WW1 research competition

TORCH (The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities) and Academic IT Services have launched a WW1 research competition whereby they invite students, early career researchers, college/museum and library staff to submit proposals to present new perspectives on the War and its impact through either a blog post or short (audio/video) podcast.

They will support selected entries to develop their digital content which will then be featured on some of the University’s key channels, including Oxford iTunesU, Podcasts.ox.ac.uk, the Oxford Centenary Programme and World War One Centenary: Continuations and Beginnings websites.

The awards will be judged by a panel of specialists on public engagement and WW1. Prizes will include an iPad Mini and the exciting opportunity to network with experts at the 2016 International Society for First World War Studies conference.

Deadline: midnight, 1 August 2016.

For more information, see here.
Download flyer: WW1 digital content competition promotional text- final(1)

The Society of Fellows in the Humanities Fellowship Competition 2017 – 2018, Columbia University

The Columbia Society of Fellows in the Humanities, with grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the William R. Kenan Trust, will appoint a number of postdoctoral fellows in the humanities for the academic year 2017-2018. Fellows newly appointed for 2017-2018 must have received their PhD between 1 January 2015 and 1 July 2017. The Fellowship Stipend for 2017-2018 is $62,000. Medical benefits are provided, and subsidized housing is available. There is a $6,500 research allowance per annum.

The Society seeks to enhance the role of the humanities in the University by exploring and clarifying the interrelationships within the humanities as well as their relationship to the natural and social sciences. The program is designed to strengthen the intellectual and academic qualifications of the Fellows: first, by affording them time and resources to develop independent scholarship within a broadening educational and professional context; second, by involving them in interdisciplinary programs of general education and in departmental courses, often of their own design; and third, by associating them individually and collectively with some of the finest teaching scholars in the University. The Society comprises the Fellows, the faculty members of the Governing Board, and other invited faculty. The Society holds weekly meetings to advance the intellectual and educational purposes common to the membership.

Application consists of an online application and TWO corresponding sets of hardcopy application materials. Applications must be postmarked by Monday, 3 October 2016. There are no exceptions or extensions to this deadline.

For further information and to apply, see here.

Views of an antique land: Imaging Egypt and Palestine in the First World War

Supported by the Lottery through the Heritage Lottery Fund Our Heritage programme, this University of Cardiff project will focus on collecting and making accessible images of Egypt and Palestine as they would have been seen by people during the First World War.

Much of the commemoration of the First World War has focussed on the Western Front and so gives the impression that the war was entirely one of mud and trenches with very little movement. However, the war in Egypt and Palestine was much more mobile and often fast moving, it was also fought in hot and dry conditions and posed a whole range of challenges to those who fought there. It is also a surprise to many that such a great number of personnel did actually serve in Egypt and Palestine at some point during the war with units regularly being withdrawn from the Western Front to serve in the area before returning to Europe later on. Egypt also served as a staging post for the Dardenelles Campaign and Thessalonika.

The aim is to collect photographs taken by service personnel, postcards, lantern slides and stereoviews. The project is not collecting the actual views but rather scans of them which, with the owners permission, will be uploaded to a dedicated website where anyone interested in seeing what their ancestors saw or who is interested in how the ancient monuments, cities, towns and villages looked during the First World War can get that information.

For a full overview of the project, see here.

CfP: “Ukutshona kukaMendi”: The Mendi Centenary Conference

Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, 28-30th March 2017

This conference commemorates the sinking of the SS Mendi that occurred during the First World War, on 21 February 1917. It pays tribute to the South African Native Labour Contingent, and the men on the Mendi who died en route to fight for their dignity and human rights through service to the war effort.

The conference seeks to explore the struggle against oppression and dispossession, and particularly against the Natives Land Act of 1913, as a reason why these men left their homes in rural South Africa to contribute to the war effort. It also aims to examine the roles played by black intellectuals such as Samuel Edward Krune Mqhayi, Solomon T. Plaatje, and John Dube in the recruitment of men to the South African Native Labour Contingent, and in dealing with the aftermath of the Mendi tragedy.

One of the themes we are very keen to traverse is black southern African perspectives on the sea. While a great deal has been theorized about ocean voyages and the littoral zone in the fields of Indian Ocean Studies and Black Atlantic Studies, there is very little existing research on black southern African perspectives on the sea.

From a literary and cultural studies perspective we would also like to consider the extent to which poetry related to the Mendi could fit within or perhaps disrupt a canon of World War 1 poetry, which has thus far focused mainly on English/ European writings.

We welcome contributions from established academics and researchers, but we are also extremely interested in how a new generation of South African writers, scholars, performance poets, artists, activists and intellectuals are reimagining and making sense of the Mendi story. To this latter end we will have panels for performance poetry, and wish to encourage participation and interaction from students. Artists and poets are invited to address the gathering through poetry, artistic work or discussion of artistic work, on any of the topics related to the conference theme.

What role does the rich history of our country play in understanding where we are today, and where does the story of the Mendi fit within that history?

We welcome abstracts (300 words max) for 20 minute papers/ presentations/ performances on any of the following topics related to the conference theme:

the story of the Mendi and its relevance to the present;
the history of the South African Native Labour Contingent;
the Mendi story and its relation to black military history in the 20th century;
“putting on the uniform”: black military history and first and second world wars;
black perspectives on the sea, the oceanic, and the littoral zone in southern Africa – we wish to explore this neglected topic through examining literature, orature, the visual arts, performance art, and history;
the Mendi and black intellectual and poetic traditions;
the place of poetry related to the Mendi in the canon of WW1 poetry;
Lost in translation: translating and retranslating poetry such as Mqhayi’s from indigenous languages into English;
“did they dance?”: historical “truth”, historiography, and the work of imagination;
the Mendi and the politics of commemoration in South Africa;
creative responses: the role of the arts in commemorating the Mendi;
the Mendi and issues of compensation.

Please submit your abstracts or proposals by 30 September 2016 to: mendi2017@gmail.com

Conference website here.

CFP: Object Matters: Making Memory: material and visual culture of commemoration in Ireland c.1800 – 2016

National Gallery of Ireland, Merrion Square, Dublin 2
13-15 October 2016
Funded by the Irish Research Council ‘New Foundations’ Scheme

Deadline for proposals 12 July, 2016

Proposals of c.300 words accompanied by a short CV are invited for 20-minute papers related to the material and visual culture of commemoration in Ireland from c.1800 to the present day. Please email to makingmemory@ncad.ie.

This cross-disciplinary conference will address how objects, images, artworks, buildings, spaces and bodies have worked and been understood in the creation and maintenance of public and private memory in Ireland since c.1800. While topics might include key personages and events such as World War 1, the Irish Civil War and the Manchester Martyrs, we also encourage proposals that address the commemoration of lesser-known histories.

Commemorative culture might encompass events such as ceremonies and parades, artefacts such as souvenirs or artworks, institutional practices such as collecting and exhibiting, particular sites such as commemorative buildings, graveyards and ceremonial spaces, and private modes of visual and material remembrance such as domestic mnemonic objects.

The conference should contribute to our understanding of how ideas about the past have been visualised, manufactured, articulated, materialised, distributed and performed.

Proposals are welcomed from researchers and practitioners across various fields including Art practice, Archaeology, Anthropology, Geography, Architectural History, History of Design, Material Culture, Visual Culture, Memory Studies, Museum Studies, Art History, History of Media, Cultural History, Sociology and Critical theory. A publication is planned based on the conference proceedings. For the proceedings of the first Object Matters conference Making 1916: material and visual culture of the Easter Rising, see http://liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk/products/60501.

Deadline July 12, 2016. Participants will be notified by July 22.

Conference Convenor Dr. Lisa Godson, National College of Art & Design
Conference Administrator Kate Butler, BL

Supported by the National College of Art and Design + University College Dublin Centre for Creative Arts and Critical Cultures / National Gallery of Ireland/Irish Museums Association / Irish Architecture Foundation / GradCAM

Enquiries and proposals should be directed to: makingmemory@ncad.ie

The Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG) awards Research fellowships for international PhD students

The Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG) awards research fellowships for international PhD students for a research stay in Mainz beginning in January 2017 or later.

Profile
The IEG awards fellowships for international junior researchers in history, theology and other historical subjects. The IEG promotes research on the historical foundations of Europe from the early modern period to the 20th century, particularly regarding their religious, political and social dimensions. Projects dealing with European communication and transfer processes as well as projects focusing on questions related to theology, church history and intellectual history are particularly welcome.

What we offer
Funding is currently € 1200/month. Research fellows live and work for between 6 and 12 months at the Institute in Mainz and can pursue their individual PhD project. They are also invited to collaborate with the academic staff of the IEG, according to their particular fields of interest (http://www.ieg-mainz.de/en/research/research-program). Fellows live and work at the Institute and are advised by a mentor from among the IEG’s academic staff. The IEG’s specialised library and the wider academic infrastructure of Mainz are available for their research.

Requirements
Applications are invited from doctoral candidates of any nationality. Applicants must already have a degree in history, theology or another historical subject. They should not have pursued their PhD project for more than three years when taking up the fellowship. PhD theses continue to be supervised and are completed under the auspices of the fellows’ home universities. Fellows are required to register officially as residents in Mainz and to reside and take part in events at the Institute. They should have a sufficient command of German in order to participate in discussions at the Institute. Fellows are not permitted to undertake paid work while receiving the IEG scholarship.

Please send your application via e-mail to: fellowship@ieg-mainz.de
Leibniz-Institut für Europäische Geschichte
Directors | Professor Irene Dingel and Professor Johannes Paulmann
Subject: Stipendienbewerbung

Please attach (as two files) the application form (download: http://www.ieg-mainz.de/media/public/PDF-Stipendien/2016_Bewerbungsformular_Application%20form_PhD.pdf ) including:

Curriculum vitae and (if applicable) a list of publications
brief description of the PhD thesis (5 pages, up to 1500 words)
structure of the PhD thesis, detailed working plan and schedule for
the intended stay at the Institute
Copies of university transcripts

Reference:
The primary academic advisor emails an up-to-date reference directly to the IEG by the
application deadline (fellowship@ieg-mainz.de).

The reference should discuss (please avoid a general letter of recommendation):

The applicant’s academic qualifications
Topic matter, goal and current state of the PhD project
A synopsis of work to be done in Mainz along with possible time and work
schedules

Please ensure that your attachment is no larger than 4 MB.

Please note that applications submitted late or incomplete cannot be taken into consideration.

For further information on the fellowship program and application see:

http://www.ieg-mainz.de/en/scholarships
http://www.ieg-mainz.de/media/public/PDF-Stipendien/2016_Bewerbungsformular_Application%20form_PhD.pdf
http://www.ieg-mainz.de/media/public/PDF-Stipendien/2015-12-14%20Stip-Flyer%20englisch.pdf

Contact Info:
Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG)
Barbara Müller
Fellowship Programme
Alte Universitaetsstraße 19
55116 Mainz – Germany
E-Mail: ieg3@ieg-mainz.de
Tel. +49 (0)6131 – 39 393 75

Two Postdoc fellowships for “Global History”

Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Göttingen
Start date: 1 January 2017

The transnational research group “A Global Network for Global History” directed by the Centre for Modern Indian Studies (CeMIS), University of Göttingen in cooperation with the International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam, and the Weatherhead Initiative on Global History, Harvard University, Cambridge MA, advertises two Postdoc fellowships for the funding period from 16 January – 30 September 2017.

The “Global Network for Global History” is funded by the VW foundation and seeks to organize a community of scholars interested in the systematic scrutiny of developments that have unfolded across national, regional, and continental boundaries and who propose to analyze the interconnections – cultural, economic, ecological, political and demographic – among world societies.

Fellows at CeMIS are appointed for 8.5 months and are provided time, guidance, office space, and access to the facilities of Göttingen University. They should be prepared to devote their entire time to productive scholarship and may undertake sustained projects of research or other original work. They will join a vibrant interdisciplinary community of scholars at CeMIS and the newly founded Forum for Global and Transregional Studies at the University of Göttingen.

The scholarship is granted for 8.5 months and amounts to EUR 2.650 per month (incl. compulsory health insurance and travel allowances). The work location is Göttingen.

Requirements for candidates are:
+ a PhD in History or Social Sciences;
+ independence, individual initiative and commitment;
+ excellent knowledge of English and the languages relevant to the research location;
+ sound knowledge of the relevant scholarly debates

Applications should contain a full CV, copies of relevant examinations, a research proposal (max. 5000 words), a writing sample (a chapter or essay), and the names and addresses of two referees. They should be sent electronically by 31 July 2016 to Prof. Dr. Ravi Ahuja.

Contact Info:
Prof. Dr. Ravi Ahuja
CeMIS
University of Göttingen, Waldweg 26, D-37073 Göttingen, Germany

Contact Email: ravi.ahuja@sowi.uni-goettingen.de
URL: http://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/540740.html