All abstract submissions (max. 250-300 words) must be received by November 14th, 2008. Submissions should be sent to
mapmirrors@gmail.com.
The figure captured in the Latin word
speculum, meaning both 'mirror' and 'encyclopedia,' is central to medieval culture. From St. Paul's foundational
'per speculum in acnigmate' to Ovid's version of the Narcissus myth to Jean de Meun's re-titling of the
Romance of the Rose as
Le Miroer aus Amoreus, the problematic of reflection cuts across medieval regional and discursive boundaries.
This traveling topos pervades medieval cultural expression, from religious thought to the production of visual and textual artwork to music and philosophy. The implicit or explicit articulation of this fascinating figure nevetheless differs as it enters (or is re-evaluated within) varying discourses.
The Medievalists @ Penn invite submissions concerning one or more formations of the 'mirror.'
We seek to encourage a plurailty of perspectives from medievalists of all disciplines in recognition of the profound 'interdisciplinarity' of our common subject of study: The Middle Ages.
Topics might include, but are not limited to:
-encyclopedias and summae
-encyclopedias and summae
-advice for princes and conduct manuals
-scientific treatises and astrology
-(Ciceronian) friendship
-reproduction and repetition
-twins and doubling
-vanity and the Narcissus myth
-reflection and replication
-representation and mimesis
-specularity and visuality
-recognition and self-consciousness
-the mirror of the soul and mysticism
-mirror as distorted image, figura, and metaphor
mapmirrors@gmail.com
Mission Statement of M@P: Medievalists @ Penn (M@P) is a reading group run by graduate students at the University of Pennsylvania. The group is comprised of members from departments
across the School of Arts and Sciences (French, Music, Spanish, English, German, and Art History among others). Our readings are primary and secondary texts chosen broadly from various disciplines, agreed
upon each semester by the current participants. Our purpose is to foster discussion and interaction among students and scholars of all aspects of the Middle Ages and to provide mutual support for
the development of a broad interdisciplinary understanding of medieval culture.