Monthly Archives: March 2017

Objects, Sounds and Stories of Love Masterclass Program (April 2017)

Melbourne Masterclass: Objects, Sounds and Stories of Love
Wednesdays 12, 19, and 26 April,2017 6.00pm-8.30pm

As part of the Love: Art of Emotion 1400-1800 exhibition held at the National Gallery of Victoria (March 31- June 18 2017) a masterclass series held over three weeks will examine a theme within the exhibition.

Led by Love: Art of Emotion curator and lead researcher, Dr Angela Hesson, the masterclass series will be a blend of lectures, discussions and performances exploring the materiality, visions and sounds of love.

There will also be exclusive exhibition viewing for the first two sessions.

To view the full program, including speaker biographies and abstracts, download the program flyer.

Program outline:

Wednesday 12 April: Objects of Love: History
Introduction by Dr Angela Hesson
Speakers: Professor Charles Zika, Dr Matthew Martin
Venue: Clemenger Auditorium BBDO, NGV International

Wednesday 19 April: Stories of Love: Film and Literature

Introduction by Dr Angela Hesson
Speakers: Professor Stephanie Trigg, Dr Mark Nicholls, Dr Lucy Van
Venue: Clemenger Auditorium BBDO, NGV International

Wednesday 26 April: Sounds of Love: Music
Introduction by Dr Angela Hesson
Speakers: Professor Jane Davidson, David Haberfeld, Dr Erin Helyard, Dr Anthony Lyons
Venue: Forum Theatre, Arts West Building, The University of Melbourne, Parkville

Cost: $40 individual session / $100 series pass (Includes light refreshments)

This masterclass program and free exhibition are subsidized through the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions. Spaces are limited.

A collaborative project produced with the ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions at The University of Melbourne.

University of Cambridge: Medieval Studies Summer Programme – Call For Applications

University of Cambridge
Medieval Studies Summer Programme
6-19 August, 2017

The academic programme:

  • Four courses (two per week)
  • Series of plenary lectures: Rebellion and Revolt
  • Evening talks

Programme description:

Course Directors encourage you to develop your own arguments about big historical issues while helping you to understand the complexities of the chosen field. The programme is challenging and is predicated on doing advance reading. It attracts current undergraduate and graduate students, and college and university teachers. Its interdisciplinary nature will appeal to anyone with an interest in medieval studies. We welcome those coming from any background but with some knowledge and a genuine interest in the period. Courses are led by recognised experts from the University and other British universities. The typical week tab gives more information about the daily schedule.

For full details and course costs, please visit: http://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/course/medieval-studies-summer-programme

Applications close 24 July, 2017.

Policing the Margins: 3rd Annual CMRS Symposium – Registration Now Open

Policing the Margins: 3rd Annual CMRS Symposium
Monash Club
March 24, 2017

The 3rd annual symposium of the Monash Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies will take place on Friday 28th April 2017 at the Monash Club.

The theme of this year’s symposium is “Policing the margins: authority, identity and religious ambiguity amongst Jews, Christians and Muslims in medieval Europe and the Mediterranean”.

The claims of Judaism, Christianity and Islam to a shared divine inheritance via the Hebrew Bible often made it difficult to define and police religious identity in medieval Europe and the Mediterranean. This symposium is concerned with the boundaries between orthodoxy and heresy, forced conversion and religious sincerity, and mysticism and orthopraxy. It will examine the question of ambiguity in religious identity and its impact on the responses of authority to the perceived dangers inherent within divergent approaches to faith in Jewish, Christian and Islamic contexts.

Keynote Speaker

  • Prof. Bronwen Neil, Macquarie University

Confirmed speakers:

  • Dr Francesco Borghesi, University of Sydney
  • Dr Raphael Dascalu, University of Chicago
  • Dr Sarah Gador-Whyte, ACU
  • Dr Aydogan Kars, Monash University
  • Rebecca Wartell Lobel, Monash University
  • Dr Tomas Zahora, Monash University

Confirmed Respondents:

  • Assoc. Prof. Jonathan Davies, Warwick University
  • Prof. Constant Mews, Monash University

Registration is now open by clicking here.

Symposium registration (including coffee, lunch, afternoon tea):

  • $45 waged
  • $40 student
  • Optional dinner and drinks: $50 per head

University of Queensland: The Rae and George Hammer Memorial Research Visiting Fellowship – Call For Applications

University of Queensland: The Rae and George Hammer Memorial Research Visiting Fellowship

This fellowship encourages scholars to visit UQ and to access the Fryer Library collection for your research. We invite Honours, Masters and PhD students, undertaking a research project or paper, from Universities outside of Brisbane to apply.

More info: https://web.library.uq.edu.au/about-us/awards-and-fellowships/rae-and-george-hammer-memorial-visiting-research-fellowship

Deadline: 28 April 2017.

The Emotions of Love in the Art of Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe

The Emotions of Love in the Art of Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe

Upcoming symposium presented by The Centre for the History of Emotions at the University of Melbourne and the National Gallery of Victoria

Date: Thursday 4 May – Saturday 6 May 2017
Venue: Thursday and Friday – University of Melbourne, Woodward Conference Centre, 10th floor, Melbourne Law (Building 106)
Venue: Saturday – The National Gallery of Victoria, Clemenger Auditorium
Convenors: Charles Zika and Angela Hesson
Contact: Julie Davies (daviesja@unimelb.edu.au)
Website: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/the-emotions-of-love-in-the-art-of-medieval-and-early-modern-europe
Registrations: Opening soon!

Love in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe was a complex emotion, a constellation of feelings shaped and reflected by artists, writers and thinkers that sought to give expression to human experience and also provide models for individual and group behavior. Notions of love took different forms and involved a range of emotions across time and space, under the influence of changing community norms, cultural practices, political institutions and social media. This symposium coincides with the exhibition Love: Art of Emotion 1400–1800 at the National Gallery of Victoria, 31 March–18 June, 2017, which draws on the NGV’s permanent collection of European art. The accompanying symposium will engage with and extend the themes presented in the exhibition primarily through visual art, but also through literature and music. It will explore how artists expressed and aroused feelings of love through gesture and facial expression, colour and shape, the context of place and narrative, the representation of bodies, and references to contemporary rituals and practices. It will examine the ways different forms of love, including affection, friendship, intimacy, erotic desire, jealousy and compassion were applied to various objects of love – such as family and kin, the divinity and saints, fatherlands and the self. It will consider how these representations created new understandings of love, which in turn influenced developments in the religious, political, cultural and domestic spheres.

Speakers will include:

David Areford (University of Massachusetts, Art History), Katie Barclay (University of Adelaide, History), Lisa Beaven (University of Melbourne, Art History), Jane Davidson (University of Melbourne, Musicology), Dagmar Eichberger (University of Heidelberg, Art History), Vivien Gaston ( University of Melbourne, Art History), Katrina Grant (Australian National University, Art History), Angela Hesson (University of Melbourne, Art History), Sally Holloway (Royal Holloway, University of London, History), Petra Kayser (NGV, Prints & Drawings), Dale Kent (University of Melbourne, History), David Marshall (University of Melbourne, Art History), Sophie Mattheisson (NGV, Art History), Jennifer Milam (University of Sydney, Art History), Mark Nicholls (University of Melbourne, Cinema Studies), John Payne (NGV, Conservation), Mark Shepheard (University of Melbourne, Art History), Patricia Simons (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Art History), Miya Tokumitsu (University of Melbourne, Art History), Stephanie Trigg (University of Melbourne, Literature), Arvi Wattel (University of Western Australia, Art History), Anna Welch (State Library of Victoria, History) and Charles Zika (University of Melbourne, History).

This symposium is associated with the exhibition “Love: Art of Emotion 1400–1800” at NGV International, opening on the 31st March.

2017 CHASS Australia Prizes – Call For Nominations

2017 will mark the fourth year of the annual CHASS Australia Prizes. The Australia Prizes honour distinguished achievements by Australians working, studying, or training in the Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences (HASS) sectors, including academics, practitioners, philanthropists, policy makers, and students.

Nominations have now opened for four prizes. Two prizes are sponsored by Routledge (cash prize of $3,500 each): one for a non-fiction book/e-book that enriches Australian cultural and intellectual life, the second for ‘Distinctive Work’- an exceptional artistic performance, exhibition, film, television show, play, composition or practical contribution to arts policy. The third prize (cash prize of $2,000) is sponsored by Future Leaders for a ‘Future Leader’, an individual under 30 years of age who is demonstrating leadership skill and potential in the arts, humanities and social sciences. The Co-Op has sponsored the fourth prize ($500 voucher) for a student essay, exhibition, performance or project in any HASS area.

For full information, please visit: http://www.chass.org.au/2017-australia-prizes.

Applications close 30 June, 2017

Society for the Study of Early Modern Women Prizes 2017 – Call For Applications

The Society for the Study of Early Modern Women seeks nominations for awards for scholarly work published/completed in the previous year. Any work on women and gender in the early modern period (ca. 1450-1750) is eligible.

Awards Categories:

  • Book Award
  • Essay or Article Award
  • Josephine Roberts Award for a Scholarly Edition
  • Scholarly Edition in Translation Award
  • Teaching Edition Award
  • Graduate Student Conference Presentation Award
  • Collaborative Project Award (Edited Collections of Essays, etc.)
  • Digital Scholarship, New Media, & Art Award (Web-based projects, exhibitions, concerts, productions of plays, etc. Note: Since such projects often do not have a single date of publication, nominations are accepted for projects operating in 2016.)

Applications close on April 7, 2017

For full information, please visit: http://ssemw.org/awards

Rare Bites: Rare Books Lunchtime Talks @ University of Sydney

Rare Bites is a series of informal and entertaining 30 minute lunchtime talks held monthly during semester in 2017 and beyond. If you want to learn about some of the treasures and lesser-known gems within Rare Books & Special Collections at the University Library, this is your opportunity. Audience attendance is free for all.

Bring your lunch and be entertained, informed and inspired – all welcome, no need to register or RSVP.

For more information, please visit: https://news.library.sydney.edu.au/rare-bites-rare-books-lunchtime-talks.

University of Cambridge (Robinson College): Fellow and College Lecturer in English – Call For Applications

Robinson College invites applications for a Fellowship and College Lectureship in English with effect from 1 September 2017 or as soon as possible thereafter. The appointment, which is tenable for five years in the first instance, is open to both men and women and is subject to the Statutes and Ordinances of the College. The College will particularly welcome applications from candidates able to teach a range of topics covered in Parts I & II of the English Tripos (details of which are given in the further particulars).

The pensionable stipend will be in the range £28,452 – £34,956, being Steps 38-45 on the University scale.

Applications close on 5 April, 2017.

For full details, please visit: http://www.robinson.cam.ac.uk/about-robinson/job-vacancies/fellow-and-college-lecturer-english

Prof. Christophe Erismann, SSEC Evening Lecture @ Macquarie University

SSEC Evening Lecture:

“Philosophy and Theology in Byzantium before 1204”, Professor Christophe Erismann (Institute for Byzantine Studies, University of Vienna)

Date: Tuesday 4 April, 2017
Time: 7:05pm
Venue: W6A 308 (Doc centre), Macquarie University
Cost: members $5; alumni $7; non members $8

Hosted by Dr Ken Parry. Further information from SSEC@mq.edu.au

Professor Christophe Erismann is from the Institute for Byzantine Studies, University of Vienna. His research focuses on the reception of Greek logic (mainly Aristotle’s Categories and Porphyry’s Isagoge) in late ancient, Patristic, and early medieval philosophy. He has published on the problem of universals, individuality, causality, and relation. He is the author of L’homme commun: la genèse du réalisme ontologique durant le haut Moyen ge (Paris 2011).