The MEMS bi-weekly e-newsletter shares information about events, conferences, calls for papers, student and faculty work in the field, and digital resources that enrich our understanding of Medieval and Early Modern Studies. If you have any items you would like to share in the newsletter, please send them to Laurel Bassett at lburgg1@umbc.edu.
ON CAMPUS EVENTS
JOIN US TOMORROW: MEMS FALL EVENT!
November 18 4 PM Exploring Islamic Manuscripts at the Walters Art Museum on Webex
Join curator Ashley Dimmig from the Walters Art Gallery for a virtual presentation of Islamic Manuscripts, with Q and A to follow.
ID:
1207944105
Password: JPtDGbfK
Access code: 120 794 410 5
Mini-MEMS Lunch and Learns:
Thank you to Dr. Johnson for leading our inaugural and mellifluous Mini-MEMS Lunch and Learn on Musical Instruments of the Renaissance! You can see a video of her talk and the Q and A on the main page of our website: http://mems.umbc.edu.
The next Mini-MEMS Lunch and Learn will be led by Dr. James Magruder on 12/9/20 at 12:15 on Webex: Female Painters in the Early Modern Era. ID:
1206631943 Access code: 120 663 194 3 |
MEMS WINTER AND SPRING ‘21 COURSE OFFERINGS
Check out upcoming course offerings at our website: https://mems.umbc.edu or our MEMS group post: https://my3.my.umbc.edu/groups/mems/posts/97158 (If you would prefer to see a PDF document of the course offerings, email Laurel at lburgg1@umbc.edu.)
COMMUNITY EVENTS
Friday and Saturday November 27-28 “Shakespeare and Race: Teaching and Performance,” Folger Institute’s Critical Race Conversations
Join this online event at Shakespeare’s Globe, the result of an ongoing collaboration between Globe Education and the University of Sussex. The event consists of three sessions: a lecture, “Racecraft” by Noémie Ndiaye (University of Chicago); a Roundtable on teaching race and early modern drama in the university classroom with Lynette Goddard (Royal Holloway University of London), Nandini Das (University of Oxford), Joyce Macdonald (University of Kentucky) and Farah Karim-Cooper (Shakespeare’s Globe and King’s College London); and Research in Action: Othello in context and in a new light, co-ordinated by Will Tosh (Shakespeare’s Globe), which will use specially staged and filmed extracts. This workshop asks us to consider Othello in the light of Soliman and Perseda (probably by Thomas Kyd) and Lust’s Dominion (Thomas Dekker and others). Discussion will then be led by Dennis Britton (University of New Hampshire), Delia Jarrett-Macauley (writer and academic) and Matthew Dimmock (University of Sussex).
Register for free at https://www.shakespearesglobe.com/whats-on/shakespeare-and-race-teaching-and-performance-2020/. Follow #ShakeRace during the Zoom sessions.
Tuesday December 1, 5:30-6:00 PM Walter Art Museum presents LIVE Curator Talk: A Child of African Ancestry at the Medici Court
This Facebook Live presentation is part of the exhibition: Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe (2012-2013). Around 1539, Giulia de Medici, who was the daughter of the duke of Florence and the granddaughter of an enslaved African, was painted next to her cousin, the widowed Maria Salviati with whom she lived. Join Joaneath Spicer, curator of Renaissance and Baroque Art, for her talk addressing why Giulia was initially painted out of the portrait and her rediscovery in the 20th century. Follow the link below for access to the talk.
https://thewalters.org/event/medici/
Thursday, December 17, 12 PM CDT Center for Renaissance Studies Programs: Dante Lecture
The Triumph of Love: The Passion in the Divine Comedy
This virtual talk led by Paola Nasti, Northwestern University, will examine the shift in late medieval devotion and spirituality to a study of the sufferings of Christ. Examination of writings and visual representation of Franciscan friars will be set against Dante’s representation of the Passion’s episodes in the Comedy.
This virtual event is free and open to the public, but advance registration is required. To register, follow the link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfEzAuICyIx0eVyYumfjgdheUI1lwttI8tRGZBudrkS94qJAw/viewform?usp=sf_link
Wednesday, January 13, 5-5:45 PM Making History Through Handwriting: An Introduction to Manuscript Transcription
The Omohundro Institute hosts Julie Fisher and Sara Powell’s discussion of transcription and transcription projects taking place across the United States and how to join them. Julie Fisher specializes in Early American and Native American history, with a focus on digital humanities projects. Sara Powell is the assistant curator of Early Books and Manuscripts at Houghton Library at Harvard University, where she specializes in medieval and Renaissance manuscripts.
For information on how to register, see:
https://oievents.wm.edu/event/making-history-through-handwriting
PAPERS AND CONFERENCES
The Huntington Library has posted their Ecologies of Paper in the Early Modern World Virtual Conference, originally broadcast November 5, 2020.
The conference explores the transmutation, preservation, and loss of paper as a cycle of archiving and forgetting that defined early modern artistic practice, economic transaction, and political statecraft. Speakers map paper’s various guises, its ability to retain meanings associated with its material origins as well as its desire to conceal its former states or to encourage belief in a value beyond its material reality. Charting the journeys of early modern paper in drawing, print, and document, this program not only restructures our understanding of paper’s importance in early modern artistic practice and political life but also reconstructs the governing roles of environment, place, and origin in modes of making and address.
https://www.huntington.org/videos-recorded-programs/ecologies-paper
DIGITAL RESOURCES
Check out the new North of Byzantium website project: Mapping Eastern Europe.
This new digital and interactive platform is intended to promote study, research, and teaching about the history, art, and culture of Eastern Europe between the 13th and 17th centuries among students, teachers, scholars, and the wider public.
https://www.northofbyzantium.org
Huntington Lecture: From Parchment to Pixel: Conservation and Digitization of Illuminated Manuscripts
Recorded August 19, 2020. Three panelists follow one of The Huntington’s most studied manuscripts as it travels from curator to conservator to digitization team, who all work together to transform a 16th-century manuscript into a 21st-century digital tool. The lavishly illuminated manuscript was created by William Bowyer, Keeper of the Records in the Tower of London in 1567 for Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, and has been among the most studied volumes since Henry Huntington acquired it in 1912.
https://www.huntington.org/videos-recorded-programs/parchment-to-pixel
For more information, please join the Medieval and Early Museum Studies Group: https://my3.my.umbc.edu/groups/mems and see our website: www.mems.umbc.edu