Call for Papers
22nd Annual Conference on Medievalism
International Society for Studies in Medievalism
27-30 September 2007
University of Western Ontario
NEOMEDIEVALISM
Plenary speakers for the conference include Terry Jones (UK), Richard Firth
Green (Ohio State University), and Alain Corbellari (Univ. de Lausanne).
Twenty years ago, Umberto Eco described the renewed interest in the Middle
Ages, with what he called a curious oscillation between fantastic
neomedievalism and responsible philological examination as being a modern
desire to dream the Middle Ages. On one level a desire to return to our
roots, to find our origins, on another it is a desire to make the Middle
Ages anew, to make the medieval period happen the way it ought to have
according to the individual modern reconception. Neomedievalism has come to
be a polysemous term, referring for political scientists to a return to
barbaric nation-states or tribalism; for media theorists to video games,
graphic novels, and other modern media which reconceptualize the medieval;
for traditional medievalists to the historiography of the discipline, the
way in which our conception of the medieval depends so profoundly on former
scholars and their hopes and desires, their failings and their strengths;
and for many others, to an interdisciplinary category which includes all the
above and any new approach to the medieval in the past five centuries.
Papers are invited on any aspect of neomedievalism and medievalism,
including the following:
neomedievalism and neoconservatism
the composition, development and presentation of new media with
neomedieval elements: manga, graphic texts, film, video, television,
video-games
neomedievalism in music, visual art, poetry, history
theorizing medievalism: new ways of thinking about the turn to the
medieval
the historiography of medievalism, the construction of the medieval past
issues of race, gender, and ethnicity in medievalism
the medieval in time and space
the neomedieval and the search for the sublime
magic, religion and science: the neomedievalist balance
neomedievalism and nationhood, policy-making, or the reconfiguring of
history
the commodification of the medieval
Abstracts of 2-300 words must be submitted by 20 March 2007 to M.J.
Toswell, chair of the Program Committee, at mjtoswell_at_uwo.ca or by mail at:
Department of English, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario,
Canada N6A 3K7 or by fax at: 519-661-3776. If there are problems with
submission, please call 519-661-2111 ext. 85776. The conference website will
shortly be posted at http://www.uwo.ca/english/neomedievalism.
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Received on Mon Dec 11 2006 - 18:26:05 EST
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