Call for Papers – International Medieval Congress 2018 (‘Memory’)

The twenty-fifth International Medieval Congress will take place in Leeds, from 2-5 July 2018 / Paper proposals must be submitted by 31 August 2017 / Session proposals must be submitted by 30 September 2017.

 

 

 

 

International Medieval Congress 2018 Call for Papers

 

The twenty-fifth International Medieval Congress will take place in Leeds, from 2-5 July 2018.

 

 

Please read the guidelines carefully before completing the IMC 2018 Proposal Form.

 

 

Session Proposal

 

 

Paper Proposal

 

 

Round Table Proposal

 

 

If you would like to apply for an IMC bursary for the IMC 2018, to help with the cost of the Registration and Programming Fee, accommodation and meals at the IMC, please complete the online Bursary Application Form below. You should submit your Bursary application at the same time as your paper or session proposal.

 

 

Bursary Application Form

 

 

Call for Papers/Sessions – International Medieval Congress 2018

 

 

The IMC provides an interdisciplinary forum for the discussion of all aspects of Medieval Studies. Paper and session proposals on any topic related to the Middle Ages are welcome, while every year the IMC also chooses a special thematic focus. In 2018 – the year of the 25th IMC – this is ‘Memory’.

 

 

There are many kinds of memory – personal and social, natural and artificial, political and cultural. Along the lines of this general taxonomy, memory operates in many diverse modes: as a mechanism, process, instrument, and cognitive framework relating to, and concerning recreations of, the past – the social past, the institutional past as well as the past of an individual. Central in the process of storing, retrieving, and (re)constructing the past, memory is by no means a stable entity; it is always undergoing transformation.

 

 

In recent decades, memory has become a very fashionable research topic. In Medieval Studies, the concept of memory has been studied as permeating history, literature, language, religion, science, philosophy, and other fields. In addition to treating the processes of storing and retrieving information, the study of memory now naturally also encompasses personal and communal identity and self-fashioning, conceptualization of the world, perception of time and space, intellectual cognition and emotional reactions, established patterns and creativity, continuity and discontinuity, memorization and forgetting – to name but a few conceptual domains under scrutiny. This, however, also means that the study of memory has gradually become very complex and even somewhat elusive. In this sense, this special thematic strand offers a unique opportunity for a fresh and vigorous treatment of the field of memory in its astonishing breadth and variety.

 

 

The IMC welcomes proposals in all areas of memory. Themes to be addressed may include, but are not limited to:

 

•Personal memory, self-fashioning, and identity
•Social, political, and religious memory
•The art of memory, mnemonics
•Memory: orality and literacy
•Knowledge and education – and its dissemination
•Metaphors for memory
•The media, mechanisms, and methods of memory – visual, verbal, and material memory
•Memory and beauty: aesthetic relevance and impact of memorization and remembering
•Objects of memory
•Lieux de memoire – communities and identity
•Construction and reconstruction of the past
•Memory: order and disorder
•Memory: sense and sensibility
•Commemoration and re-enactment
•Memory and immortality
•The arcane and daily life
•Memory and virtue
•Performance/drama/music – memory and playfulness
•Memory: habit and improvisation
•Forgetting and oblivion: natural processes vs. damnatio memoriae
•Forbidden memory
•Manipulative memory
•Categorization in language (analogy vs. anomaly, etc.)
•Etymologizing (including folk etymology)
•Formulas and catalogues
•Remembering the Middle Ages

 

 

The Special Thematic Strand ‘Memory’ will be co-ordinated by will Lucie Doležalová (Institute of Greek & Latin Studies, Univerzita Karlova, Praha) and Jan Cermák (Department of English, Univerzita Karlova, Praha).

 

 

All proposals should be submitted online. Paper proposals must be submitted by 31 August 2017. Session proposals must be submitted by 30 September 2017. The IMC welcomes session and paper proposals submitted in all major European languages.

 

 

https://www.leeds.ac.uk/ims/imc/imc2018_call.html

 

 

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