Microsoft word - call for expressions of interest_latinpats.doc

Call for Expressions of Interest: ARC Network for Early European Research-sponsored Postgraduate Advanced Training Seminar Latin Clinic for Medievalists and Early Modernists
Organisers: Yasmin Haskell (University of Western Australia) and Date: 13 November 2009
Venue: Centre for Classical and Near Eastern Studies of Australia,
Madsen Building, University of Sydney, NSW

Rationale and aims

How’s your Latin lately? As students of medieval and early modern history, thought and
literature al of us wil come across (or up against . .) texts in Latin, the international language of scholarship, science, medicine, law, religion and diplomacy wel into the eighteenth century. Latin was also an important vehicle for creative writing, so it can’t be safely ignored even by students of the European vernacular literatures. This NEER postgraduate advanced training seminar is designed to introduce you to a range of post-classical Latin literature and genres and to help you tailor your language learning to your particular research needs and interests. If you’re struggling with a Latin inscription, letter, or other document, why not bring it along and ask an expert? And if you’re a classical Latinist, why not come and see how the other half lives! We aim to accommodate different levels of experience, and to help even the rustiest learners conquer their fear of the un-dead language . . To get the most out of this workshop, though, you wil need to have at least a basic familiarity with the grammar and vocabulary of classical Latin.
Format

Experienced medievalists and early modernists who specialise in or regularly use Latin in their
research wil lead sessions throughout the day in the areas of medieval Latin, Renaissance humanist Latin (fifteenth-sixteenth centuries), and early modern Latin (seventeenth-eighteenth
Provisional program

9:15 am: Welcome by the convenors.
9:30 am: Day to be launched with a talk on the transition from classical to post-classical Latin/
11:00 am-5:30 pm: Paral el sessions (TBC, depending on availability of presenters and interests of participants).

• Reading medieval Latin historical texts • Reading medieval Latin literary texts • Editing and translating medieval Latin texts • Using Italian/ Northern European archives and libraries • Reading Renaissance Latin historical texts • Neo-Latin poetry and the Classical Tradition • Translating and editing Renaissance and neo-Latin texts • Social and political classics of Dutch humanism (Erasmus, Grotius, Lipsius) • Latin in scientific, medical, or philosophical texts • Latin in the Enlightenment – the end of an era or a new frontier?
Expert presenters (TBC)
Medieval Latin
: Dr Juanita Feros Ruys (University of Sydney); Professor Philippa Maddern
(University of Western Australia).

Renaissance Latin
: Ms Frances Muecke (Sydney); Dr Maurizio Campanel i (University of
Rome), Dr Andrea Rizzi (University of Melbourne); Dr Francesco Borghesi (University of Sydney); Dr Grantley Macdonald (University of Tours).
Early modern Latin (seventeenth-eighteenth centuries)
: Professor Yasmin Haskel
(University of Western Australia); Dr Maurizio Campanel i (University of Rome); Dr Jan Waszink (University of Utrecht).
Other guests and facilitators:
Professor Nerida Newbigin (University of Sydney) Professor Joseph Farrel (University of Pennsylvania)

Information for applicants

Postgraduates registered with NEER and ECR NEER participants accepted to attend the seminar may be eligible to receive financial assistance from NEER of up to $500 to attend the seminar. Applications to attend should be sent directly to Yasmin Haskel ([email protected]) and Frances Muecke ([email protected]) and should include: details of the degree in which you are enrol ed (PGs) or the title of your current a c.300-word abstract outlining how attendance at this workshop wil directly benefit a c.300 word statement stating your level of experience in (classical) Latin and the periods, genres, and texts you would be most interested in studying. (Please rank your five preferred sessions from the offerings above.); demonstrated necessity of financial assistance (if applicable); for planning purposes, an indication of whether you might be interested in staying on for a one-day symposium (14 November) of the NEER Latin research cluster. The theme is: ‘Latin Identities: Representations of Self and Community from Antiquity to

Source: http://www.classics.org.au/Latin_Clinic.pdf

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