NEH Summer Seminar: "Health and Disease in the Middle Ages" (24 June-27 July 2012)
March 1 is the deadline for receipt of applications for a Summer Seminar to be held 24 June-27 July 2012 in London (U.K.) on the topic of "Health and Disease in the Middle Ages." It is co-sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. New this year is NEH's decision to allow up to two advanced graduate students to participate. This Seminar is designed for people who HAVE NOT had advanced training in medical history. Like all NEH programs, this Seminar is limited to U.S. Citizens and permanent residents.
Please pass this notice on to your colleagues, graduate students, and other interested parties. Thank you!
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Monica H. Green
Professor of History
School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies Box 874302 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-4302 monica.green@asu.edu<mailto:monica.green@asu.edu><mailto:monica.green@asu.edu>
https://webapp4.asu.edu/directory/person/384868
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Applications are being sought for a five-week Seminar for College and University Teachers—“Health and Disease in the Middle Ages”—which is being held June 24 through July 28, 2012, in London, England. Part of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Seminars and Institutes program, the Seminar is sponsored by the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) and will convene at the Wellcome Library, the world’s premier research center for medical history. This Seminar will gather together sixteen scholars (including up to two advanced graduate students) from across the disciplines interested in questions of health, disease, and disability in medieval Europe and the Mediterranean.
A primary goal is to explore how the scientific technologies of assessing disease prevalence andidentifying pathogens (particularly leprosy and plague) can inform traditional, humanistic methods (historical, literary, art historical, and linguistic) of investigating cultural responses to disease and disability. The Seminar also explores how humanistic studies of medieval medicine can inform modern scientific studies of historical diseases, which are developing at a rapid pace thanks to new methods in paleopathology and ancient DNA (aDNA) retrieval and analysis. Our goal is not simply to foster dialogue among the disciplines regarding the intersections of religion, economics, and medicine in the medieval interpretation and treatment of disease, but also to provide a historical basis for understanding crises in global health today.
The two co-Directors, Monica Green and Rachel Scott, are specialists in the fields of medical history and bioarcheology, respectively, and they will be aided by three guest lecturers who bring additional perspectives to interdisciplinary dialogue. Drawing on these multiple areas of expertise, the Seminar advocates studying the material evidence for disease and health-seeking behaviors alongside learned and artistic interpretations. Special emphasis is placed on assisting participants with their independent research projects relating to the History of Medicine, especially those based on unpublished primary sources.
The ideal participant for this Seminar will be a faculty member at a university or college, or an advanced graduate student, working in the humanities, social sciences, or natural sciences with an interest in research on medieval medicine. The NEH requires that applicants be United States citizens, residents of U.S. jurisdictions, or foreign nationals who have been residing in the United States or its territories for the last three years. The Seminar is designed for those with no prior background in medical history and does not presuppose any advanced training in the biological sciences. Scholars working on any aspect of medieval Europe or the Mediterranean, and in any discipline, are encouraged to apply. Also, because our understanding of Europe will be expanded by thinking comparatively, scholars with expertise in other premodern cultures (e.g., pre-Columbian Americas or China) are encouraged to apply.
The sixteen selected participants will receive a stipend for the five-week Seminar of $3900, to cover airfare, housing costs, and other expenses. Housing has been prearranged at University College London.
Admission is competitive. The application process has two parts:
Part 1 – submitted directly to NEH: Fill out the initial application form online at the NEH website:
https://securegrants.neh.gov/education/participants/. This part is for the NEH’s internal records and is the necessary first step of processing your file. Please print it out since a copy of the form also needs to be included in Part 2.
Part 2 – submitted directly to the Seminar Directors, c/o ACMRS (at the e-mail or snail-mail address below): The rest of the application materials consist of a copy of the NEH cover page, a curriculum vitae, a brief essay explaining your interest in the Seminar, and two letters of recommendation.
For further information (including a detailed description of the program and the syllabus), please go to the Seminar website:
http://acmrs.org/healthanddisease2012.
Or write to us or call at:
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) 4th Floor, Lattie F. Coor Hall Arizona State University P.O. Box 874402 Tempe, AZ 85287-4402
e-mail:
healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org<mailto:healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org><mailto:healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org>
Phone: 480.965.4661
Please pass this notice on to your colleagues, graduate students, and other interested parties. Thank you!
--
Monica H. Green
Professor of History
School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies Box 874302 Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-4302 monica.green@asu.edu<mailto:monica.green@asu.edu><mailto:monica.green@asu.edu>
https://webapp4.asu.edu/directory/person/384868
--------------
Applications are being sought for a five-week Seminar for College and University Teachers—“Health and Disease in the Middle Ages”—which is being held June 24 through July 28, 2012, in London, England. Part of the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) Summer Seminars and Institutes program, the Seminar is sponsored by the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) and will convene at the Wellcome Library, the world’s premier research center for medical history. This Seminar will gather together sixteen scholars (including up to two advanced graduate students) from across the disciplines interested in questions of health, disease, and disability in medieval Europe and the Mediterranean.
A primary goal is to explore how the scientific technologies of assessing disease prevalence andidentifying pathogens (particularly leprosy and plague) can inform traditional, humanistic methods (historical, literary, art historical, and linguistic) of investigating cultural responses to disease and disability. The Seminar also explores how humanistic studies of medieval medicine can inform modern scientific studies of historical diseases, which are developing at a rapid pace thanks to new methods in paleopathology and ancient DNA (aDNA) retrieval and analysis. Our goal is not simply to foster dialogue among the disciplines regarding the intersections of religion, economics, and medicine in the medieval interpretation and treatment of disease, but also to provide a historical basis for understanding crises in global health today.
The two co-Directors, Monica Green and Rachel Scott, are specialists in the fields of medical history and bioarcheology, respectively, and they will be aided by three guest lecturers who bring additional perspectives to interdisciplinary dialogue. Drawing on these multiple areas of expertise, the Seminar advocates studying the material evidence for disease and health-seeking behaviors alongside learned and artistic interpretations. Special emphasis is placed on assisting participants with their independent research projects relating to the History of Medicine, especially those based on unpublished primary sources.
The ideal participant for this Seminar will be a faculty member at a university or college, or an advanced graduate student, working in the humanities, social sciences, or natural sciences with an interest in research on medieval medicine. The NEH requires that applicants be United States citizens, residents of U.S. jurisdictions, or foreign nationals who have been residing in the United States or its territories for the last three years. The Seminar is designed for those with no prior background in medical history and does not presuppose any advanced training in the biological sciences. Scholars working on any aspect of medieval Europe or the Mediterranean, and in any discipline, are encouraged to apply. Also, because our understanding of Europe will be expanded by thinking comparatively, scholars with expertise in other premodern cultures (e.g., pre-Columbian Americas or China) are encouraged to apply.
The sixteen selected participants will receive a stipend for the five-week Seminar of $3900, to cover airfare, housing costs, and other expenses. Housing has been prearranged at University College London.
Admission is competitive. The application process has two parts:
Part 1 – submitted directly to NEH: Fill out the initial application form online at the NEH website:
https://securegrants.neh.gov/education/participants/. This part is for the NEH’s internal records and is the necessary first step of processing your file. Please print it out since a copy of the form also needs to be included in Part 2.
Part 2 – submitted directly to the Seminar Directors, c/o ACMRS (at the e-mail or snail-mail address below): The rest of the application materials consist of a copy of the NEH cover page, a curriculum vitae, a brief essay explaining your interest in the Seminar, and two letters of recommendation.
For further information (including a detailed description of the program and the syllabus), please go to the Seminar website:
http://acmrs.org/healthanddisease2012.
Or write to us or call at:
Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) 4th Floor, Lattie F. Coor Hall Arizona State University P.O. Box 874402 Tempe, AZ 85287-4402
e-mail:
healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org<mailto:healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org><mailto:healthanddisease2012@acmrs.org>
Phone: 480.965.4661