PMR 2009 (October 16-18, 2009)

Scraped from various announcements of this year’s PMR Conference at Villanova University (Philadelphia, PA):

Call for Papers Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies (PMR) at Villanova University invites you to participate in its 34th International P M R Conference October 16-18, 2009, featuring:

  • John Van Engen (University of Notre Dame), author of Sisters and Brothers of the Common Life
  • M. Michèle Mulchahey (Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Toronto), author of First the Bow is Bent in Study

The P M R committee this year makes a special invitation to scholars from all disciplines in these fields to address our plenary theme: Ora et Labora. Pray and Work.
As always, the PMR makes an OPEN CALL to scholars, institutions, and societies to propose Papers, Panels, or Sponsored Sessions in all areas and topics in LATE ANTIQUITY/PATRISTICS, BYZANTINE STUDIES, MEDIEVAL STUDIES, ISLAMIC STUDIES, JEWISH STUDIES, and RENAISSANCE & REFORMATION STUDIES.

From the Christian liturgy of the hours to Jewish daily liturgy and the Muslim call to prayer, the cultures of Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages marked the movement of the day's work with prayer. The day's frame was set by spiritual exercises of many sorts, and thus the fruits of one's labor, one's work, bore within it something of the fruits of the spirit. What is the relationship between the many forms of work – intellectual, manual, cultural, artistic, social, political, economic – and prayer? Are there points of tension? Resistance? From lectio divina and sacred theology, to scholastic philosophy and canon law; from the Divine Comedy and liturgical plays, to sacred architecture and iconography; from the Holy Roman Empire and educational foundations, to Byzantine schools and monasteries, to Jewish chevruta and Islamic madrasas, this year's thematic "conference within a conference" will explore these questions and more, opening up a fresh, new perspective on perennial questions of matter and spirit, reason and faith, politics and religion.

Deadline for submissions: May 29, 2009
Notice of acceptance will be made by June 30, 2009

For more information please visit the conference’s website.

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Mark Johnson

Mark Johnson is an associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, and founded thomistica.net on Squarespace in November of 2004. He studied with James Weisheipl, Leonard Boyle, Walter Principe, and Lawrence Dewan, at the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies (Toronto, Canada).