MAA News – Call for Publication Prize Submissions

The Medieval Academy of America invites submissions for the following prizes to be awarded at the 2024 MAA Annual Meeting. The Medieval Academy warmly encourages the nomination of publications written by scholars working beyond the tenure track as well as those written by faculty. Unless otherwise indicated, submissions are to be made by the publisher. If your project, monograph, or article is eligible, please contact your publisher and ask them to nominate your work. Submission instructions vary, but all dossiers must complete by 15 October 2023.

PLEASE NOTE: because of the ongoing MAA office closure, PDF review copies of nominated books may be submitted instead of hardcopies (PDFs should be emailed to the Executive Director). In addition, the residency restrictions limiting eligibility for some book prizes to residents of North America have been lifted.

John Nicholas Brown Prize
Awarded to a first monograph of outstanding quality in the field of medieval studies.

Article Prize in Critical Race Studies
Awarded annually to an article in the field of medieval studies that explores questions of race and the medieval world, and which is judged by the selection committee to be of outstanding quality.

Digital Humanities Prize
Awarded to an outstanding digital research project or resource in the field of medieval studies.

Van Courtlandt Elliott Prize
Awarded to a first article of outstanding quality in the field of medieval studies.

Karen Gould Prize
Awarded to a monograph of outstanding quality in medieval art history.

Monica H. Green Prize
Awarded to an exceptional project that demonstrates the value of medieval studies in our present day.

Haskins Medal
Awarded to a distinguished monograph in the field of medieval studies.

Jerome Singerman Prize
Awarded to a meritorious second monograph in the field of medieval studies.

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MAA News – Race and Gender Working Group

The next meeting of the Race & Gender Working Group will take place on Friday, August 18, 2023 at 12pm-1:30pm EST.

Dr. Mohamad Ballan, Assistant Professor of History
Stony Brook University

A Discussion of his recent Speculum article “Borderland Anxieties: Lisān al-Dīn ibn al-Khatị̄b (d. 1374) and the Politics of Genealogy in Late Medieval Granada.”

Abstract: This article seeks to contribute to larger scholarly conversations about the construction and deployment of difference in medieval borderland societies. It examines the ways in which genealogical notions of “Arabness” [ʿurūbiyyah], which expressed Islamic identity in terms of Arab lineage, structured the process of identity formation in Nasrid Granada (1232–1492). Through a close reading of the works of the Nasrid scholar-statesman Lisān al-Dīn ibn al-Khatị̄b (d. 1374) and his intellectual-political network, the article explores how Nasrid elites incorporated “Arabness” into the articulation of a local identity rooted in ethnic cohesion, religious exclusivity, and genealogical continuity. It argues that this constituted a particular strategy of identification that sought to differentiate Nasrid Granada from its neighbors and demarcate the boundaries between al-Andalus, Christian Iberia, and the Maghrib, even as these regions came to be tied even more closely together through political, intellectual, social, and mercantile networks between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries. The article concludes with a consideration of the “racialization of religion” and the manner in which Ibn al-Khatị̄b integrated ideas about environmental determinism and physiognomy, alongside genealogy, to represent the religious and cultural traits of the inhabitants of Granada as fixed, immutable, and heritable characteristics, the product of both lineage and environment. Through an examination of the racialized production of difference within the dynamic borderland context of late medieval Iberia, this article seeks to invite broader comparative approaches that integrate the medieval Islamic world into discussions about race, racialization, and ethnicity in the Middle Ages.

Click here for more information and to register.

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MAA News – Good News From our Members

Virginia Blanton (Univ. of Missouri, Kansas City) has been awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to work at the Ruusbroec Institute in Antwerp, researching English nuns who sought refuge in Catholic Flanders during the Reformation.

Congratulations! If you have good news to share, please send it to Executive Director Lisa Fagin Davis.

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Jobs For Medievalists

The University of Vermont’s Department of History in The College of Arts & Sciences invites applications for a full-time, tenure-track member in Global Environmental History, at the rank of Assistant Professor.  Period and area of specialization are open. Candidates should hold a PhD in history or be an advanced ABD in History.  Opportunities to participate in a range of interdisciplinary programs exist at the University of Vermont, depending on the successful candidate’s research and teaching interests. The position will start in Fall of 2024. The successful candidate will possess an ability to develop a vigorous research agenda and to publish in peer-reviewed journals and author historical monographs. The successful applicant may also pursue other forms of scholarship including digital scholarship and public history projects. Engaging classroom practices that excite and inspire students in the study of history, as well as the ability to teach courses at the introductory (including the Global Environmental History survey) and advanced undergraduate and graduate levels, are also expected. https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=65643

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Call for Papers – Conflict and Polemic on the Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean World

Sessions at the International Medieval Congress,
Leeds, 01-04 July 2024
Conflict and Polemic on the Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean World

Organizers:
Alexander Marx, Austrian Academy of Sciences
Laurin Herberich, University of Heidelberg

Sponsor: Arbeitsgemeinschaft Ibero-Mediaevistik

This call for papers invites contributions concerned with the Iberian Peninsula and neighboring regions in the Mediterranean World. Papers can focus on any period throughout the Middle Ages. The thematic focus is concerned with the subjects of conflict and polemic, including inter-religious interaction, political conflicts, crusading, piracy, polemical literature, notions of the other, and preaching efforts – but not limited to these subjects.

Besides this thematic focus, these sessions have the goal to seize the opportunity provided by the IMC to bring together scholars from different scholarly and national communities, since many different groups are working on the Iberian Peninsula, and via these sessions we would hope to encourage stronger interaction between these groups. This includes several nationally determined groups such as the strong German scholarship on Iberia (as united in the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Ibero-Mediaevistik) as well as several subject-related groups such as crusade scholars devoted to corresponding phenomena on the Peninsula. These sessions have therefore the goal to put different communities into conversation and to generate new synergies between different scholarly traditions.

If you are interested in presenting in these sessions, please send a title and c.250 words abstract (in English) to the two organizers by 15 Sept. 2023.

Contact:
alexander.marx@oeaw.ac.at
laurin.herberich@zegk.uni-heidelberg.de

Deadline for proposals: 15 Sept. 2023

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Glossed texts of medieval Latin

If you or your students are as weak in medieval Latin as I was in graduate school, you might want some help. I’m looking for collaborators to prepare texts with abundant glossing of the Latin, with the aim of rapidly and relatively painlessly increasing fluency. The focus will be on texts of special interest to students of literature rather than history (unlike Beeson, etc.). About a year of high school Latin would be a prerequisite.

Texts provided will be fairly extensive—perhaps some ten to fifty pages—and of course on line and at no cost. Previously translated texts, and especially hitherto untranslated texts, prose or verse, are welcome. Texts need not be pristinely edited—even the Pat Lat would be okay—and should be out of copyright. A good source, for example, is thelatinlibrary.com/medieval. So far I have prepared selections from Bede, Isidore, Andreas Capellanus, and (complete) Dante’s letter to Can Grande.

If you are interested in collaborating please email me at bar7ney@gmail.com, and I will send you a sample. I welcome any format and level of glossing that you prefer—no style sheet. I could also use help in the technical business of putting the texts on line.

With thanks, Stephen A. Barney

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Otto F. Ege Symposium in September 2023

“The Life, Legacy and Legend of Otto F. Ege: A Symposium”

When: Friday, 8 September 2023, 9am to 4pm
Where: Hollings Special Collections Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia

***Due to limited space, REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED before 15 August***

The University of South Carolina is pleased to invite students, librarians, and academics to a one-day symposium on the “Life, Legacy and Legend of Otto F. Ege.” This free event will take place on 8 September 2023 in our state-of-the-art Hollings Special Collections Library, located on the Columbia campus.

Four leading Ege scholars will make presentations on a range of innovative subject-matter: Scott Gwara (University of South Carolina), Eric J. Johnson (Ohio State University), Lisa Fagin Davis (Medieval Academy of America) and Elizabeth Hebbard (Indiana University).

In addition to this program, Scott Gwara and Kristin Harrell will introduce the Otto F. Ege Digital Archive, a comprehensive resource on Ege’s life, business and private library. This website will showcase newly digitized photographs, letters, dealer catalogues, academic publications, newspaper articles, scrapbook ephemera and digital images of manuscripts from a host of collections, include those of Ege’s heirs, Yale’s Beinecke Library and the Lima Public Library.

The event will include an exhibition of Ege manuscripts, original photographs and facsimile correspondence.

Because of limited seating, registration is required before 15 August. To register, or for further information, please email Kristin Harrell, project manager of the Otto F. Ege Digital Archive, at KHARRELL@email.sc.edu.

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MAA Advocacy Committee Response to SCOTUS Affirmative Action Ruling

We, the Advocacy Committee of the Medieval Academy of America, denounce the Supreme Court of the United States ruling to strike down affirmative action. The loss of affirmative action is detrimental to both the enrichment of particular disciplines, including medieval studies, as well as the broadest realizations of equity in our communities beyond higher education. We join other institutions and organizations across the country to denounce the ruling of the Supreme Court of the United States, and we reaffirm our commitment to supporting greater diversity in our programming, our grant opportunities, and our advocacy.

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Launching the Medieval DC Digital Resource

Washington, DC-area medievalists, in conjunction with DC Humanities and The Catholic University of America, are pleased to announce the launch of Medieval DC, (https://sites.google.com/cua.edu/medievaldc/home), a resource created in conjunction with the 2023 Annual Meeting of the Medieval Academy of America.This DC Humanities grant-funded initiative features several of our colleagues and highlights many of our DC partner institutions.

The website showcases sixteen locations in the DC area where the medieval might be encountered. Ten of the web pages include short videos tailor-made for our site and starring DC medievalists. The site is geared towards high school and undergraduate students especially (although it can be used by the general public) and we hope that if you are teaching in either of these environments, MAA members might find this resource helpful.

DC Humanities was impressed by our final product, and would like to feature the site at an event on September 21. If you are in the DC area in September, please come join us; we will have more details as the date draws near.

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MAA News – From the Editor’s Desk

Greetings from the Editor’s desk at Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies. Since the new issue of Speculum, July 98/3 (2023), will soon post online and land in your mailboxes, I take this opportunity to preview the riches we have in store for you. The issue leads off with Maureen Miller’s presidential address “Reframing the ‘Documentary Revolution’ in Medieval Italy,” given as a show-stopping plenary lecture at the Medieval Academy of America’s annual meeting in Washington, DC in February. Maureen is keeping lively company in this issue: the other four articles are all by early career scholars whose work demonstrates that the future of our field is in good hands. François·e Charmaille’s “Trans Climates of the European Middle Ages, 500–1300” examines the figure of Tiresias in medieval literature, through the lens of trans climatology, a concept that encompasses “the climatically ordered procession of the seasons as transgender change” and a notion of gendered seasons. Turning to Italian literature, specifically Dante, Grace Delmolino’s “Fraudulent Counsel: Legal Temporality and the Poetics of Liability in Dante’s Inferno, Boniface VIII’s Liber Sextus, and Gratian’s De penitentia” shows how the poet’s concept of fraudulent counsel in the Inferno drew on legal ideas, particularly those from the canon law tradition. Joining the animated discussion in art history about medieval diagrams, Justin Willson’s “On the Aesthetic of Diagrams in Byzantine Art” argues for a Byzantine theological tradition of diagrammatic art. And finally, in “Mechanics of Royal Generosity: The Gifts from the Wedding of King Matthias Corvinus and Beatrice of Aragon (1476),” Patrik Pastrnak introduces us to two unpublished inventories that document both the wedding gifts of the royal couple and the relationships that these gifts created.

I am also delighted to announce a new initiative of Speculum—a podcast!—whose release is timed to coincide with the publication of the July issue. Entitled Speculum Spotlight, this pilot podcast is a collaboration between Speculum and The Multicultural Middle Ages podcast. Our vision is to highlight in a 30-minute interview format one article and its author from the most recent issue of the journal, in this case July 2023.  The goal is to spotlight the scholarly contribution the research makes and to give the listener a glimpse behind the scenes to explore the research, writing, and crafting of the essay with its author.

Following the advice of the Editorial Board of Speculum and the preferences of the MMA members, we have used this pilot to highlight the scholarship of an early career scholar. In this case, we have selected Francois·e Charmaille’s “Trans Climates of the European Middle Ages, 500–1300” to be the subject of our first episode. Logan Quigley conducts the interview. I hope that listeners will find the sparkling conversation between the two interlocutors as engaging and informative as I do.

My thanks and gratitude go to the MMA series producers, William Beattie, Jonathan Correa, Reed O’Mara, and Logan Quigley, who accepted my proposal for this collaboration with such excitement. I’d also like to thank the members of the Speculum Editorial Board, who also enthusiastically supported this project, and particularly Mohamad Ballan, who has signed on as one of the episode producers. I also want to acknowledge the Speculum staff, Taylor McCall, Carol Anderson, and Jane Maschue, and at the Medieval Academy of America, the Graduate Student Committee, Lisa Fagin Davis, and Chris Cole for his technical support on this project.  As of 1 July, you can access the podcast here or click through on the right rail of our website. You can also find it at all the usual podcasts platforms.  Happy listening! But do make sure to read the issue too!

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