CfP: New Approaches to Medieval Water Studies

Recent scholarship in water studies has generated several germane streams of new methodological approaches, each relevant to medieval history. This OLH Special Collection will showcase the state of the field for medieval water studies, tease out its salient themes, and demonstrate possible futures for the field. In the last decade, new attention has been paid to the role of water as both a literary metaphor and a cultural reality in the Middle Ages, with exciting results. In The Sea and Medieval Literature (2007), Sebastian Sobecki fruitfully explored how water is used to communicate ‘Englishness’ in various different medieval texts. In environmental history, Ellen Arnold’s Negotiating the Landscape: Environment and Monastic Identity in the Medieval Ardennes (2013) has initiated a new assessment of medieval spiritual relationships with the environment, and has led to a subsequent project on early medieval rivers and waterways. Carole Rawcliffe has shed new light on how urban medieval people conceived of water and dealt with its various challenges in Urban Bodies: Communal Health in Late Medieval English Towns and Cities(2013) and, in a related field, critics like Elizabeth Archibald, Liz Herbert McAvoy and Albrecht Classen have investigated the bathing practices of medieval people, reflecting on how the various customs and associations of medieval bathing manifest themselves in literature of the period, from romances to devotional works.
This work emerges as part of a greater discourse on medieval hygiene and cleanliness, showcased in a forthcoming volume edited by Classen entitled Hygiene, Medicine, and Well-Being in the Middle Ages (2017). This trend is accompanied by a corresponding growth in nuanced studies of Christian baptism, including The Visual Culture of Baptism in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Fonts, Settings and Beliefs (2013). Moreover, three thriving areas of medieval studies—namely emotions history, ecocriticism, and the history of travel and cartography—must necessarily encompass water, as an integral part of the medieval landscape and as a conduit for emotion, in the form of tears.
This collection will make an original contribution to a growing debate by: a) setting the scene for new multi- and inter-disciplinary water studies through a speculative survey essay from the editors; b) showcasing perspectives from authors in very different disciplines as a state-of-the field snapshot; c) encouraging the authors to speculate on the methodological challenges of their respective studies; and d) contributing to the understanding of wider environmental humanities themes emerging from the study of water in the Middle Ages. The first criterion will be of great value to those seeking to enter or advance the field, the second will contribute new research to medieval water studies and the wider studies of medieval environment and imagination, the third will provide a new collection of tools, and the fourth will be of value to water historians, water management practitioners, and water governance experts in need of pre-modern context for their work.
Topics might include (but are not limited to):
  • The role of water as a literary metaphor or narrative signpost in medieval literature
  • The role of bathing and cleanliness for medicine or spirituality
  • Liquid landscapes of the Middle Ages – both real and imagined
  • Water within medieval philosophy and cosmology
  • Flood, catastrophe and eschatology
  • Bodily water and its cultural associations or literary representations
  • Water marking boundaries, water disrupting boundaries
  • Water and elemental order and disorder
  • Water through an ecotheoretical / ecomaterialist lens
  • Intersections between different disciplines in studies of water
  • Water as a figure for change, stasis or continuity
  • Artistic representations of water
  • Critical interventions in the treatment of water / the elements by medievalists
Research articles should be approximately 8000 words in length, including references and a short bibliography. Submissions should comprise of:
  • Abstract (250 words)
  • Full-length article (8000 words)
  • Author information (short biographical statement of 200 words)
The deadline for submission is Friday 28th April, 2017
The special collection, edited by Dr James Smith (University of York) and Dr Hetta Howes (Queen Mary, University of London), is to be published in the Open Library of Humanities (OLH) (ISSN 2056-6700). The OLH is an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-funded open-access journal with a strong emphasis on quality peer review and a prestigious academic steering board. Unlike some open-access publications, the OLH has no author-facing charges and is instead financially supported by an international consortium of libraries.
Submissions should be made online at: https://submit.openlibhums.org/ in accordance with the author guidelines and clearly marking the entry as [“NEW APPROACHES TO MEDIEVAL WATER STUDIES”, SPECIAL COLLECTION]. Submissions will then undergo a double-blind peer review process. Authors will be notified of the outcome as soon as reports are received.
To learn more about the Open Library of Humanities please visit: https://www.openlibhums.org/ 
For further information, please contact James Smith.