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Forwarding for Mark Rankin.

Happy New Year, everybody!

---------- Forwarded message ---------

Dear colleagues,

*NEH Summer Seminar for College and University **Teachers *

*Printing and the Book During the Reformation: 1450-1650 *



Please consider applying to the forthcoming National Endowment for the
Humanities Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers on "Printing and
the Book During the Reformation: 1450-1650." The seminar will examine
continuity and change in the production, dissemination, and reading of
Western European books during the 200 years following the advent of printing
 with movable type. Seminar participants will consider the governing
question of whether the advent of printing was a necessary precondition for
the Protestant Reformation, and ways in which elements such as book layout,
typography, illustration, and paratext (e.g., prefaces, glosses, and
commentaries) shaped the responses of readers. Employing key methods of the
History of the Book and the History of Reading, our investigation will
consider how the physical nature of books affected ways in which readers
understood and assimilated their intellectual contents. This program is
geared to meet the needs of teacher-scholars interested in the literary,
political, or cultural history of the Renaissance and/or Reformation, the
History of the Book, the History of Reading, art history, women’s studies,
religious studies, bibliography, print culture, library science (including
rare book librarians), mass communication, literacy studies, and more.

This seminar will meet from 4 – 30 July 2022 at The Ohio State University
in Columbus, OH. The Rare Books and Manuscripts Library at OSU preserves
more than 3,500 books printed before 1650, with exceptional strengths in
the British and Western European Reformations and early printing (including
one hundred books printed before 1500). Named collections include the
Harold J. Grimm Reformation Collection (which includes, among other
treasures, more than 120 Luther sermons and treatises in Latin or German
printed during his lifetime), the John Foxe and John Day collections (both
among the finest in North America), and the James Stevens-Cox *STC*-sigla
collection (mostly religious books so rare that the editors of the *Short-title
catalogue *listed this as a named private collection).


Those eligible to apply include citizens of USA who are engaged in teaching
at the college or university level and independent scholars who have
received the terminal degree in their field (usually the Ph.D.). In
addition, non-US citizens who have taught and lived in the USA for at least
three years prior to March 2022 are eligible to apply. NEH will provide
participants with a stipend of $3,450. Up to three spaces will be reserved
for non tenure-track faculty.


Full details and application information are available at
https://sites.lib.jmu.edu/nehprinting-book-reformation2022/
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://sites.lib.jmu.edu/nehprinting-book-reformation2022/__;!!DZ3fjg!pQ-tAWcvM_4xsRMo60jjbcIPYzhFQ3V11V7eQuqSr__-w5My6WsRnlA77QDSVmW3FogmlYw$>.
For further information, please contact [log in to unmask] *The
deadline for application is March 1, 2022. *


Best wishes,

Mark Rankin





Mark Rankin
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.jmu.edu/english/people/full-time*20faculty/rankin-mark.shtml__;JQ!!DZ3fjg!pQ-tAWcvM_4xsRMo60jjbcIPYzhFQ3V11V7eQuqSr__-w5My6WsRnlA77QDSVmW3B1NuCyA$>,
Ph.D.
Professor of English
Editor, *Reformation*
James Madison University
921 Madison Drive
MSC 1801
Harrisonburg, VA 22807
USA
540-568-6560 (office)
330-814-7028 (cell)