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[UPDATE] Approaches to the Late Medieval City - 10/30/09full name / name of organization: Columbia University Medieval Guild contact email: latemedievalcity@gmail.com The Columbia University Medieval Guild with the support of Columbia Department of English and Comparative Literature is pleased to announce its 20th Annual Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference, “Approaches to the Late Medieval City,” taking place on 30 October, 2009. The keynote address will be delivered by Professor Sheila Lindenbaum. The conference will also include a methodology panel featuring Anthony Bale, Elliot Kendall, Alyssa Meyers, Paul Strohm and Marion Turner, moderated by David Wallace. The aim of this conference is to explore the place of the city in late medieval life and thought. Medieval cities were spaces of exchange, conflict and creativity, drawing together multiple ways of acting in and thinking about the world. Medieval scholars have approached the city in a variety of ways – through the interconnections of literatures, performances, political contexts, modes of defining identity, and forms of authority. We invite papers from a variety of critical perspectives, methodological approaches and disciplines in order to develop a multi-dimensional understanding of the late medieval city. How does the city shape late medieval social life and forms of creativity? How do cultural imaginings of self, community and nation, and the social organizations that are their practical counterparts, shape the city in turn? What continuities or fissures can we map in the spaces, times, ideas and practices of late medieval cities? Topics of inquiry may include, but are not limited to: Institutions: religion; education and universities; kingship; the state and national identity Associational Polity: social contest and revolt; factions; guilds; religious fraternities; emerging and obsolete identities or classes Intersections: mercantile, literary and global connections between cities; cosmopolitanism; translation; conversion; trilingual England Performances in the City and of the City: court ceremonies; ritual; city genres and narratives of the city; Corpus Christi and other city entertainments Documents and Manuscript Culture: uses of the archive; reading practices; textual production; textual communities; patronage Spatial Configurations: city geography and the city in geography; city versus country; architecture and space Temporality: relationships to a real or imagined past, present and future; clock time; chronicles Please send your proposal (no longer than 300 words) for a 15 to 20-minute paper to the organizers at latemedievalcity@gmail.com by August 25th 2009. Proposals should include the title of the paper, presenter's name, institutional affiliation (including department), email address, mailing address, and telephone number. Please also indicate if you would be willing to moderate a panel. cfp categories: bibliography_and_history_of_the_book cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ethnicity_and_national_identity gender_studies_and_sexuality general_announcements graduate_conferences international_conferences medieval poetry religion theatre travel_writing
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