Authority and the Book in Medieval Culture
Medieval History

Authority and the Book in Medieval Culture


Authority and the Book in Medieval Culture



April 4, 2009

Yale University



Abstracts from graduate students are now being accepted for the 26th Annual New England Medieval Studies Consortium Graduate Student Conference, the theme of which will be ?Authority and the Book in Medieval Culture.?



The organizers hope that this broad heading will elicit proposals for papers from all disciplines of Medieval Studies. Of especial interest are papers dealing with palaeography and manuscript studies; hagiography; literary studies; art history; history and historiography; gender studies; religious studies; musicology and medieval liturgical studies; as well as biblical exegesis and the relationship between Latin and various medieval vernaculars. Further, we look forward to receiving proposals that take more theoretical approaches to ideas of authority in the medieval period. We also hope to have one panel devoted to papers that explore different aspects of the history of modern Medieval Studies.



Papers are to be no more than twenty minutes in length and read in English. Abstracts of no more than 250 words should be sent by e-mail to [email protected] or [email protected]; a hardcopy may be mailed to:



Andrew Kraebel

Department of English

Yale University

P.O. Box 208302

New Haven, CT 06520-8302



The deadline for submissions is December 1, 2008.



Graduate students whose abstracts are selected for the conference will have the opportunity to submit their paper in its entirety for consideration for the Alison Goddard Elliott Award. The conference will also feature an exhibition of manuscripts in the collection of the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, and a plenary speaker, to be announced at a later date.



Please circulate this call for papers. A PDF version is available:

http://www.yale.edu/medieval/documents/CallforPapersv1.pdf




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Medieval History








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