Daily Archives: 2 July 2018

Call for Fellowship Applications Before Farm to Table: Early Modern Foodways and Cultures

Before Farm to Table: Early Modern Foodways and Cultures, the inaugural project of the Folger Institute’s  Mellon Initiative in Collaborative Research, will use the pervasiveness of food in everyday life as a window into early modern culture. The project announces a competition for semester-long fellowships to be held in residence at the Folger Library in one of two semesters: either Spring 2019 or Fall 2019, for three to four months.

Each Before ‘Farm to Table’ fellow will be awarded US$10,000 for work in the Folger collections on topics relating to early modern food and foodways in the British world, broadly conceived. Applications are due by 1 September, 2018.

Three co-directors are orchestrating the inaugural project’s agendas and activities. They include David Goldstein, associate professor of English at York University in Canada; Amanda Herbert, assistant director for fellowships in the Folger Institute; and Heather Wolfe, curator of manuscripts at the Folger. Before Farm to Table will mine rich and under-explored collections at the Folger; it will highlight new voices and genres from the past; it will create a hub in a network of scholarly projects; it will advance the maturation of scholarly discussion and debates in the field; and it will contribute to social and cultural histories as well as forge new grounds for meaningful conversations with experts from outside the humanities. Within in the Folger, Before Farm to Table will spark new conversations with our audiences, from young to old.

For more information and to apply, please see https://www.folger.edu/before-farm-to-table-early-modern-foodways-cultures/fellowships

CFP for RSA 2019 panel: Friends, Neighbours, Allies: The Networks of Non-Elite Women in Early Modern Societies

Call for proposals for a panel on “Friends, Neighbours, Allies: The Networks of Non-Elite Women in Early Modern Societies” at the at the 2019 meeting of the Renaissance Society of America (Toronto, 17-19 March, 2019).

An ever-richer scholarship has explored the social relationships and cultural collaborations of literate and elite early modern women. This panel seeks to broaden our understanding of homosocial networks to include working, poor, and marginalized women between 1500 and 1700. Representations drawn from literary texts, visual imagery, and archival sources are welcome. Themes of interest might include: the role of gender in female same-sex relationships; relationships between peers or across social categories, such as mistress and servant; meanings of friendship among plebeian women; emotions, especially empathy; instrumentality and collaboration; material exchanges; and coping strategies, including the illegal. Papers about a mix of geographical and cultural settings will advance discussion of similarities and differences in the homosocial networks of early modern women. 

Professor Elizabeth Cohen (York University), collaborating on this CFP, will chair the panel. 

Please email paper proposals, including a title and abstract of 100-150 words, as well as a one-page C.V. (300 words) to Marlee Couling by 14 July, 2018

Contact Info: 

Marlee Couling
PhD Candidate, ABD
History
York University
Toronto, CA

Contact Email: 
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