” (Etienne Gilson Dissertation Grant)

Schallek Awards:

The five Schallek Awards, given in collaboration with the Richard III Society – American Branch, support graduate students conducting doctoral research in any relevant discipline dealing with late-medieval Britain (ca. 1350-1500).

Taylor Joseph Aucoin (University of Bristol), “Shrovetide: Festival in Medieval and Early Modern Britain”

Gavin Fort (Northwestern University), “The Vicarious Middle Ages: Proxy Pilgrimage in Late-Medieval England, 1250-1550”

Jon-Mark Grussenmeyer (University of Kent), “Cardinal Kemp: The Last Lancastrian Statesman”

Lori Jones (University of Ottawa), “Changing Perceptions of the Origin (Geographical and Historical) of the Plague”

Sarah Elizabeth Wilson (Northwestern University), “Regenerative Mourning: Sorrow’s Social Uses in Late Medieval England”

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MAA News – Schallek Fellow Named

RostadThe Medieval Academy of America, in collaboration with the Richard III Society – American Branch, is pleased to announce that the 2015 Schallek Fellowship has been awarded to Samuel Rostad (University of Notre Dame) for research on his dissertation, “Benedictine Popular Preaching in Late Medieval England, c. 1350-1500.” Sam will spend his Fellowship year in England studying manuscripts of Benedictine sermons.

In summarizing his dissertation, Sam writes: “For a group of regulars normally bound to silence, the Benedictines of late medieval England were a surprisingly vocal bunch. Although popular preaching from the thirteenth century on is generally associated with friars and seculars, a large body evidence – including surviving sermons, preaching licenses, and pastoral handbooks owned by monasteries – points to the active part Benedictines played in preaching to the laity in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. My dissertation will draw on this wide range of evidence to provide a thorough study of Benedictine popular preaching in late medieval England, a subject which has received some scholarly attention but has yet to be explored fully. A large part of the dissertation will focus on the surviving sermons themselves and what the Benedictines actually preached to the laity, the emphases and themes of their preaching. But I am also interested in a number of related questions which will provide a fuller discussion of the topic, for instance Benedictine use of pastoral aides in their sermons and their own views on preaching and their place in the pastoral life of medieval English society. In broadest terms, I hope this study will contribute to the discussion of the place of the Benedictines in late medieval religious life. As one of the most direct lines of contact between clergy and laity, as well as its increasing prominence from the thirteenth century on, preaching offers an excellent avenue into the study of Benedictine-lay religious interaction.”

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MAA News – MAA @ Kalamazoo

Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 82v.

Cod. Pal. germ. 848, Große Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (Codex Manesse), Zürich, c.1300-c.1340, fol. 82v.

As always, the Medieval Academy will have a strong presence at Kalamazoo next week, sponsoring a Plenary lecture, two related sessions, and, through CARA and the GSC, three roundtables:

Plenary lecture: Friday, 8:30 AM, East Ballroom, Bernhard Center

Cary J. Nederman (Texas A&M University), “Modern Toleration through a Medieval Lens: A ‘Judgmental’ View”

Related sessions: Toleration of the Religious “Other” (Fri. 1:30 PM, Session 231, Valley II, LeFevre Lounge); Toleration and Council (Fri. 3:30 PM, Session 285, Valley II, LeFevre Lounge)

Graduate Student Committee session: The Public Medievalist: A Roundtable on Engaging the Public with the Middle Ages (Thurs. 3:30 PM, Session 115, Schneider 1140), followed by the GSC reception with cash bar (5:30 PM, Fetzer 2030)

CARA sessions: What’s New in Digital Humanities (A Roundtable) (Sat. 10 AM,Session 375, Schneider 1340); Medievalists in the Media (A Roundtable) (Sat. 1:30 PM, Session 433, Schneider 1340)

Further information is available on the IMC website http://wmich.edu/medieval/congress/sessions.html.

In addition, the Medieval Academy exhibit table will be staffed in shifts by Speculum editor Sallie Spence, Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis, and Editorial Assistant Erin Pomeroy. We hope you will stop by to say hello.

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MAA News – From the Executive Director: “Compatible Careers” and the Future of Academia

shieldAt the recent Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy at the University of Notre Dame, The Consortium for the Teaching of the Middle Ages (TEAMS http://www.teamsmedieval.org/) sponsored a roundtable session titled “The Futures of Medieval Studies and the Academy,” moderated by Thomas Goodmann (Univ. of Miami). Participants Mary Carruthers (New York Univ. and President of the Fellows), Irina A. Dumitrescu (Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn), and Barbara H. Rosenwein (Loyola Univ. Chicago) addressed issues concerning both Medieval Studies and Academia in general, followed by questions and discussion. A recording of the session is available here. I was particularly glad to have attended, since the discussion often turned to the Medieval Academy and concerns about how the MAA can help members, student members in particular, through advocacy, mentoring, and financial support. You’ll hear my responses to various questions and comments in the recording along with a very lively discussion.

Students in the audience expressed particular concerns about the job market, a topic of concern to all. We all know of prominent medievalists whose positions, after retirement, were re-tasked to be filled by early modernists or other non-medievalists. More and more students and junior scholars are vying for fewer and fewer positions, positions that are defined with increasingly broad strokes. Students are understandably anxious about how to balance their commitment to the Middle Ages with a wish to be “marketable” in an ever-more-generalizing job market. As panelist Irina Dumitrescu asked, “Does the future include Medieval Studies?” To judge by anecdotes of over-enrollments of Medieval Studies courses filled with students who grew up reading and watching Game of Thrones and Harry Potter and, of course, Lord of the Rings, there is often a disconnect between undergraduate demand and administrative supply. To help fill the seats and demonstrate to the administration the popularity of Medieval Studies, Barbara Rosenwein recommends – among other things – promoting courses through social media and enticing titles. We all know that once we get them in the door, they will want to be medievalists.

But then what? Are we sending our students out into a world where there aren’t enough full-time jobs? Where adjuncts are paid sub-standard wages? Where they have to “settle” for alt-ac?

As someone whose career has never followed the path of a traditional academic, I speak from experience when I say that there does not have be any “settling” involved in making that choice. Not everyone who goes to graduate school wants to be a full-time professor, and not everyone who wants to be a full-time professor is able to land the job they want. It behooves us all to make sure that our students know that there are other options out there and that they are all valued and acceptable.

For the last three years, Fordham University’s Center for Medieval Studies has modeled this support for its students by offering an annual program titled “Compatible Careers for Medievalists.” This year, panelists included graduates of Fordham’s Medieval Studies program who were pursuing careers outside traditional Academia. Participants spoke about how the skills they acquired as medievalists were applicable in other workplace environments. Some examples are described in this handout created by Fordham alumnus Paul Slonina, currently a consultant with Booz Allen. As the definition of Medieval Studies continues to expand – in the classroom, at the podium, in the pages of Speculum, and in print – our understanding of how we define success for ourselves and our students needs to expand as well. Our skillset is eminently marketable, and there are a lot of ways to be a medievalist.

At the TEAMS roundtable, Mary Carruthers spoke about the changing climate on campuses where a degree is sometimes seen as a commodity, where the increasing corporatization of universities that seem to prioritize cost-efficiency over all creates a less-than-supportive environment for all faculty, regardless of department. In this climate, it is more important than ever for medievalists to preach, as the Academy declared in the 1940s, “the Truth of the Humanities.” We need to engage in international initiatives, delve into public and educational policy development, reach out to other disciplines, and continue the valuable work many have already begun in comparative histories. And we need to support each other. The leadership and governance of the Medieval Academy of America stands willing and able to advocate on behalf of endangered programs and positions. Please contact me if you need our help.

Finally, don’t forget that the Academy already offers a platform for networking and collaboration through the Committee on Area and Regional Associations (CARA), a group that facilitates brainstorming, problem-solving, and strategizing among Committee and Program chairs and administrators. If you haven’t already registered, the CARA Committee and I invite you to join us as we inaugurate a new model for CARA networking at the annual (and free) CARA Luncheon at the upcoming Kalamazoo Congress, on Friday, May 15, at noon. Attendees will engage in programmatic discussions over lunch with others who share similar concerns. If you would like to join us as a representative of your program, please register by Monday, May 11, here. I look forward to seeing you there.

And if you can’t come to the CARA lunch at Kalamazoo, stop by the Medieval Academy table in the exhibit hall to say hello and pick up some chocolate. We’d love to meet you.

Lisa Fagin Davis, Executive Director
LFD@TheMedievalAcademy.org

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