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medieval-religion: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture

Please distribute widely - we hope you will consider submitting an abstract
to one of our sessions for next year's Kalamazoo Medieval Congress!

*The Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group* is sponsoring three sessions at
the 52nd International Congress on Medieval Studies at Kalamazoo for 2017:
1)   New Approaches to the Helfta Nuns and Their Contemporaries *(contacts:
C. Annette Grisé, Barbara Zimbalist)* 2)   Syon Abbey and Its Associates
[co-sponsored with the Syon Abbey Society] *(contacts: Brandon Alakas,
Stephanie Morley)* 3)  *Imitatio Mariae* in the *Meditationes vitae Christi*
Traditions across Europe *(contacts: Leah Buturain, Laura Saetvit
Miles)* Please
send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a completed Participant
Information Form to the co-organizers of your selected session by *15
September 2016*. Electronic submissions are preferred. Details of the
session topics and co-organizer contact information are found below. Please
send general inquiries and requests to join the listserv to Cathy Grisé:
[log in to unmask]


1)        New Approaches to the Helfta Nuns and Their Contemporaries
(Organizers: Members of VDCG Committee)

In the second half of the thirteenth century, the female monastery of
Helfta played a significant role in the cultivation of Western European
mysticism. The circle of nuns comprising three visionaries and their
abbess—Mechtild of Hackeborn (1240-1298), Gertrud the Great of Helfta
(1256-1302), Mechtild of Magdeburg (1207-1282/94, a beguine who joined
Helfta later in life), and Gertrud of Hackeborn (1232-1292, Abbess of
Helfta and sister of Mechtild), respectively—were responsible for several
important visionary treatises (including *Liber Specialis Gratiae, The Book
of Special Grace,* and *Das fließende Licht der Gottheit,* *The Flowing
Light of Divinity*) that defined German mysticism for their time: for
example, they developed nuptial mysticism using imagery of holy women as
Brides of Christ, and dedicated themselves to the Devotion of the Sacred
Heart as part of their active program of female education, piety, and
community. This interdisciplinary session will allow scholars and students
to showcase recent research on the Helfta nuns and explore how these holy
women expanded and changed traditional paradigms, as well as to compare
this material with that of other late-medieval mystics.

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a completed Participant
Information Form to the co-organizers of this session by 15 September 2016.
Electronic submissions are preferred.

Session Organizers:

Dr C. Annette Grisé

Dept. of English and Cultural Studies

McMaster University

1280 Main St. W.

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

L8S 4L9

[log in to unmask]



Dr Barbara Zimbalist

Department of English
Hudspeth Hall, Room 113
500 W. University Ave.
El Paso, Texas 79968-0526

[log in to unmask]


2)       Co-sponsored with Syon Abbey Society: Syon Abbey and its
Associates (Organizers: Brandon Alakas and Stephanie Morley)

The Syon Abbey Society and the Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group invite
paper abstracts for its joint session “Syon Abbey and its Associates” which
treat any aspect of writing associated with the intellectual and spiritual
culture that flourished at the abbey.  Syon’s reputation as a stalwart
centre for orthodox reform and prolific source of vernacular devotional
writing since its foundation in 1415 has been well-documented and
long-recognised.  This session seeks to examine the channels of connection
beyond the convent walls, both in terms of the abbey’s impact on
contemporary thinkers, patrons, printers, and lay readers, as well as the
influence—material and spiritual—the world beyond its walls may have
exerted on the abbey.



A nodal point for high-ranking aristocrats and intellectuals in late
medieval and Tudor England, Syon attracted a diverse body of individuals
ranging from Margaret Beaufort and Katherine of Aragon to Richard Pace,
Thomas More, and John Fisher. These connections are often noted but seldom
explored. How, for example, were ties forged and maintained between the
Birgittine community, secular elites, printers, and the reading public? For
over a century, Syon both ministered to and depended upon a vast network of
lay support for its pastoral initiatives and its commitment to
reinvigorating—and, finally, preserving—monastic life.  This session aims
to probe the nature of this long-nurtured relationship between the
spiritual and the secular which accounts for the formidable authority and
longevity of Syon Abbey.



Papers may address the movement and circulation of books to or from the
Abbey; consider particular relationships between authors or patrons on
either side of the convent walls; or examine specific texts or translations
associated with the abbey for traces of broader associations.  Any and all
disciplinary and methodological approaches are welcome.



Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a completed Participant
Information Form to either co-organizer of this session by 15 September
2016. Electronic submissions are preferred.



Dr Brandon Alakas
Department of Fine Arts and Humanities
University of Alberta, Augustana
4901 - 46 Avenue
Camrose, AB T4V 2R3
Canada
[log in to unmask]



Dr Stephanie Morley
Department of English
Saint Mary’s University
923 Robie Street
Halifax, NS B3H 3C3
Canada
[log in to unmask]


3)       Paper Panel: "Imitatio Mariae in the Meditations vitae
Christi traditions across Europe" (Organizers: Leah Buturain and Laura
Saetvit Miles)

The pseudo-Bonaventuran *Meditationes vitae Christi *(*MVC*) is considered
the single most influential devotional text written in the later Middle
Ages. This paper panel will explore how the textual tradition of the *MVC* and
related gospel meditations fostered creative forms of imitating Mary,
or *imitatio
Mariae. *While *imitatio Christi* has received scholarly attention, *imitatio
Mariae* merits more fruitful consideration - especially as it compasses
texts and images that engage both laity and religious in imitating the
Virgin’s virtues. This panel will focus on performative rituals and texts
used to recapitulate her life events, such as the Annunciation.  How
did *imitatio
mariae* enrich the "devout imagination" of the faithful? How did readers
perform Mary’s own performance of speech, silence, and prayer? We hope to
solicit abstracts that tap into the variegated traditions of the *MVC* from
across Europe, in Latin and multiple vernaculars.

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a completed Participant
Information Form to the co-organizers of this session by 15 September 2016.
Electronic submissions are preferred.



Session Contacts:

Dr Leah Buturain

[log in to unmask]]USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology

1946 N. Serrano Ave.

LA, CA 90027

[log in to unmask] ‎

Dr Laura Saetveit Miles

Department of Foreign Languages,

University of Bergen

Postbox 7805, N-5020 Bergen, Norway

[log in to unmask]






*Notice of new Society at the International Medieval Congress at Western
Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI*

The Vernacular Devotional Cultures Group seeks to fill the gap left by the
departure of the Mystics Quarterly sessions at Kalamazoo, with a broadened
focus to include vernacular spiritual writings of the late Middle
Ages--championed by female visionaries, but also written and disseminated
by clerics and monks, and read by women religious as well as by the laity.
We sponsored our first session in Kalamazoo 2016 for scholars and students
of late-medieval, vernacular devotional culture. We wish to complement the
work being done by such groups as the Syon Abbey Society, the Lollard
Society, and the Anchoritic Society.

Our mandate for the Vernacular Devotional Culture includes making up for
the loss of the Mystics Quarterly sessions (no longer taking place at
Congress) by sponsoring sessions on medieval mystics and mysticism,
fostering collaboration among societies devoted to religious cultures, and
showcasing recent scholarship on vernacular spiritual traditions in
medieval Western Europe.
For further information please contact:

Cathy Grisé, McMaster University ([log in to unmask])

Barbara Zimbalist, University of Texas at El Paso ([log in to unmask])

Jennifer Brown, Marymount Manhattan College ([log in to unmask])

Stephanie Amsel, Southern Methodist University ([log in to unmask])

Website: https://macblog.mcmaster.ca/vernacular-devotional-cultures/

Listserv: is just being established. Please email Cathy Grisé at
[log in to unmask] for details, or look for upcoming information on the
website.

-- 
Laura Saetveit Miles
English Literature
Førsteamanuensis, Institutt for Fremmedspråk, Universitet i Bergen
Associate Professor, Department of Foreign Languages, University of Bergen

www.syonabbeysociety.com

www.laurasaetveitmiles.com

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