Daily Archives: 3 June 2016

The Middle Ages Now Free Public Lecture @ University of Sydney

The Middle Ages Now

Date: Wednesday 15 June, 2016
Time: 6:00pm-7:30pm
Venue: Law School LT 104, Level 1, Sydney Law School, Eastern Avenue, the University of Sydney
RSVP: Free event with online registration requested. Please click here for the registration page

HASHTAG for this lecture: #middleages

Co-presented by the Global Middle Ages Faculty Research Group in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the University of Sydney, the newly established Sydney Social Science and Humanities Advanced Research Centre (SSSHARC), the ARC Centre for the History of Emotions and Macquarie University

The Middle Ages have never been more current. Particularly since 9/11, the term ‘medieval’ has been used to describe, for example, climate-change deniers, climate-change scientists, Christians, Muslims, IS, and Al-Qaeda, to name a few. In these contexts, the Middle Ages denotes ignorance, superstition and barbarism.

Why this turn to the idea of the Middle Ages to explain our modern times? Our speakers will explore the long history of the ‘modern’ Middle Ages and its particular relevance for today’s global culture.

Introductions:

  • Professor Sahar Amer, Chair, Department of Arabic Language and Cultures, University of Sydney

Speakers:

  • Associate Professor Lynn Ramey (Chair) Vanderbilt University, USA
  • Professor Laura Doyle, University of Texas at Austin, USA
  • Professor Candace Barrington, Central Connecticut State University, USA
  • Associate Professor Geraldine Heng, University of Texas at Austin, USA

Cultures of the Modernities in the Global Middle Ages @ University of Sydney

Cultures of the Modernities in the Global Middle Ages
Global Middle Ages Faculty Research Group, The University of Sydney
15-18 June, 2016

Convenors: Prof. Sahar Amer and Dr. Hélène Sirantoine (University of Sydney); Prof. Louise D’Arcens and Dr. Clare Monagle (Macquarie University)

This inaugural conference of the Global Middle Ages Faculty Research Group at the University of Sydney focuses on Cultures of Modernity in the Pre-Modern and Early Modern Period. Encompassing medieval studies and medievalist approaches, it aims to expand the traditional focus, disciplinary constraints, geographic reach, and historical periodization of the Middle Ages and early modern period. Contesting the largely Eurocentric bent of much scholarship on the pre-modern period, this conference questions the assumed linear trajectory of Europe, the conventional categories of “center” and “periphery,” highlighting in the process the crucial role of “peripheries” in the construction of European modernity.

During the two day conference, invited speakers and panelists will challenge the notion oft-repeated in world history that Western powers were constituted in the fifteenth century or the Renaissance and gave rise, only then, to a capitalist modernity. They will revisit this dominating grand (meta)-narrative of Euro-centric modernity with its teleological, stage-oriented histories, and its associated categories of “progress,” “industrialization,” and “civilization.”

This conference will reflect more specifically on the technologies, translation projects, intercultural engagements, and cultural sophistication of earlier empires. These have begun to rewrite the history of our contemporary world, the narrative of the Enlightenment and of our assumed modernity. They are also having an impact on contemporary theorizations of postcolonialism, capitalism, feminism, race, and material cultures. Our conversation will revolve around the importance of this pre-modernity in discussions of contemporary forms of modernity and of the value of the past to contemporary understanding of the present.

This interdisciplinary conference will bring together three international keynote speakers (Prof. Laura Doyle, UMass-Amherst; Prof. Candace Barrington, Central Connecticut University, and A/P Geraldine Heng, University of Texas-Austin) who will share with us their research on “interimperiality” (Doyle), the Global Chaucer Project (Barrington), and the Global Middle Ages Project (GMAP) as well as MappaMundi digital initiatives, & Scholarly Community for the Globalization of the Middle Ages (Heng). The conference will also feature our international visiting scholar-in-residence Professor Lynn Ramey (Vanderbilt University) and her digital humanities work on “Cyprus” Crossroads of the Medieval Mediterranean.”

To register for the conference, please email Prof. Sahar Amer (sahar.amer@sydney.edu.au) or Dr Hélène Sirantoine (helene.sirantoine@sydney.edu.au). Please note that spaces are limited, so it is first come, first serve, with priority for those who can attend the entire conference in order to ensure a dynamic, cohesive, and enriching conversation.