Society for Neo-Latin Studies

Society for Neo-Latin Studies

Archive

2006


Oxford English Faculty/The MacDiarmid Society

BUCHANANALIA

Events to mark the quincentenary of

George Buchanan (1506-82)

 

Tuesday 7 November 2006, Merton College

1pm-2pm Neo-Latin Reading Group: Buchanan translation workshop

(‘De Equo Elogio’, from Sylvae; De Sphaera, 1.1-15, 5.1-19; texts will be posted on EMWO, http://users.ox.ac.uk/~lina0897/emwo/index.shtml)

5 pm Early Modern Literature Graduate Seminar

Robert Crawford (University of St Andrews):

‘George Buchanan and Scottish Latin Poetry’

8pm Robert Crawford will read from his recent volume of translations,

Apollos of the North: Selected Poems of George Buchanan and Arthur Johnston

All welcome: for further information, please contact david.norbrook@ell.ox.ac.uk

 


LATIN AND VERNACULAR IN RENAISSANCE IBERIA III:

OVID FROM THE MIDDLE AGES TO THE BAROQUE

CALL FOR PAPERS

Following the success of the previous two Latin and Vernacular in Renaissance Iberia, we propose a third conference to explore one particular aspect of this field, to be held at the University of Nottingham on 19-20 April 2007. Up to 15 papers of 20 minutes in English or Spanish are invited on the pervasiveness of Ovid in the Iberian Peninsula from the thirteenth
to the seventeenth centuries. Possible topics might include: aemulatio; commentaries and translations; bilingual editions; Neo-Latin reworkings of Ovid; the integration of his poetry into vernacular style; the presence of Ovid within the school and university curricula; Ovidian imagery and themes within the comedia.

Submissions from postgraduate students will be welcomed.

Proposals for papers should be sent to Dr Alejandro Coroleu by 1 December
2006


Organisers:

Dr Alejandro Coroleu (to whom all correspondence should be addressed)
Department of Hispanic and Latin American Studies
University of Nottingham
Nottingham NG7 2RD (UK)
alejandro.coroleu@nottingham.ac.uk

Dr Barry Taylor
Early Printed Collections
The British Library
96 Euston Road
London NW1 2DB (UK)
barry.taylor@bl.uk


2006
 
Fellowships at the Newberry Library
application deadline 21 October 06

 Advanced Phd students and recent recipients of the PhD in institutions that belong to the Newberry Library's Center for Renaissance Studies Consortium are eligible to apply for two Visiting Fellowships and 16-20 funded places on a residential workshop. Candidates researching in any aspect of Latin studies in the Early Modern period are particularly encouraged to apply.


The Visiting Fellowships and workshop form part of the second year of a three-year collaboration between the Renaissance Studies centres of the Newberry Library and the University of Warwick.  The collaboration is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Activities in 2006-2007 focus on the topic 'European and New World Forms of Knowledge in Colonial Spanish America c. 1520-1800'. Reading knowledge of Spanish is not a prerequisite.


Two Visiting Fellowships associated with this programme will be offered for the period 29 May-23 July. The Visiting Fellowships will meet the costs of travel, accommodation and subsistence expenses at the Newberry Library. At the end of their tenure, the Visiting Fellows will participate (together with 16-20 other early career scholars) in a 2-week funded residential workshop at the Newberry (23 July-3 August 2007).  Like the Visiting Fellows, PhD students and recent recipients of the PhD selected to participate in the residential workshop will receive stipends that meet their travel, accommodation, and subsistence costs for the duration of the workshop.  Applicants can apply either for the residential workshop alone, or for both the residential workshop and the Visiting Fellowship programme.   Applications and further details of the programme can be found at http://www.newberry.org/renaissance/consortium/Warwick/Warwick.html
 
The particular importance of Latin to the programme will be clear from the attached flyer: as well as vital historical sources, much of the literature and poetry of colonial Spanish America was written in Latin, and knowledge of the European classical tradition is important for a full understanding of the cultural history and heritage of the colonial period.


Given that both Neo-Latin literature and the reception of Greco-Roman antiquity are becoming increasingly prominent, the Fellowships are designed to encourage younger scholars to diversify their interests at a crucial stage in their career. Interest in the Classical Tradition in Latin America is developing rapidly and needs the expertise of professional classicists and Latinists.


 For further information, should it be required, please contact Andrew Laird in the Department of Classics at Warwick University or Dr Catherine Armstrong at Centre for Renaissance Studies at the University of Warwick: C.M.Armstrong@warwick.ac.uk

Page contact: Maude Vanhaelen Last revised: Mon 28 May 2007
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