- Language Log has a discussion of "left dislocation" in Old and Modern English. Until reading this, I had no idea this construction was called "left dislocation." Thanks to Kristine Hunt for the link!
- Jonathan Jarrett has Feudal Transformations VIII. Listen, Jonathan, at eight posts, this is not a series, it's a regular feature!
- Here are monkeys and medieval time travel. I vow not to end this sentence with an exclamation, as I have with the last three entries in a row, even though it contains monkeys.
- Believe it or not, this is the second time poo-flinging has come up in an academic context for me today.
- The Heroic Age has its usual collection of CfPs and announcements. If you're a medieval scholar, you really need to pop on over there once a week or so whether I send you or not.
- A film company needs an expert in the use of scimitars. Surely one of you wordhoarders knows someone.
- University of California, Riverside will host "Medievalism, Colonialism, Nationalism: A Symposium" on November 7th & 8th. Um, UC Riverside, can I get some kind of conjunction in that title?
- JJ Cohen has the CFP for "Meeting in the Middle: Probing the Margins of the Medieval World." Cool poster, by the way.
- Nic D'Allesio reviews Ovid's Art and the Wife of Bath, a mostly positive review.
- Tolkien Studies V is out.
- Mearcstapa has the abstracts for their Leeds session. This is something I'd like to see become a trend: placing abstracts for sessions (or whole conferences) online. I can't tell you how many times I've looked at a conference program and been unable to tell from a cutesy title whether a paper was about what I was looking for. Thanks, Asa Mittman.
- Speaking of which, over at Slouching Towards Extimacy we have an abstract on the untydras of Beowulf.
- More manuscripts go online, and I become happier.
- Old Norse News has a report from Aarhus Summer School.
- The Weird Medieval Animal of the Week is the viper.
- Shana Worthen has the details on the book technology sessions at K'zoo and Leeds.
- Senchus has a post on good-looking Scottish heads and unsqueamish women.
- Here are two of the Today in Medieval History entries for Sept 22 and 24th.
- The Medieval Historical Fiction Novel of the Week is Joan Wolf's The Edge of Light.
- Kate Laity will be appearing all over Albacon.
- Michael Drout discusses Tolkien in the Wall Street Journal.
Him se yldesta andswarode; werodes wisa, wordhord onleac. "That noblest of men answered him; the leader of the warrior band unlocked his wordhoard."
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Morning Medieval Miscellany
Ah, mornings, with all their miscellaneous medievaliciousness!
I'm very much hoping that "Feudal Transformations IX" will be the last for a long time, as my readership has shrunk significantly over the course of this set of posts. I should get back to claiming I don't write about sex directly!
ReplyDeleteAlso, I shall try and put my group's Leeds abstracts online as soon as I've got them all; that's a good suggestion.
Thankyou for the links!
Thanks for the promo! I should mention I am wearing my academic hat as well as my fiction writer hat for the con: defending academia's right to study literature -- yes, even (gasp!) genre literature!
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