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Thu, 28 Aug 2008 09:44:56 -0400 |
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I think the museum community will be as interested in this as the medievalists.
Karen Reeds
cc: Janet Marquardt <[log in to unmask]>
>From: Janet Marquardt <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: [MEDART] CFP-Leeds 2009
>Sender: "MEDART-L: Medieval Art History" <[log in to unmask]>
>
>Call for papers:
>
>International Medieval Congress, Leeds University, 13-16 July 2009
>Session sponsored by the International Center of Medieval Art
>
>Shaping Reception of Medieval Sites: What are we doing?
>
>Organized by: Janet T. Marquardt, Eastern Illinois University
>
>With the eleven-hundredth anniversary of the Abbey of Cluny's
>foundation in 910 approaching, it seems timely to evaluate our
>current understanding of medieval monuments as cultural patrimony.
>We have seen two centuries of rising awareness to the historical
>importance, cultural meaning, and tourism potential of medieval
>structures in Western Europe. They have changed from outdated and
>neglected ruins past fashionable appreciation to picturesque relics
>claiming large investments toward their restoration. Yet some
>countries have too many historical monuments to maintain and the
>oldest represent the largest resource drain. How relevant are
>medieval sites today and why should modern administrations continue
>to market them as "authentic" representatives of culture? Who
>determines popular views of the past in our society and are they
>merely following formulae initiated in the nineteenth century? Why
>are we still commemorating anniversaries of medieval institutions
>long gone?
>
>This session would ideally be composed of papers about sites that
>have been reevaluated or which have been recently "rediscovered,"
>their reception and commemoration, as well as how their role in the
>past and towards the future continues to be shaped.
>
>
>Please email paper proposals of no more than 300 words to
><mailto:[log in to unmask]>[log in to unmask] by September 15,
>2008 and indicate whether you would require a digital data or
>traditional slide projector.
--
Karen Reeds, PhD, FLS
Guest Curator
Come into a New World: Linnaeus & America
Exhibition, February 15-July 1, 2007 American Swedish Historical
Museum, Philadelphia http://www.americanswedish.org/linnaeus.htm
May 3-September 2008 New Jersey State Museum, Trenton
http://www.newjerseystatemuseum.org
Exhibition guide available from
http://www.dianepublishing.net/category_s/490.htm
[log in to unmask]
609--279-9420
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