Medieval History
Open Access in the Academy, and What it Means for Medievalism Studies
Open Access in the Academy, a roundtable at 29th Intl. Conference on Medievalism, Georgia Tech, October 2014, with Thomas Hahn, Kevin Harty, Leah Haught, J. Britt Holbrook, Fred Rascoe, Paul Sturtevant, Jesse G. Swan, Robin Wharton, and Richard Utz (chair)], is now available online at Georgia Tech's SmarTech repository in multiple versions.
THE LINK TO THESE VIDEOS IS HERE
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Carol Robinson On Medievalism & The International Congress On Medieval Studies
Here is Carol Robinson, on collaborative efforts regarding Medievalism for the 50th Intl. Congress on Medieval Studies: Since its founding in 1976, the International Society for the Study of Medievalism, several other groups focused upon more specific...
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Medievalism Now Forthcoming
We are happy to announce a special issue of The Year's Work in Medievalism forthcoming in May. Entitled Medievalism NOW, and edited by Karl Fugelso, E. L. Risden, and Richard Utz, it will be available online and with full open access...
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Georgia Tech Establishes Past Present Faculty Group
It all began with a Symposium, Tech Gets Medieval, in 2012, during which a group of colleagues at Georgia Tech gathered to see if medieval culture might have a place at one of the nation's premier tech universities. Then, in 2013, the group received...
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Year's Work In Medievalism Goes Open Access And Moves To Georgia Tech
Dear colleagues, The Year's Work in Medievalism has a checkered history. Originally conceived as a publication that would accompany our annual medievalism conferences as a proceedings outlet as well as a place for annual summaries of scholarship,...
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Tech Gets Medieval Fall 2012 Symposium Now Viewable
In the fall semester of 2012, Brittain fellow Dr. Kellie Meyer and colleagues from different areas of specialty at Georgia Tech organized a symposium, Tech Gets Medieval: How Medieval Technology Can Teach the Past. The complete symposium is now available...
Medieval History