CALL FOR PAPERS
International Conference
Using the
Past: The Middle Ages in the Spotlight
The international
conference “Using the Past: The Middle Ages in the Spotlight” will take place
at the Monastery of Santa Maria da Vitória (Batalha, Portugal) on December 9–12,
2020.
The conference
aims at bringing together scholars from all around the world concerned with the
uses of the medieval past. Participants will address when, where, how, why and
by whom the medieval past has been used, with papers embracing a broad
chronological timeline that begins in the medieval period itself and extends to
include contemporary politics, society and mass media. Thus, this conference
seeks to provide a forum for scholars who are willing to examine and to advance
knowledge on the use of the medieval past, contributing to a better assessment
of contemporary realities, problems and challenges.
Possible questions, topics and approaches may include, but are by no
means restricted to, the following:
- Methodological
Approaches: Terminology, Concepts, Categories. Scholars
are invited to present papers focusing on the terminology and conceptual
frameworks of Medieval Studies, Medievalism and Mittelalter-Rezeption. Papers
questioning the uses, accuracy and usefulness of traditional categories within
Medieval Studies, such as Gothic, Romanesque, Anglo-Saxon, or Dark Ages, would also
be appropriate.
- Academic
Medievalism. Scholars are invited to analyse how and to what
extent personal ideologies (e.g. political or religious) underpin academics’
approaches to the Middle Ages, whether implicitly or explicitly. In addition, papers
in this category might consider how the locations of universities and research centres
within specific geopolitical contexts might influence academics to promote a
certain vision and study of the medieval period (e.g. institutions located in a
region or territory with separatist or nationalistic agendas).
- The Reception
of the Middle Ages. Scholars are invited to propose
case studies addressing the use, reuse, recreation, invention, imagination and evocation
of the medieval past, from the Middle Ages onwards, both in European and
Non-European territories. Papers considering the medieval past as inspiration in
literature, visual arts, music, theatre, cinema, television, comics or video games
are welcome. In addition, papers focusing on longue durée phenomena will be very appropriate (e.g. the political
and ideological (re)use of medieval figures during and after the Middle Ages,
or the creation of collective memory and its use in families, institutions,
societies and nations). Regarding non-European territories, we welcome case
studies that focus on (but are not limited to) the following questions: What
kind of agents were involved in promoting, creating and receiving medieval
heritage in the nineteenth through twenty-first centuries in non-European
territories? What was the relation established with native cultures? Was there
any attempt to combine medieval European recreations with local cultural and
artistic traditions?
- Contemporary
Politics, Society and Mass Media. The conference aims at analysing
the noticeable and repeated number of recent phenomena—from the Iberian
Peninsula, to Brazil and New Zealand—where the medieval period has been invoked
in political campaigns, in support of independence movements, and as
justification for racialized agendas and even terrorist attacks.
- Tourism and
the Middle Ages. Special attention will be given to case studies that
approach how the growing development of tourism from the nineteenth century
onwards determined a certain vision of the Middle Ages, or, conversely, how grotesque/romantic
views of the Middle Ages have been used to promote tourism. Papers considering
how current tourism determines the conservation and restoration of medieval and
neo-medieval heritage (e.g. the case of the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris) are
also welcome.
We invite
participation from graduate students, early career researchers and senior
scholars. Participants are welcome to present in English, Portuguese, Spanish,
French or Italian. Proposals for either 3-paper sessions or individual papers are
equally welcome. Individual papers should be 20 minutes in length.
Please
submit an abstract and a brief CV of no more than 300 words each to medievallyspeaking@gmail.com by April 30 , 2020 (extended deadline!).