Monthly Archives: December 2016

Queer/Adaptation – Call For Papers

Submissions are sought for a collection of essays tentatively titled Queer/Adaptation.

Please send inquiries and proposals of 300-­400 words to Pamela Demory (phdemory@ucdavis.edu) by January 15, 2017. Full articles of approximately 5000 words would be due by September 1, 2017.

In recent years, Adaptation Studies has moved well beyond the study of novels adapted for film, dismantling the oppositions that have characterized so much popular discourse on adaptation—original/copy, faithful/unfaithful, book/film—and questioning the formerly assumed “natural” progression of original text to inferior copy. The study of adaptation now encompasses multiple media: books and film, yes, but also stage plays, musicals, video, games, songs, toys, fan fiction … the very promiscuity of which could be said to be queer. In fact, a Venn diagram of queer and adaptation would reveal a significant overlap. To queer something is to deconstruct it, to demonstrate the instability of all those apparently obvious oppositions— male/female, gay/straight, homosexual/heterosexual, normal/deviant—that structure our understanding of ourselves and others. Queer revels in fluidity; it resists the supposed “natural” plot of heterosexual courtship to marriage to children—in life and in texts. Both queer and adaptation can disrupt the idea of an original unified whole; can bring to light unstated assumptions, fissures in normative ideologies; can be processes of rewriting, of resistance, of performance.

This collection of essays will illuminate the intersection of queer and adaptation. Proposals should be grounded in current adaptation and/or queer theory, should be rigorous and scholarly, but written for a broad academic audience. Topics might include (but are not limited to) the following:

  • Process would explore the queerness of adaptation itself; processes of reading, of resisting, of destabilizing notions of authorship, authority, ideology.
  • Form would explore adaptations that—by critiquing or resisting a source text’s conventional narrative structure or normative ideologies—can be read as queer, or by using nontraditional (even “inappropriate”) media (fan fiction, videogames, comics, merchandise, themepark rides, popular songs, artwork in a variety of media)—might be considered queer.
  • Performance would explore how queer actors or performers affect meaning in a given adaptation (any adaptation that plays with gender roles and/or sexuality)—as well as drawing connections between gender and adaptation as performances.
  • Reception would explore how queer readers, spectators, theatregoers, and consumers of adaptations shape meaning—as well as drawing connections between queer reading practices and adaptation.
  • Authorship would explore how queer authors—including novelists, filmmakers, journalists, producers, screenwriters, and other adapters—shape meaning, and how that meaning shifts when some or all of the authors or adapters identify as queer.
  • Characters and Story would explore stories about queer characters and/or about homosexuality that have been adapted from one medium to another.

About the Editor:

Pamela Demory, PhD, is Continuing Lecturer in the University Writing Program at the University of California, Davis, where she has taught courses in film adaptation, queer cinema, and writing in film studies. She is the co-­‐editor (with Christopher Pullen) of Queer Love in Film and Television: Critical Essays (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and the author of “Queer Adaptation” (in The Routledge Companion to Adaptation Studies, forthcoming).

Culture and Violence – Call For Papers

“Culture and Violence”
38th Annual Medieval and Renaissance Forum
Keene State College, Keene, NH, USA
21-22 April, 2017

Keynote speaker: Professor Richard W. Kaeuper, University of Rochester

“From Geoffroi de Charny to Louis de la Tremoille: The Autumn of Chivalry”

Professor Kaeuper’s research has focused on medieval English and Continental history, justice and public order, and especially on the development of chivalry, with an emphasis on its nexus with violence and religion. Professor Kaeuper’s research bursts traditional disciplinary boundaries, combining institutional and legal history with a strong emphasis on cultural, especially literary and social developments. His most recent book, Medieval Chivalry, appeared this past spring in the distinguished Cambridge Medieval Textbooks series. Among his previous publications are Holy Warriors: The Religious Ideology of Chivalry (UPenn, 2009), Chivalry and Violence in Medieval Europe (Oxford, 1999), and an extensive introduction to Elspeth Kennedy’s translation of Geoffroi de Charny’s Book of Chivalry (UPenn, 1996; 2nd edition 2005).

We welcome abstracts (one page or less) or panel proposals that discuss the nature and cultural and religious context of violence in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern period.

Papers, however, need not be confined to this theme but may cover other aspects of medieval and Renaissance life, literature, languages, art, philosophy, theology, history, and music.

Students, faculty, and independent scholars are welcome. Please indicate your status (undergraduate, graduate, or faculty), affiliation (if relevant), and full contact information on your proposal.

Undergraduate sessions are welcome but require faculty sponsorship.

Please submit abstracts, audio/visual needs, and full contact information to Dr. Robert G. Sullivan, Assistant Forum Director at sullivan@german.umass.edu.

Abstract deadline: January 15, 2017

Presenters and early registration: March 15, 2017

The Association of Adaptation Studies 12th Annual Conference – Call For Papers

‘Returns’
The Association of Adaptation Studies 12th Annual Conference
De Montfort University, Leicester
18-19 September, 2017

The Association of Adaptation Studies Annual Conference will return to its roots in the Centre for Adaptations, De Montfort University, Leicester, where it hosted the Association’s inaugural conference. The focus will be on ‘returns’ and, as Linda Hutcheon has argued, ‘return’ does not necessarily mean ‘regression’. Topics are invited on all aspects of adaptations and those with an emphasis on homecomings, returns, remakes and re-fashioning will be especially welcome.

The conference will take place in the newly refurbished De Montfort University campus in he heart of historic Leicester with opportunities to visit the Richard III Visitor Centre, Leicester City Football Club and the Centre for Adaptations’ Andrew Davies Archive.

Proposals (maximum 150 words) should be sent to Professor Deborah Cartmell and Dr Anna Blackwell (djc@dmu.ac.uk and anna.blackwell@dmu.ac.uk) by 30 March, 2017.

University of Oxford: Postdoctoral Research Assistant (A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry) – Call For Applications

University of Oxford – Faculty of English Language and Literature
Postdoctoral Research Assistant – A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry

Location: Oxford
Salary: £31,076 to £38,183 p.a.
Hours: Full Time
Contract Type: Contract / Temporary

Following the award of a European Research Council Advanced Grant to Professor Andy Orchard (‘A Consolidated Library of Anglo-Saxon Poetry’), the Faculty of English Language and Literature is seeking to appoint two Postdoctoral Research Assistants to work on the project.

The project involves the creation of an interactive online edition of the 60,000 or so lines of verse, roughly half in Old English and half in Latin, that comprise the entire combined corpus of Anglo-Saxon poetry. This will be marked up through TEI P5 XML to facilitate the identification of idiosyncratic features of sound, metre, spellings, diction, syntax, formulas, themes, and genres across the corpus. The project will produce a linked series of conferences, workshops, and print publications, including monographs, conference-proceedings, and a themed issue of an academic journal. Further details of the project are included in the Further Particulars.

The two postdoctoral researchers, with training in both Latin and Old English, will each have primary responsibility for either the Old English or Anglo-Latin elements of the project and will be expected to take a leading role in establishing the research base for the project, establishing the normalized mirror corpus and creating the bibliographic database in conjunction with the other members of the project team. Throughout the project, the RAs will be expected to present their research at several conferences a year, to undertake original research leading to the production of articles and/or a monograph, and to co-edit conference proceedings and other publications. They will also help to organise the seminars, workshops, and conferences, and will co-edit the conference proceedings and special journal issue.

Two full-time posts are offered from 1 March, 2017 (or as soon as possible after this date), for a fixed-term of 54 months.

Applicants should possess a PhD in Anglo-Saxon Literary and linguistic studies or a related field by the time of taking up the post; experience of work with Anglo-Saxon texts and manuscripts, including accuracy in transcription and translation; proficiency in Old English and/or Latin, especially with regard to language and metre; the ability to work flexibly and in a team; a willingness to participate in the overall running of the project and public engagement activities; a high level of communication skills, including the ability to address a range of audiences; a high level of organisational skills and an ability to meet deadlines; excellent computer skills; and the capability to work independently across disciplinary boundaries.

Applications (which should include a CV and a supporting statement explaining your suitability for the post) should be made online. Candidates short-listed for interview will be asked to submit a sample of written work (8,000 – 10,000 words) in advance of the interviews, and will be requested to give a short presentation as part of the assessment process. Two references will be sought for short-listed candidates.

The closing date for applications is 12.00 noon on 9 January, 2017. Interviews are expected to be held in Oxford during week beginning 23 January, 2017.

For full details and to apply, please visit: https://www.recruit.ox.ac.uk/pls/hrisliverecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.jobspec?p_id=126483

Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society Annual Prizes (2017)

The Medieval and Renaissance Drama Society awards annual prizes to recognize achievement in publication, conference presentation, and archives research in the field of early drama studies: http://themrds.org/upcoming-awards

For an essay or book published in the 18 months before January 30, 2017:

  • Martin Stevens Award for best new essay in early drama studies ($250 award + one year membership in MRDS)
  • Barbara Palmer Award for best new essay in early drama archival research ($250 award + one year membership in MRDS)
  • David Bevington Award for best new book in early drama studies (non-Shakespearean, no edited volumes) ($500 award + two years membership in MRDS)

For a conference paper presented in the 12 months before January 30, 2017:

  • Alexandra Johnston Award for best conference paper in early drama studies by a graduate student ($250 award + one year membership in MRDS)

Entry Information

Deadline for nominations: January 30, 2017

Eligibility: All MRDS members and non-members

The Judges: Each category of submissions is judged by committees made up of members of the MRDS Executive Council.

Submissions:

For the Palmer and Stevens Awards, please send the published article as an attachment to an email addressed to kipling@humnet.ucla.edu. The committee will consider any essay published within 18 months of the deadline and judged by the committee to be of outstanding quality. Qualifying essays published in a collection may be submitted for the Stevens and Palmer Awards.

For the Bevington Award, please send one hard copy of the book (plus a copy in digital form if you like). An author unable to supply a hard copy, may submit the book in digital form only, though hard copy is preferred. The committee will consider any book of high quality published within the last 18 months. Publishers: please limit submissions for the Bevington to two books per year. NOTE: Edited collections and Shakespearean studies are not eligible for the Bevington Award.

For the Johnston Award, papers should not exceed 5,000 words, excluding notes, and should include the name and date of the conference at which the paper was delivered, and the
presenter’s name, the title of the paper, and a contact number or email. We encourage graduate students to seek out a mentor to review their work before submission. MRDS members are happy to serve as mentors.

Send one copy of each book to the address below (hard copy or digital). Articles and papers may be submitted digitally, either in .pdf or .doc format via email, or on a CD-Rom. If submitted in hardcopy, send three copies of each essay or paper. Please direct all submissions to:

Gordon Kipling
3428 Park Ave.
Minneapolis, MN 55407
USA
kipling@humnet.ucla.edu

Announcement of Award Winners

Awards announcement and presentation will take place during the annual MRDS business meeting in May 2016, at the 51st International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI.

Bedchamber Scenes/Scènes de lit in European Early Modern Drama – Call For Papers

Bedchamber Scenes/Scènes de lit in European Early Modern Drama
University of Georgia Special Collections Libraries, Athens, Georgia, USA
April 12-13, 2017

The University of Georgia (UGA) and the Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3 (UPVM) and IRCL (UMR5186 CNRS) are delighted to announce a conference, “Bedchamber Scenes/Scènes de lit,” as part of their new collaboration, “Scene-Stealing/Ravir la scène,” sponsored by UGA, UPVM, CNRS, the Partner University Fund of the French Embassy, and the FACE Foundation.

Activities: Planned conference activities include seminars, paper sessions, plenary lectures, a staged reading, and a poster session for undergraduate research. Delegates will also have the opportunity to attend the UGA Theatre and Film Studies Department’s production of Titus Andronicus in the Cellar Theatre.

Call: We solicit seminar and panel papers from faculty and graduate students in English, French, Theatre, Film Studies and other related disciplines on the topic of bedchamber scenes in French and English or more broadly European drama, from the Renaissance through the Enlightenment. Such scenes appear in, for example, Edward II; A Woman Killed with Kindness; The Revenger’s Tragedy; Volpone; The Maid’s Tragedy; The White Devil; ’Tis Pity She’s a Whore; All’s Lost by Lust; Monsieur Thomas; Romeo and Juliet; Othello; Cymbeline; The Man of Mode; The Country Wife; Le Malade Imaginaire; and so on.

We invite individuals or groups of scholars to share different perspectives on the same scene and encourage interdisciplinary collaboration and exchange. Topics might include: well-known bedroom scenes from Shakespearean drama, such as the murder in Othello or Iachimo’s voyeurism in Cymbeline; bedtricks in early modern and Restoration comedy, on stage or screen; death-bed and sick-bed scenes; film adaptations of scenes that re-set them to bedrooms, as is frequently done with the “closet scene” in Hamlet; comparative approaches to bedroom scenes in early modern drama from England and France; appropriations of famous farcical bedroom scenes in television sit-coms or feature film romantic comedies; bedroom scenes in novelizations of early modern drama, including Shakespeare; theoretical investigations of intimate theatrical spaces; sex and sexism in early modern drama and its appropriations; Orientalism as a theatrical trope in bedchamber scenes in script and on stage; and many others.

We also welcome proposals from actors or performers who would like to participate in the conference, and from undergraduate students who would like to submit a presentation for a planned undergraduate poster session.

Contributions in both French and English are invited, although we will ask French-language authors to be willing to make an English translation of their work available at the conference.

Please send by January 31, 2017 the following:

  1. 250-word abstract for 20-minute conference papers or for performances of various lengths, or a 200-word abstract for a manuscript to be circulated in a seminar or for an undergraduate research poster
  2. 3-5 sentence biography
  3. a brief sentence clarifying whether you would prefer to participate in a seminar, to lead a seminar, to deliver a paper, to offer a performance, or to present a poster.

Send all materials to Sujata Iyengar (iyengar@uga.edu) and Christy Desmet (cdesmet@uga.edu). The conference committee comprises representatives from both UGA and UPVM from English, French, Theatre, and related departments. Selected papers will be eligible for publication in the peer-reviewed multimedia online journal Scene Focus/Arrêt sur Scène.

Reparative Histories 2: The Making, Re-making and Un-making of ‘Race’ – Call For Papers

Reparative Histories 2: The Making, Re-making and Un-making of ‘Race’
Centre for Research in Memory, Narrative and Histories, University of Brighton, UK
6-7 April, 2017

Keynote Speaker. Professor Catherine Hall (University College London)

This interdisciplinary conference aims to build on the momentum created by the first Reparative Histories symposium held in 2014 and by the subsequent publication of a special issue of Race & Class (‘Reparative Histories: radical narratives of ‘race’ and resistance’, Race and Class, 57, 3 (2016)). That first event was interested in critically addressing the ways in which conceptions of the ‘reparative’ are currently shaped and understood, and in exploring what it means to turn to history in the appeal for recognition and redress. We set out to explore the question of how to relate the past to the present in the context of ‘race’, narrative and representation. Significant issues stemming from the first symposium concerned the importance of thinking through forms of historical interconnectedness both spatially and temporally, and ways of addressing, the dialectics of anti-colonial struggle, anti-racist resistance and mobilisation. This conference aims to further develop the concept of ‘Reparative Histories’ and to build on these concerns.

Given that racialised meanings continue to powerfully structure understandings of identity, belonging and exclusion within multiple social, cultural political and economic spaces. How might we further trace the history and politics of the making and unmaking of ‘race’? How might we connect effectively these historical formulations and to the maintenance of particular contemporary power relations? This conference aims to explore critically the ways in which processes of making, re-making and un-making ‘race’ are rooted in particular histories, politics and cultures. The conference aims to further elucidate the processes of racialization associated with histories of imperialism, colonialism, transatlantic enslavement and other forms of global labour production. It also aims to question how ‘legacies’ might be traced in the light of contemporary social and economic formations. ‘Race’ continues to signify either by glossing its historical provenance, or by drawing upon it.

At the same time, ‘race’ and its histories, offer a powerful political platform for those engaged in anti-racist, anti-colonial resistance. These traditions of struggle are currently being re-activated and re-articulated in ways that confront the power and pull of the universalism of liberal orthodoxy and they are increasingly exposing its fault-lines and occlusions. What is the role of history and indeed, memory, in relation to these resistant political processes. How might representations of the past be activated for the now?

Possible themes for this symposium could include ‘race’ and colonialism, ‘race’ and labour; anti-slavery resistances; decolonisation and de-colonial struggles; capitalism and ‘race’; interracial class solidarity; gendered racialization; anti-racist resistance movements; the racializing of ‘suspect communities’; anti-Semitism and Islamaphobia; Whiteness studies and the limitations of privilege theory; ‘race’, representational form and expressive culture; and contemporary anti-racist politics;

Questions for consideration might include (but are not limited to the following):

  • How does tracing the historical making of ‘race’ contribute to reparative history?
  • How do re-makings of ‘race’ in the contemporary moment draw on raced histories of the past?
  • How has an anti-racist insistence on racialization functioned in forms of political mobilisation and/or political resistance?
  • What are the limits of liberal humanism in accounting for normalising discourses of ‘race’?
  • How can the history and legacies of transatlantic enslavement, colonialism and imperialism be drawn upon for the purposes of resisting contemporary racisms?
  • What sort of politics do histories and memories of inter-racial mobilisations either enable or delimit?
  • How are migrants placed within the language of racialized labour practices both historically and in the present?
  • What does the treatment of refugees tell us about contemporary politics of ‘othering’?
  • What is the role of literary and other forms of cultural representation in securing/subverting racialized imaginaries?
  • How can memories and/or memorialisation negotiate the contested histories of ‘race’?

We invite proposals from across the disciplines. They may concern historical and/or contemporary issues or moments and address any representational form. We welcome proposals for single papers, panels, or for plenary discussions. (Please provide a brief rationale for a panel or a plenary.) If your proposal speaks to one of the conference questions listed above, please specify this in your submission. Postgraduate submissions are of course welcome.

Proposals of 250 words and a brief biography/CV should be sent to Anita Rupprecht (A.Rupprecht@brighton.ac.uk) and Cathy Bergin (C.J.Bergin@brighton.ac.uk). Closing date for proposals: December 31, 2016.

The conference fee is £80. There is a fee of £40 for graduate students and for those with no institutional affiliation.

The conference will be held at the Grand Parade Campus, University of Brighton.

Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation/Durham University: Post-Doctoral Fellowship (Priory Library Digitisation Project) – Call For Applications

Zeno Karl Schindler Foundation/Durham University 12-month Post-Doctoral Fellowship

Job Purpose: To conduct post-doctoral research in the context of the Priory Library Digitisation Project. This project, entitled ‘Durham Priory Library Recreated’, is a collaboration between Durham Cathedral and Durham University for the digitisation of 480 volumes of manuscripts and several dozen printed books belonging to the pre-Reformation Cathedral Library and dating from the seventh century AD onwards. The fellow will work on material that has been, or is being, digitised in one of five (overlapping) research areas: (1) History of the Book; (2) Community Living: Liturgy, Rules and Well-Being; (3) Scholastic Learning and Philosophical Enquiry; (4) Science, Knowledge and the Natural World; (5) Digital Recreations (for more information about these areas, see: www.dur.ac.uk/imems/durhampriory).

For full details and to apply, please visit: https://recruitment.durham.ac.uk/pls/corehrrecruit/erq_jobspec_version_4.display_form?p_company=1&p_internal_external=E&p_display_in_irish=N&p_applicant_no=&p_recruitment_id=004063&p_process_type=&p_form_profile_detail=&p_display_apply_ind=Y&p_refresh_search=Y

Applications close on 9 January, 2017.

Please note the short-listing for this vacancy will take place on Wednesday 11 January, 2017. Interviews will be held on Friday 20 January, 2017.

Australian Early Medieval Association 2017 Conference – Call For Papers

Receptions
2017 Conference of the Australian Early Medieval Association
Australian National University, Canberra
21–22 April, 2017

Conference Website

This conference invites papers on the broad theme of the alterity of the Middle Ages. The state of being other or different–otherness–is at the heart of the reception theory and offers the opportunity to investigate the ways the Middle Ages have been received into the modern world; and the ways in which the Medieval world acted as conduit for the transmission of the Classical. We welcome any papers related to all aspects of the Late Antique and Early Medieval periods (c. 400–1150) in all cultural, geographic, religious and linguistic settings, even if they do not strictly adhere to the theme.

Abstracts of 250-300 words for 20-minute papers should be submitted via email to conference@aema.net.au by 15 January, 2017.

Power of the Bishop III: Bishops as Diplomats 1000-1400 – Call For Papers

Power of the Bishop III: Bishops as Diplomats 1000-1400
Cardiff University
1-2 June, 2017

Conference Website

This two-day conference sponsored by Medium Aevum will explore the importance of diplomacy in a bishop’s career. How bishops responded to situations was often crucial to building or destroying their reputations, and, sometimes, their very lives depended on their ability to exercise their diplomatic skills.

This conference aims to explore the common themes regarding the use and development of diplomacy in a bishop’s career; how and when was it deployed, and in what circumstances? What impact did the Gregorian Reforms and Investiture Crisis have on this aspect of a bishop’s skill-set?

Most importantly, how do we see diplomacy expressed? As well as through legal agreements and treaties, we would like to explore the role of diplomacy in other areas, including but not limited to: the architecture of the Cathedrals and Bishop’s Palaces, the various uses of the landscape, the visual elements within manuscripts that bishops patronised, the types of gifts given and exchanged; the choice of special dates and feast days to mark particular events.

Abstracts of 200 words in length, in English, should be emailed to powerofthebishop [at] gmail [dot] com with the subject line “POB III ABSTRACT”.

Deadline for Abstracts: 20 February, 2017