Dear Members and Prospective Members
of the Medieval Association of the
Pacific:
In April, 2004, we had an extremely
successful joint meeting with the Medieval
Academy at Seattle, Washington. Many
thanks to Richard K. Emmerson, Executive
Director of the Medieval Academy and
to the local program committee for
their efforts to assure that everything
ran smoothly.
I take this opportunity to introduce
myself to new members as the current
President of MAP, and to inform the
membership about next year’s
annual conference, to be held in San
Francisco, March 11-12, 2005. The local
arrangements are being handled by William
Bonds and Jarbel
Rodriguez. Proposals for sessions
or for individual papers should be
sent by October 21, 2004, preferably
by e-mail or e-mail attachment, to Brenda
Deen Schildgen, or by postal mail
to Brenda Deen Schildgen, Comparative
Literature Program, University of California,
Davis, 95616.
Complete sessions, organized by an
individual or an organization, with
an assigned chair, are particularly
welcome. We also welcome offers
to chair sessions from members who
expect to attend the conference. Proposals
and abstracts should be under one page
in length, and should include the name,
discipline, academic rank, and institutional
affiliation of the presenter, as well
as full contact information such as
postal and e-mail addresses, and telephone
numbers. The presenter should
also indicate if he or she wishes to
use A-V or computer equipment.
All presenters at a MAP conference
must be members of the organization. Prospective
members will find a membership application
at the appropriate link on the MAP
website.
I remind graduate student members
that MAP subsidizes your registration
fees, and that two prizes are available
annually: the John F. Benton Travel
Award to conferences or research for
independent scholars and graduate students,
and the Founders’ Prize for the
best graduate student paper delivered
at a MAP conference. Details
of these prizes and application deadlines
are available at the appropriate places
on the MAP website (www.medieval.ucdavis.edu/map/).
I look forward to seeing many of you
in San Francisco in March 2005. The
2005 conference promises to be exciting
and rewarding.
Sincerely,
Siân Echard
President, MAP
August 29, 2004
34th Medieval Workshop at the University
of British Columbia Medieval Authorship:
Theory and Practice, November
12-13, 2004. Keynote by Alastair Minnis
(Ohio State University). The conference
will approach the topic from a variety
of disciplinary perspectives, consider
several geographical regions, and explore
theoretical and practical aspects of
authorship throughout the Middle Ages.
Dear Members and Prospective Members
of the Medieval Association of the
Pacific:
It is a pleasure to welcome returning
members of MAP, as well as to issue
a warm invitation to those of you who
may be considering joining the Medieval
Association of the Pacific for the
first time. I became a member of MAP
when I joined the English department
of the University of British Columbia
in 1990, and since that time have met
many of you at conferences up and down
the west coast: MAP more than lives
up to its reputation as one of the
liveliest and most congenial of regional
scholarly associations.
Our most recent conference in Seattle
saw the retirement of James Otté as
President, my move from Vice President
to President, and the election of Phyllis
Brown as the new Vice President. We
said our grateful farewells to 4 retiring
council members, and welcomed 4 new
ones: John Ott, History, Portland State;
Nick Howe, English, UCB; Michael Calabrese,
English, CSU, Los Angeles; Laura Hollengreen,
Architecture, University of Arizona.
The Seattle conference was a remarkable
experience, thanks to the dedicated
work of the local committee, led by
Micéal Vaughan, and the generous
cooperation of the Medieval Academy’s
Rick Emmerson. Our thanks to all those
who helped to make this joint MAP-Medieval
Academy meeting so memorable for all
of us.
MAP’s next meeting will take
place in San Francisco, hosted by San
Francisco State University, March 11-12,
2005. Local arrangements are being
handled by Williams Bonds (bonds@sfsu.edu)and
Jarbel Rodriguez (jarbel@sfsu.edu).
Abstracts for papers will be due November
1, 2004.
MAP offers a stimulating and collegial
venue for graduate students presenting
papers. If you are a faculty member,
please encourage your students to join
and to attend our meetings: you might
even consider making them a gift of
a graduate student membership. Graduate
student members are reminded that MAP
subsidizes student registration fees
for our annual meetings, and that it
makes available the following awards
and prizes: the John F. Benton Travel
Awards, which contribute $400.00 towards
the cost of travel to conferences for
independent scholars and graduate students;
and the Founders’ Prizes, given
to the best graduate student papers
delivered at the annual MAP conference.
The next deadline for the Benton awards
is November 1, 2004: applications should
be made to the Vice President, Phyllis
Brown. For information, see the MAP
website at http://medieval.ucdavis.edu/map/.
The deadline for the Founders’ Prize
nominations is June 1, 2004,
and these can go to the committee chair,
David Tinsley who can be contacted
at tinsley@ups.edu.
I hope to see as many of you as possible
in San Francisco next March. In the
meantime, do check in with the website
for updates as to our activities.
Sincerely,
Siân Echard
President, MAP
The Founders' Prize
MAP awards a maximum of three prizes
($500/ $250/ $250) for the best papers
presented by graduate students at the
annual meetings.
Winners of the MAP Founders' Prize
for 2004
Alicia Walker in Art History, Harvard:
“Articulating a Medieval Community
of Kings: Diplomatic Gifts in The Book
of Gifts and Rarities.”
Michael P. McGlynn, Comparative Literature,
University of Oregon:
“Mund, mâg (skepi), uurd,
uuord: law in the Heliand.”
This award, named in honor of its
progenitor, John F. Benton, MAP President
1982-1984, provides travel funds for
all members of the Medieval Association
of the Pacific--independent medievalists
and graduate students in particular--who
might not otherwise receive support
from institutions.
Winners of the John F. Benton Award
(2004)
1) Andrea Fitzgerald Jones (PhD student,
English, UCLA), “The Body, the
Taboo, and Epistemology in The Miller’s
Tale and The Summoner’s Tale” (2003
MLA)
2) Tiffany Beechy (PhD student, English,
University of Oregon), “Poetic
Interpretation and the Sinews of Deor” (2004
Kalamazoo)
3) Laura Faatz (MA student, History,
University of Utah), “The Legend
of Good, Holy, and Learned Women: The
Library of Priory of Dartford, Kent” (2004
Kalamazoo)
4) Karina Marie Ash (MA student, Comparative
Literature, San Francisco State University), “A
Reconsideration of Wolfram’s
Vrou Uote: Heroic Parody or Mournful
Piety? (2003 Texas Medieval Association)
Upcoming Deadlines
Founder’s Prize: June 1, 2004
Benton Award: November 1, 2004
Submissions for next year’s MAP
meeting in San Francisco: November
1, 2004. Submissions should be sent
to the Secretary of the Association,
Brenda Deen Schildgen at bdschildgen@ucdavis.edu
Next year’s MAP meeting: March
11-12, 2005, San Francisco.
13 April 2003
Dear Members and Prospective Members
of the Medieval Association of the
Pacific:
Please allow me to take this opportunity
to once again welcome returning members
and to introduce myself to new members
as the current President of MAP. My
name is James K. Otté. I am
a twenty-six year veteran of the Department
of History at the University of San
Diego, which has twice hosted the annual
MAP Conference, once in 1996 and again
in 2002.
In the name of MAP I would like to
take this opportunity to thank Professor
John Ott and his able colleagues at Portland
State University in Portland,
OR, for hosting this year’s MAP
conference. John and his colleagues
made the conference a model of organization;
they created an environment conducive
to both intellectual inspiration and
collegial exchange.
Next Year, 1-3 April, 2004, MAP will
meet jointly with the Medieval Academy
of America at the University of Washington,
Seattle WA. Professor Miceal F. Vaughan, miceal@u.washington.edu,
will be in charge of local arrangements. Because
we are meeting jointly with MAA, abstracts
for papers are due May 15 rather
than our usual November 1 deadline. Please
see the February issue of the Medieval
Academy Newsletter for information
about submitting proposals to the 2004
conference.For
web access to the call for papers,
go to http://www.medievalacademy.org/t_bar_2.htm, click
on annual meetings, then future annual
meetings, then CALL FOR PAPERS under
annual meeting 2004.
Graduate student members are reminded
that MAP subsidizes your registration
fees for our annual meetings, and that
awards and prizes are available annually:
1) the John F. Benton Travel Awards
to conferences or research for independent
scholars and graduate students and
2) the Founders’ Prizes for the
best graduate student papers delivered
at a MAP conference. This year
the deadline for Founders’ Prize
submissions is May 15;
the deadline for Benton Travel Award
submissions is September 1.
As your president, I look forward
to seeing returning members and meeting
new ones in Seattle, WA.
Sincerely,
James K. Otté
President, MAP
The Founders' Prize
MAP
awards a maximum of three prizes ($500/
$250/ $250) for
the best papers presented by graduate
students at the annual meetings.
The
deadline for submissions of papers
presented at the 2003 annual meeting
is May 15, 2003. Submissions
should be sent to Gina Greco (grecog@pdx.edu).
Winners
of the MAP Founders' Prize for 2002-3
(papers presented at the 2002 meeting
in San Diego, CA) are
First
Prize: Liam Moore, UC Davis "The Use of the Title "Imperator" in
the Chronica Adefonsi Imperatoris."
Runner-up Prize: Samuel Dean, University
of Utah
"Fuerwitz and the Passion for
Fashion."
Winners of the MAP Founders' Prize
for 2001-02(papers
presented at the 2001 meeting in Tempe,
AZ) are
First
Prize: Glenn Keyser, University
of Utah.
"One Way Streets: Urban Geography
and Anti-Semitism in Chaucer's Prioress's
Tale." (Will
Be Printed in Chronica 2003)
Runner-up Prize: Christina Fitzgerald,
UCLA.
"Of
Magi and Men: Christ's Nativity and
Masculinity in the Chester Drama Cycle."
Runner-up Prize: Ronald Ganze, U of
Oregon.
"Leaving
the Bed-Chamber Behind: Chaucer's Announcement
in the Book of the Duchess."
Winners
of the MAP Founders' Prize for 2000-1
(Papers Presented at the 2000 meeting
in Victoria, BC) are
First
Prize: Eleonora Stoppino,
UC Berkeley
"Between East and West: Bernardo
del Carpio and the drawing of cultural
boundaries in XIIIc Spain."
Runner-up
Prize: Christina Fitzgerald,
UCLA
"A Guild Afloat: Domestic
and Social Ideology in Chester's 'Noah's
Flood'"
Runner-up
Prize: Asa Mittman, Stanford
University
"'Light Words,' Weighty Pictures."
(Printed in Chronica 2002)
This award, named in honor of its
progenitor, John F. Benton, MAP President
1982-1984, provides travel funds for
all members of the Medieval Association
of the Pacific--independent medievalists
and graduate students in particular--who
might not otherwise receive support
from institutions.
The award may be used to defray costs
connected to a paper at anyconference,
especially for the conferences of the
Association, or connected to scholarly
research. Three awards will be
presented each year, for $400.00 apiece.
The 2003 application
deadline for the these awards is September
1. Applications
should include a 1-page vita, an abstract
of the paper submitted to the conference,
and a photocopy of the Call for Papers
or conference announcement; if the
application is for travel to research,
it should include a 1-page vita and
a letter outlining the research project.
Send applications or enquiries to the
Vice-President of the Association.
Professor Sian
Echard
Department of English
University of British
Columbia Vancouver,
British Columbia
CANADA V6T 1Z1 sian@interchange.ubc.ca
Spring
Conference at UC Santa Cruz, May
16-17:
Authenticity and Revision in Performance:
The Case of Hrotsvit and Terence
This
conference will complement a double
production of "The Eunuch" by
Terence and "The Conversion
of the Whore Thais" by Hrotsvit;
the keynote speaker will be David
Wiles of the University of London.
Annual ACMRS
Conference:
Translatio, or Transmission of Culture
12 - 14 February 2004
ACMRS (the Arizona Center
for Medieval and Renaissance Studies)
at Arizona State University invites
session and paper proposals for its
tenth annual interdisciplinary conference
to be held February 12-14, 2004. The
Center welcomes papers that explore
any topic related to the study and
teaching of the Middle Ages and Renaissance,
and especially those that focus on
this year's theme of translatio or
transmission of culture. Papers may
address, for example, issues surrounding
the translation of various texts into
various languages or the transmission
of culture from one people to another
or the various kinds of translations
possible in ecclesiastical contexts."
By October 1, 2003, submit
paper and or session proposals online
(preferred method) at http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/acmrs/conference (not
yet available); or e-mail two copies
of session proposals or one-page abstracts,
including whether you need a/v equipment
or not, and two copies of your current
c.v. to acmrs@asu.edu; or send your
proposal or abstract to Robert E. Bjork,
Director, ACMRS, Arizona State University,
Box 872301, Tempe, AZ 85287-2301. Phone:
(480) 965-5900. Fax: (480) 965-1681.
Selected papers related to the conference
theme will be considered for publication
in the tenth volume of the "Arizona
Studies in the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance" series, published
by Brepols Publishers (Belgium). Papers
dealing with any facet of the Mediterranean
region will be considered for publication
in the journal Mediterranean Studies,
sponsored by the University of Massachusetts
at Dartmouth, the University of Kansas,
and ACMRS.
The conference will also host The
Medieval Book: A Workshop in Codicological
Practice. This pre-conference half-day
workshop will happen during the afternoon
of Thursday, April 12. Led by Richard
Clement of the University of Kansas
Spencer Library, the workshop will
focus on the making of the medieval
codex. Participants will discuss the
production of parchment, paper, pens,
and ink, and then will make several
quires in preparation for writing.
Note: This workshop does not cover
scripts and is not calligraphic.
The setting of the conference will
be the Fiesta
Inn Resort, 2100 S. Priest Dr.
in Tempe. It is situated close to ASU
as well as numerous attractions in
Phoenix, Scottsdale and Tempe, and
approximately 15 minutes from Phoenix's
Sky Harbor International Airport. The
high temperature in the "Valley
of the Sun" during February
averages 70 degrees Fahrenheit (21
degrees Celsius).
The conference registration fee is
just $75 ($40 for Students) and includes
welcoming and concluding receptions,
two days of concurrent sessions (Friday
and Saturday), and the keynote address
by Mary Carruthers, Dean for the Humanities
and Erich Maria Remarque Professor
of Literature at New York University.
International
Society of Anglo-Saxonists Conference
ACMRS
will host the 2003 International
Society of Anglo-Saxonists (ISAS)
conference, which this year will
focus on "Conversion and Colonization." The
conference dates are August 4-9,
and the location will be the Chaparral
Suites Resort in Scottsdale. To
learn more about the conference,
Chaparral Suites, and the related
events and excursions, please visit
the ACMRS website,
where you can also find information
on the next year's Annual
ACMRS Interdisciplinary Conference: Translatio
or Transmission of Culture (to
be held 12 - 14 February 2004).
Chaucer & Co.
"Founded in 1997,
Geoffrey Chaucer & Co. is dedicated
to touching the lives and spirits of
audiences around the world by bringing
to life on stage the Canterbury Tales,
making accessible some of the greatest
cultural gifts of
the English language, rich in wisdom,
history, philosophy, and ethics. As
a non-profit classical theatre Geoffrey
Chaucer & Co. stages Chaucer's
masterpieces, superb theatrical explorations
of the human comedy and condition,
in modern translation with original
music. Chaucer & Co. invites you
to visit their website at www.chaucertheatre.org.
They have been performing primarily
around the San Francisco Bay Area,
but are currently booking a more extensive
tour of the
Clerk's & Merchant's Tales (a musical)
in Fall 2003. Contact Executive
Director Becky Geist at 415-491-0818
or toll-free at 1-877-4-CHAUCE-R or
by email at beckygeist@attbi.com."
Heckman Research
Stipends
The Hill Monastic Manuscript
Library invites applications for the
Heckman Research Stipends, made possible
by the AA Heckman Fund at the Library.
Each year HMML awards up to 13 such
grants, in amounts ranging up to $1,500.
Stipends may be used toward the cost
of travel, room and board, microfilm
reproduction, photo-duplication and
other expenses associated with research
at the Library. Length of residence
may vary from a minimum of two weeks
up to six months. Graduate or post-doctoral
scholars (those who are within three
years of completing a terminal master's
or doctoral degree) are eligible. The
program is specifically intended to
help scholars who have not yet established
themselves professionally and whose
research cannot progress satisfactorily
without consulting materials to be
found in the collections of the Hill
Manuscript Library.
Applicants should submit
a letter of application, curriculum
vitae, a brief description of the research
project including length of stay, an
explanation of how the Library's resources
will enable them to advance their project,
and a confident letter of recommendation
from their advisor, thesis director,
mentor, or, in the case of post-doctoral
candidates, a colleague who is a good
judge of their work. Please direct
all inquiries and materials to the
Committee on Research, Hill Monastic
Manuscript Library, Box 7300, Saint
John's University, Collegeville, MN
56321.
Grants are awarded twice
each year, with application deadlines
of 15 April and 15 October. For instance,
applications made by April 15, 2001
will be for research occurring during
the period July through December 2001.
The Hill Monastic Manuscript
Library houses extensive resources
for the study of manuscripts and archives.
With nearly 90,000 manuscripts on microfilm,
HMML has microfilmed extensively in
Austria, Germany, Spain, Portugal,
Malta, and Ethiopia; and it is currently
microfilming the manuscript collection
at the Royal Library in Stockholm,
Sweden. Because HMML has filmed entire
collections of manuscripts, its resources
support research across a wide spectrum
of topics. The Library
is particularly strong in theology,
philosophy, history, literature, liturgy,
and music. Scholars may consult the
Library's website for further information,
including a partial electronic inventory
of its collections. Please go to www.hmml.org.
Upcoming MAPMeetings:
2004
at University of Washington--contact
Prof. Míċeál Vaughan (miceal@uwashington.edu or
206-543-2285)
2005
at San Francisco State University--contact
Prof. Bill Bonds (bonds@sfsu.edu or 415-338-1669)