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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: 	Thirty-Third Medieval Colloquium of the Centre of Medieval 
Studies U of T
Date: 	Fri, 5 Aug 2011 10:21:51 -0400
From: 	Barbara North <[log in to unmask]>
To: 	Barbara North <[log in to unmask]>



*Call for Papers: Reminder - Submissions due September 1^st , 2011*

*Imitation, Emulation, and Forgery: Pretending and Becoming in the 
Medieval World*

*March 2-3 2012*

The Thirty-Third Medieval Colloquium of the Centre for Medieval Studies, 
University of Toronto

//

/Opening Keynote: Jan Ziolkowski, Arthur Kingsley Porter Professor of 
Medieval Latin, Harvard/

/Closing Keynote: Marjorie Curry Woods, //Jane Blumberg Centennial 
Professor of English, University Distinguished Teaching Professor, The 
University of Texas at Austin/

//

Imitation is a central concept within medieval thought, linking 
disparate genres and avenues of human experience within a network of 
interconnected models and interpretive structures. Medieval people saw 
their work standing within a relationship of resemblance to models and 
sources that predated their efforts, from the image of God in man, to 
the examples of poets, historiographers and hagiographers. Imitation 
implies both a faithfulness to its sources and also an inherent 
differentiation, and medieval culture used this space that embodied both 
sameness and difference as a particularly fertile zone; the religious 
found an imperfect mirror within the world and humanity, reflecting the 
transcendent world beyond matter; saints imitated Christ and one 
another, authors and poets looked to the models of both Christian and 
pagan antiquity, texts were copied and diffused, artists looked to the 
work of their forbears and the world around them, and knights fashioned 
themselves in the guise of the heroes of romance. Establishing a 
relationship to a transcendental model was a primary mechanism of 
producing authority, and it formed the basis for traditions of textual 
transmission, institutional legitimacy, personal identity, and a 
sweeping range of other persistent ideas. While scholars of medieval 
subjects have each grappled with imitation in their own fields, rarely 
have those discoveries been brought together in a concentrated 
interdisciplinary conversation.

We invite abstracts of *250 words* together with a 1-page CV by the 
deadline of *1st September 2011 *that deal with the broad issue of 
imitation in the Middle Ages as encountered in (but not limited to) 
literature, theology, hagiography, historiography, art history, and 
philosophy. We hope to bring together scholarly discourses regarding the 
imitative traits found in medieval subjects in ways that combine and 
seek to reveal the often-neglected similarities present in medieval 
forms of imitation. Topics might include, but are not limited to

- Literary, dramatic, or artistic mimesis

- Medieval forgeries and frauds

- Textual copying and diffusion

- Legal precedents

- Vernacular translations and adaptations of Latin classical or 
patristic sources

- Dionysian mysticism, the imitatio Christi and the theology of imitation

- Imagination and simulation in the Middle Ages

- Magic and illusion (including diabolic deception)

- The Speculum as concept and organizational method

- Genre building and imitation

- Historiography and ‘borrowing’

- Discipleship and 'following'

- Sacred topology

Papers should be 20min in length. To submit a proposal, or for any other 
inquiries, please email the Conference Committee c/o Daniel Price at 
[log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>. Further 
information and updates will be available through the CMS website at 
http://medieval.utoronto.ca/.

**************************************************************************************************************************************************************************

Barbara North

Institute Secretary

Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies

59 Queen's Park Crescent

Toronto, ON M5S 2C4

416-926-7142

[log in to unmask]

www.pims.ca