This panel will discuss how the conception and operation of “crisis” intersect with issues of gender and the cultural codes of society. Assuming a broad temporal scope for the Middle Ages (c.500 CE–c.1500 CE), the panel is interested in examining how societal constructions of gender triggered and were, in turn, shaped and reshaped by disruptions and upheavals in religious life, literary culture, economic structure, and political organization.
Welcome to H-Announce!
H-Announce is a moderated one-way distribution network for events, conferences, calls for papers, calls for publication, programs, workshops, sources of short-term funding, fellowships, and news from H-Net and our affiliates.
To submit an announcement, log into the Commons and click "Create" in the right hand menu of the H-Announce page. If you don't have an account, please register and navigate back to H-Announce.
To receive individual or daily digests of all H-Announce postings, log into the Commons, and click "subscribe to this network" in the right hand menu of the H-Announce page.
For additional guidance, please refer to H-Announce: A User's Guide, located at the Help Desk.
Daily Publishing Schedule
Jobs, Reviews, & H-Net This Week Digests are published on Monday and distributed to Daily Digest subscribers on Tuesday morning.
All other announcements are moderated as they come and are distributed to Daily Digest subscribers the following day.
Please note: Announcements are posted and distributed the same day they are moderated; however, daily digests are distributed the day after moderation. Network editors receive the H-Announce daily digest and choose relevant content to repost to their networks. To post an announcement directly to a specific network, you may select that network(s) in the post announcement interface. Announcements posted to networks are subject to individual network moderation and publishing policies.
CFP: Class Participation: A Must or a Bonus?
55th Northeast Modern Languages Association (NeMLA) Annual Convention
Boston, MA, March 7-10, 2024
Submission Deadline: September 30, 2023 through the NeMLA portal: https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/20518
Starting in April 2024, the a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School for the Humanities Cologne, the Graduate School of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Cologne, will award 8 doctoral scholarships.
Unsettling Orthodoxies in Merchant Seafaring History (Post 1750)
An Invitation to graduate and post-doctoral students, and early career faculty to participate in an online real-time discussion series hosted by Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 12 SEPTEMBER 2023 (infomarworkshops@gmail.com)
Our purpose: discussion of the sources, concepts, and methods that inform us about past maritime populations.
The Comics Arts Conference is now accepting 100- to 200-word abstracts for papers, presentations, and panels taking a critical or historical perspective on comics (juxtaposed images in sequence) for a meeting of scholars and professionals at WonderCon, in Anaheim, CA, March 29–31, 2024. We seek proposals from a broad range of disciplinary and theoretical perspectives and welcome the participation of academic and independent scholars. We also encourage the involvement of professionals from all areas of the comics industry, including creators, editors, publishers, retailers, distr
2023 Lemkin Book Award Ceremony
Join the Institute for the Study of Genocide and the Cardozo Law Institute in Holocaust and Human Rights as we honor this year's Lemkin Award recipient, historian and author, Sabine F. Cadeau, for her book 'More Than a Massacre: Racial Violence and Citizenship in the Haitian-Dominican Borderlands.' Professor Cadeau will give a talk on her book, followed by a discussion and audience questions.
October 26, 2023
6:00-7:30 PM
Cardozo School of Law
New York City
Join us in person or online.
CFP for a Special Issue interconnections: journal of posthumanism
Appel à contributions pour le numéro hors-série de interconnexions : revue de posthumanisme
Guest Editors Dr. Allison Mackey and Dr. Elif Sendur
Join Rich Cairn for a free webinar on teaching disability history in K-12 history. Oct. 19, 7-8pm ET. Sponsored by the National Council for the Social Studies.
He will showcase the free, online K-12 Disability History Curriculum: Reform to Equal Rights. http://www.emergingamerica.org/curriculum/reform-equal-rights-disability-history-curriculum
In the age of microbiome research, Earth system science, and the Anthropocene, American cell and microbiologist Lynn Margulis (1938-2011) has become a poster child of science studies and adjacent art-science worlds. Scholars such as Donna Haraway, Bruno Latour, and Isabelle Stengers have each found in Margulis’s work inspiration for their own conceptions of human-nature relations and onto-epistemological models, thereby turning her into a celebrity, a witness, and sometimes a prophet.
Filiations and Affiliations
Bonds, Entanglements, and Social Networks in African Literatures and Cultures