CfP/CfA Veranstaltungen

Lines in the Sand: Ecotones and Polity in Medieval Literature, Panel at the International Medieval Congress in Leeds

Beginn
04.07.2022
Ende
07.07.2022
Deadline Abstract
01.09.2021

Lines in the Sand: Ecotones and Polity in Medieval Literature

Panel at the International Medieval Congress in Leeds, UK, July 4–7 2022

From kingdoms staking claims on opposing riverbanks to landowners arguing over a thorny hedge, transitional environments have long formed the foundations for political and social boundaries. Such material anchors in turn may be claimed to demonstrate the natural legitimacy of these borders and the institutions they define. Yet medieval literature, art, and popular culture overflows with depictions of such ecotones – water to land, mountain to plain, forest to field – that test both the permanence and permeability of the categories and divisions humans impose on their surroundings (and themselves). Interestingly, such works also tend to build their portrayals of economic endeavor and political spectacle on the ever-shifting sands of coastlines, fens, and wastelands. This panel thus seeks to examine the diverse ecological boundaries highlighted in medieval narratives, and especially to track the presentation of such habitats in works that defy modern categories of genre, nationality, religion, and/or audience. Papers that place such analysis into conversation with contemporary conceptions of the “value(s)” or nature of modern ecotones are particularly welcome. 

We welcome paper proposals from all disciplines that investigate the complex presentations of environmental boundaries in medieval texts. Topics may include, but are not limited to:  

  • Uses of transitional environments to define political or cultural communities
  • The setting of mercantile activities along ecological boundaries 
  • Ecological contexts of invasion and colonization  
  • Border spaces in texts that reaffirm or dismantle traditional social hierarchies (e.g. class, race, gender) 
  • Definition(s) of human identity in the environments of political, religious, or linguistic frontiers 
  • Experiences of non-human life on coastlines and riverbanks, in hedges and fens, and/or along political boundaries 
  • Descriptions of ecotones in texts that defy or subvert generic boundaries, or in prosimetric or multilingual texts 
  • Textual transmission/translation across ecological and/or political borders 

Please send queries and abstracts (200–250 words), with a title, two suggested keywords, your mailing address, and your affiliation(s), to Aylin Malcolm (malcolma@sas.upenn.edu) or Andrew Richmond (richmonda1@southernct.edu) by 1 September, 2021.

Keywords may be chosen from this list: www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/imcarchive/2020/keywords. For more information about presenting at the IMC, see the proposal guidelines at www.imc.leeds.ac.uk/proposals/criteria.

Quelle der Beschreibung: Information des Anbieters

Forschungsgebiete

Ecocriticism, Literatur und Theologie/Religionswissenschaften, Stoffe, Motive, Thematologie, Literatur des Mittelalters (6.-13. Jh.)

Links

Ansprechpartner

Einrichtungen

University of Leeds

Adressen

Leeds
Großbritannien
Datum der Veröffentlichung: 16.08.2021
Letzte Änderung: 16.08.2021