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
Thank you to curator Ashley Dimmig for her terrific presentation on Exploring Islamic Manuscripts at the Walters Art Gallery. You can see a video of her talk and the Q and A on the main page of our website: http://mems.umbc.edu.
Mini-MEMS Lunch and Learns: December 9: 12:15-12:45 PM
Instrumental to Intellectual: Italian Female Artists, 1600s
Sure, she can play the virginal, but can she paint? That was a question of Giorgio Vasari, whose seminal art history marveled at the first Italian women to become professional artists. Dr. James Magruder will look at how the first cohort of Italian female artists depicted themselves and some of the women around them, first as gentlewomen and increasingly as intellectuals. Where Vasari positioned them as marvels of Nature, they depicted Nature to prove their full humanity, as well as full equality with their fathers, teachers, and husbands. Please join us: 12/9/20 at 12:15 on Webex! Join Webex meeting ID: 1206631943 Password: GCwvwdr3(US) +1 202-860-2110 (toll) Access code: 120 663 194 3 1206631943@umbc.webex.com
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
Thursday December 3, 1:00-2:00 PM, Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies presents: Runaway Ecologies with ACMRS Resident Gabriel de Avilez Rocha
Runaway Ecologies: Rethinking Empire, Insurgency and Nature in the Early Atlantic. This talk focuses on experiences of fugitive collectives in the sixteenth-century Caribbean and West Africa’s Gulf of Guinea. A guiding question is: how does weighing the impact of initiatives of escape from enslavement on both sides of the Atlantic at an early critical juncture of colonization alter our understanding of the relationship between empire, insurgency and nature? The event is free and digital. Registration is required to attend. To register, visit: https://asuevents.asu.edu/content/runaway-ecologies-acmrs-shortterm-resident-gabriel-de-avilez-rocha?eventDate=2020-12-03.
Thursday December 10, 3:00-4:15 PM Folger’s Critical Race Conversations: Shakespeare and Race in Performance
This youtube virtual event features theatrical practitioners Tyler Fauntleroy, Rosa Joshi, and Farah Karim-Cooper. From their lived experiences, they ask what we have to learn and unlearn about the effects of elitism and gatekeeping in stagecraft. How can the rehearsal space address unconscious biases that give rise to and may perpetuate color-blindness? Where might we go from here with our engagements with Shakespeare and race in performance? See https://www.folger.edu/events/critical-race-conversations-shakespeare-and-race-in-performance for more information.
Monday December 15, 5:30-6:00 PM Walter Art Museum presents LIVE Lecture: Handwritten Art: Calligraphy in Asian and Islamic Cultures
Would you like to learn more about the calligraphy you saw in Ashley Dimmig’s recent presentation on Islamic manuscripts? Check out this Facebook Live presentation with Ashley and her colleagues Adriana Proser and Danny Chan as they discus a selection of calligraphy in the Walters collections. Follow the link below for access to the talk:
https://thewalters.org/event/calligraphy/
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
Call for Papers: Power, Patronage and Production: Book Arts from Central Europe (ca. 800-1500) in American Collections
The Index of Medieval Art (Princeton University), the Pierpont Morgan Library & Museum (New York), and the Department of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University will host a conference to accompany the exhibition, “Imperial Splendor: The Art of the Book in the Holy Roman Empire, 800-1500,” presented at the Morgan Library from October 15, 2021 to January 23, 2022 . The conference runs January 13-15, 2022. For more information, including topics and categories for proposals, see http://www.themedievalacademyblog.org/call-for-papers-power-patronage-and-production-book-arts-from-central-europe-ca-800-1500-in-american-collections/
DIGITAL RESOURCES
If you weren’t able to check out the Walters curator talk this week on Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe (or even if you were), the exhibition catalogue referenced in the talk is available:
https://thewalters.org/wp-content/uploads/revealing-the-african-presence-in-renaissance-europe.pdf
For ongoing digital updates from the Medieval (academic) world, check out #medievaltwitter, #shakeRace, and #raceB4Race.
Interested in an old holiday recipe? Check out “Strawberries in Snow” from medievalcookery.com.
8 egg whites
1 pint whipping cream
½ cup sugar
1-2 Tbsp rose water
2 pints strawberries
1 cup red wine
¼ cup sugar
½ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp ginger
Whip cream and set aside. Beat egg whites until they form soft peaks. Add egg whites to whipped cream and whisk together. Add rose water and sugar, adding a little sugar at a time. This stuff will have a consistency something like Cool-Whip but will taste lots better.
Clean strawberries and place into bowl. Mix red wine, sugar, cinnamon, and ginger. Pour mixture over strawberries and allow to marinate for an hour or so. Serve “snow” with strawberries on top and with a couple shortbread cookies on the side.
Sources: A Proper Neue Book of Cokery, T. Gloning. (16th cent), The Good Housewife’s Jewell (16th cent).
For more information, please join the Medieval and Early Modern Studies Group: https://my3.my.umbc.edu/groups/mems and see our website: www.mems.umbc.edu
See you in the New Year!