Oxford Centre for Late Antiquity - OCLA

Oxford Centre for Late Antiquity - OCLA

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The aim of OCLA is to foster dialogue between the scholarly disciplines, and between the many institutions of the world that study Late Antiquity.

https://ocla.web.ox.ac.uk/about-us

Photos from Oxford Centre for Late Antiquity - OCLA's post 09/05/2024

We thank Bassileos Tatia for sharing.
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Conference Program!

Conference Title: After Kant: What do art and literature owe to Kant?

Location: Prague, Czechia;

Date: 24 - 26 June 2024

Faculty of Humanities, Charles University

The Faculty of Humanities at Charles University is pleased to announce its international conference, After Kant: What do art and literature owe to Kant?, to be held in Prague, Czechia on 24 - 25 June 2024.

On the occasion of the 300th anniversary of Kant’s birth, we want to pay attention to his influence on subsequent thinking about beauty and art, and thus discuss his impact on philosophy of art and aesthetics, from the thinkers and creators of the Romantic tradition (e.g. Schleiermacher, Novalis, Schlegel) and Idealism (e.g. Hölderlin, Schelling, Hegel), to the post-Hegelian philosophers (e.g. Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche), to 20th-century authors of different traditions and positions.

Day 1: 24 June 2024

Keynote Speaker: Ian Alexander Moore, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, CA.

Day 2: 25 June 2024

Keynote Speaker: Dr. James D. Reid, Professor of Philosophy at Metropolitan State University of Denver in Denver, CO.

Day 2: 26 June 2024
Keynote Speaker: doc. Mgr. Josef Fulka, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Charles University.

Language: Czech, English.

Format: Hybrid (in-person and online).

For general inquiries about the conference, please contact:

[email protected]

We look forward to your participation in our conference.

Note: The last day of the conference, June 26th, is for Czech presenters.

Kind regards,

Conference Organizers:

Doc. Mgr. Aleš Novák, Ph.D., Brice Cantrell, Shawn Christopher Vigil, Tatia Basilaia

08/05/2024

Thank you John Arnold for sharing.

Gender, Identity, and Authority in Late Antiquity
March 20-23, 2025
The Society for Late Antiquity is pleased to announce the sixteenth biennial meeting of Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity, which will be held at The University of Tulsa, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. We encourage papers that investigate issues and aspects of gender, identity, and/or authority within the broader late antique world, either in relation to one another or on their own. This thematic scope is intentionally broad, allowing for many different approaches and from a host of disciplines and methodologies. Gender, for example, might include the impact of religion or other factors on ideas of the family, s*x, and s*xuality, understandings of the nature of gender differences, or conceptions of identity and authority in relationship to the gendered or genderless self or other. Likewise, identity might focus on its self-perception or ascription by others, its potential to be malleable, situational, or contested, or its various components, like ethnicity, political allegiance, religious affiliation, or class. Finally, authority might interrogate its attribution to or expectation for a particular person (e.g., an empress or saint), place (e.g., Rome), or thing (e.g., a text or creed), the mechanisms for its attainment or rejection, such as tradition, merit, or force, or its realization of lack thereof, either as an actual fact or ideal.
Abstracts (no more than 500 words) for papers presenting original scholarship should be submitted for consideration no later than October 1, 2024.
Conference website: https://sites.utulsa.edu/shiftingfrontiersxvi/
Conference email: [email protected]

Shifting Frontiers XVI – At The University of Tulsa Call For Papers Gender, Identity, and Authority in Late Antiquity March 20-23, 2025 The Society for Late Antiquity is pleased to announce the sixteenth biennial meeting of Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity, which will be held at The University of Tulsa, in Tulsa, Oklahoma. We encourage papers tha...

Sapiens ubique civis XI (2024) Application 07/05/2024

Call for Papers

Sapiens Ubique Civis XI – Szeged 2024

PhD Student and Young Scholar Conference on Classics and the Reception of Antiquity

Szeged, Hungary, August 28–30, 2024

The Department of Classical Philology and Neo-Latin Studies, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Szeged (Hungary) is pleased to announce its international conference Sapiens Ubique Civis XI – Szeged 2024, for PhD students and young scholars, as well as M.A. students aspiring to apply to a PhD program.
The aim of the conference is to bring together an international group of young academics working in various places, languages, and fields. Papers on a wide range of subjects, including, but not limited to, the literature, history, philology, philosophy, linguistics, and archaeology of Greece and Rome, Byzantinology, Neo-Latin studies, and reception of the classics, as well as papers dealing with theatre studies, digital humanities, comparative literature, contemporary literature, and fine arts related to antiquity are welcome. We are also happy to accept submissions regarding pedagogical methods in teaching Latin, Greek and other classical subjects. Panel submissions from multiple speakers on these subjects are also welcome.
Lectures: The language of the conference is English. Thematic sessions and plenary lectures will be scheduled. The time limit for each lecture is 20 minutes, followed by discussion. It is not possible to present online.
Application: Applications should be sent via Google Form: https://forms.gle/RwjfreCA6G6F4M7y7.
Abstracts of a maximum of 300 words are welcomed and should be proofread by a native speaker. The application deadline is June 9, 2024. An acceptance notification will be sent to you by June 23, 2024 at the latest.
Registration: The registration fee for the conference is €80. The participation fee includes the conference pack, reception meal, closing event, extra programs, and refreshments during coffee breaks. The participation fee does not include accommodation, but the conference coordinators will assist conference participants in finding accommodation in the city centre.
The participants will also be informed about publication possibilities in due course.
Getting here: Szeged, the largest city in Southern Hungary, can be easily reached by rail from Budapest and the Budapest Ferenc Liszt International Airport. Those who prefer travelling by car can choose the European route E75 and then take the Hungarian M5 motorway passing by the city.
For general inquiries about the conference, please contact us at [email protected].
We look forward to your participation in our conference.
Kind regards,

Dr János Nagyillés PhD
Chairman of the Conference Committee
Dr habil. Ibolya Tar CSc; Prof Dr László Szörényi DSc; Prof Dr Péter Kasza DSc;
Dr habil. Endre Ádám Hamvas PhD; Dr habil. György Fogarasi PhD; Dr Imre Áron Illés PhD;
Dr David Preston PhD; Dr Ferenc Krisztián Szabó PhD; Dr Gergő Gellérfi PhD; Dr Tamás Jászay PhD
Members of the Conference Committee
Dzsenifer Bakos; Dr Tamás Jászay PhD; Dr Gergő Gellérfi PhD
Conference coordinators

[Szeged SUC via email]

Sapiens ubique civis XI (2024) Application Call for Papers: www.klasszika.hu/suc For general inquiries about the conference, please contact us at [email protected].

02/05/2024

Thank you Angelo Castrorao Barba for sharing.

02/05/2024

Dumbarton Oaks Mentorship Program for East-Central European Scholars

Please find here the Call for Applications for the Dumbarton Oaks Mentorship Program for East-Central European Scholars, co-organized with North of Byzantium and Connected Central European Worlds, 1500-1700.



We invite applications for a remote four-session mentorship program tailored to early-career scholars, with a special focus on those affected by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. The four sessions will take place in Fall of 2024 (September-November) and Spring of 2025 (February-April).



We encourage historians and art historians with a specialty in the medieval or early modern visual culture of East-Central Europe to apply to this program. The successful applicants should be advanced PhD candidates (within 1 year of completion of their degrees) or junior-level scholars (up to 5 years since graduation with a doctoral degree).

The deadline for applications is May 12, 2024.

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Kenyon College - Details - Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History 02/05/2024

Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History 2024-2026 at Kenyon College

Kenyon College, a nationally ranked liberal arts college in Ohio, invites applications for a two-year, full-time Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History beginning August 2024. The area of specialization is open, but candidates with teaching expertise in the arts of the Islamic world or Ancient Art of any region before 600 CE are especially encouraged to apply. We are interested in teacher-scholars who can offer creative ways to engage with the Art History Department’s Visual Resources Center, the Blick-Harris Study Collection, The Gund, and regional art museums.

The successful applicant will be able to teach broadly in their field. The selected candidate will teach five total classes per year at the introductory, intermediate, and advanced levels. Applicants should complement, not duplicate, current expertise of the department. The selected candidate may have the opportunity to provide mentorship to honors projects.

The successful candidate will have a Ph.D. in hand at the time of the appointment. Candidates who are ABD with a completion date by August 2024 will be considered. Experience in teaching as the instructor of record in college-level courses is required. We seek scholars who can demonstrate a record of undergraduate teaching excellence, preferably in a liberal arts setting.

To apply, candidates should visit the online application site found at http://careers.kenyon.edu. Applications must include: 1) a cover letter describing teaching experience, research interests, teaching philosophy, and information on ways that issues and practices related to diversity, inclusion, and equity have been or will be included in teaching, 2) a curriculum vitae, 3) unofficial graduate transcript(s), 4) a list of three references with detailed contact information, including email address (at least one reference must speak to the candidate’s teaching experience). Note: references will only be contacted for those candidates who advance to the latter stages of the search.

Review of applications will begin immediately and continue until the position is filled. All applications received by May 10 will be given full consideration.

https://careers.pageuppeople.com/695/cw/en-us/job/493087/visiting-assistant-professor-of-art-history

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Kenyon College - Details - Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History Kenyon College invites applications for a two-year, full-time Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History beginning August 2024. The area of specialization is open, but candidates with teaching expertise in the arts of the Islamic world or Ancient Art of any region before 600 CE are especially encou...

HOME 02/05/2024

Call for Journal Articles - The Hungarian Historical Review

The Hungarian Historical Review (https://www.jstor.org/journal/hunghistrevi; www.hunghist.org) invites submissions for its second issue in 2025, the theme of which will be Coherence of Translation Programs and the Contexts of Translation Movements, ca. 500– 1700 AD

The deadline for the submission of abstracts: June 15, 2024. The deadline for the accepted papers: December 15, 2024.

This Special Issue aims to explore the complex historical, literary, and material backgrounds that are conducive to producing translations from any source language (Greek, Arabic, Armenian, Syriac, Hebrew, etc.) into Latin and from Latin into the vernaculars or local dialects from Late Antiquity until the end of the Renaissance period. The special issue investigates triggers and factors that helped produce Latin translations and eased the reception of Latin texts by non-Latin-using audiences. The variety of source and target languages creates a comparative framework that enriches our understanding of complex translating processes as historical phenomena. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to): The birth of the idea of translating specific texts or corpora; The relation between geopolitical shifts and translation programs; The role of translators in pursuing programs; Translators’ development/ professionalization over the course of the centuries or within a specific epoch in pursuing specific programs; Movement and travel of translators as a trigger behind translations; Interreligious relations and cultural and economic exchange between West and East as a broader backdrop for translations; The role of patrons and audiences, systematizing tendencies of patrons; Scientific, political, educational, and religious networks behind translations; Personal initiatives and the lack of coherence behind translated texts. We welcome submissions from scholars in various disciplines, including medieval and renaissance history, literary and philological studies, art history, archaeology and material culture, and Islamic, Hebrew, and Byzantine studies. We especially encourage submissions that offer interdisciplinary perspectives and engage with current historiographical debates.

Please send an abstract of no more than 500 words and a short biographical note with a selected list of the author’s three most important publications (we do not accept full CVs) no later than June 15, 2024. Proposals should be submitted to the special editor of the issue by email: [email protected]

The editors will ask the authors of selected papers to submit their final articles (max. 10,000 words) no later than December 15, 2024.

The articles will be published after a double-blind peer-review process. We provide proofreading for contributors who are not native speakers of English. All articles must conform to our submission guidelines.

The Hungarian Historical Review is a peer-reviewed international quarterly of the social sciences and humanities, the geographical focus of which is Hungary and East-Central Europe.

For additional information, please visit the journal’s website: www.hunghist.org

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HOME Hungarian Historical Review (Acta historica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae - New Series) Angol nyelvű történelmi folyóirat

02/05/2024

Medieval Academy of America Annual Meeting (March 20-22, 2025) - Invitation for Submissions

In March 2025, the Medieval Academy of America will hold its centennial meeting on the campus of Harvard University. This three-day conference, organized by members of Harvard’s Standing Committee on Medieval Studies and scholars from colleges and universities across the Boston area, will be preceded on Wednesday 19 March by a day-long graduate student workshop as well as the annual Digital Medieval Studies Institute (DMSI). The conference is meant not simply to celebrate the centenary of a professional organization, but to reflect on the present and future of the study of the “medieval” millennium of the human past, broadly conceived, and to welcome scholars and students working on this period who belong to professional organizations other than the Medieval Academy. We thus encourage submissions of individual papers or panel proposals before 3 June 2024. The CFP and links to submission forms are available online here. Note that we expect to offer travel subventions worth $500 to as many as 100 colleagues lacking research support, whose papers are accepted or who are chosen to participate in the graduate student workshop. If you have any questions, or would like more information about this event, please feel free to contact us.

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Ērān Tūrān Hrōm 02/05/2024

Research Forum 'Ērān: West and Central Asia in the First Millennium CE'

We invite early career scholars interested in researching global Late Antiquity to take part in our initial Research Forum titled Ērān: Central and West Asia in the First Millennium CE’ which will take place at the University of Lille (France), 15 – 19 July 2024. The deadline for applications is May 15, 2024.



The Research Forum is a place for established scholars and junior researchers involved in the study of the Iranian world in the first millennium CE to come together for a dialogue of ideas, research agendas, and methods.

The Forum will last for 5 days and is set around the themes of Historiography, Languages of the empire, Religions and Cultures, Material and Visual Culture, Economy and Administration.

Early career scholars are encouraged to propose papers in their desired themes, although these might be organised across the week depending on the number of papers in each theme.

For more information, visit:

www.GlobalLateAntiquity.com

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Ērān Tūrān Hrōm Ērān Tūrān Hrōm is a project aiming to bring together scholars of various discipline concerned with the study of the first millennium or late antique Central and West Asia and the Mediterranean zone, and even the wider Afro-Eurasian world (including East Asia and Africa). The project is envisio...

The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture 02/05/2024

Mary Jaharis Center Sponsored Panel at 60th International Congress on Medieval Studies

To encourage the integration of Byzantine studies within the scholarly community and medieval studies in particular, the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture seeks proposals for a Mary Jaharis Center sponsored session at the 60th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, May 8–10, 2025. We invite session proposals on any topic relevant to Byzantine studies.

Session proposals must be submitted through the Mary Jaharis Center website. The deadline for submission is May 13, 2024.

If the proposed session is approved, the Mary Jaharis Center will reimburse a maximum of 4 session participants (presenters and moderator) up to $800 maximum for scholars traveling from North America and up to $1400 maximum for those traveling from outside North America. Funding is through reimbursement only; advance funding cannot be provided.

For further details and submission instructions, please visit https://maryjahariscenter.org/sponsored-sessions/60th-icms.

Contact Brandie Ratliff, Director, Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture, with any questions.

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The Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture Founded in 2010 through a generous gift from the Jaharis Family Foundation, the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture is dedicated to the promotion and advancement of knowledge about the rich heritage of Byzantine art and culture.

Third Annual Academic Symposium | St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary 02/05/2024

Third Annual Academic Symposium at St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary

November 13-15, 2024: Third Annual Academic Symposium at Saint Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary.

This year’s symposium, titled “I Saw the Lord (Isa 6.1): Entangled Jewish and Christian Perspectives on the Encounter with God,” gathers leading Orthodox Christian and Jewish scholars from around the world, who will reflect on the manner in which theophanic texts—biblical accounts of Divine Revelation to the patriarchs and prophets—have always been and remain foundational to their respective doctrinal and spiritual traditions. For more details, see the Symposium page: https://www.svots.edu/events/symposium_2024

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Third Annual Academic Symposium | St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary “I Saw the Lord” (Isa 6.1): Entangled Jewish and Christian Perspectives on the Encounter with God Saint Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary (SVOTS) will hold its Third Annual Academic Symposium on November 13-15, 2024. This year’s symposium, titled “I Saw the Lord (Isa 6.1): Entangled...

02/05/2024

Lecture Series of the Department of Byzantine Studies, University of Cologne

June 5
CLAUDIA SODE & MARTINA FILOSA (COLOGNE)
Von der Inschrift zur digitalen Edition: Aktuelle Projekte zur
Erschließung byzantinischer Bleisiegel

June 12
NIELS GAUL (EDINBURGH)
Authorial Manuscripts of the Middle and Later Byzantine
Periods: Codicological, Performative and Cross-Cultural Readings

June 19
ELENI SKARSOULI (COLOGNE)
Papyrologie und Digital Humanities: Aus der Arbeit mit einem
philologischen Papyrus

June 26
PIA CAROLLA (GENOA)
Crossing Data, Discovering Paths: Towards a Digital Archive
of the Manuscripts by the Notorious Forger Andreas Darmarios

July 3
CHRISTOS SIMELIDIS (THESSALONIKI)
How to Sign a Book: Byzantine Book Epigrams and Their
Database

July 10
STEPHANOS MATTHAIOS (ATHENS)
"Wir, jetzt und die anderen": Sprechergruppen und
Quellen byzantinischer Lexikographie griechischer Sprache

Every lecture will take place on the specified date, from 16:00 to 17:30, in the Hauptgebäude, Horsaal VIIa. For any questions, please contact: [email protected].

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