Shii News – Academic Items
1.Metadata Librarian for Middle Eastern Languages
The University of Chicago: The Library
Location : Chicago, IL
Open Date: Jun 09, 2023
Description
The University of Chicago Library is seeking an innovative and forward-thinking individual for the position of Metadata Librarian for Middle Eastern Languages. The University of Chicago is home to one of the world’s great collections for the study of the Middle East. The Middle Eastern collection in Regenstein Library is recognized by scholars throughout North America, Europe, and the Middle East as one of the premier research collections in Middle Eastern and Islamic studies in the world. The collection supports undergraduate, graduate, and faculty research and teaching in all disciplines of the social sciences and humanities including history, literature, language, religion, philosophy, bibliography, art, political science, anthropology, music, sociology, and film.
The collection, amounting to over one million items, consists of monographs, serials, microformat materials, lithographs, maps, films, photographs, video and audio tapes, DVDs, CD-ROMs, and electronic resources, covering the area between Central Asia and the Atlantic Ocean and from Asia Minor to sub-Saharan Africa. It includes materials in the principal languages of the Middle East—Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and their dialectical variants—as well as the relevant materials produced in various languages in North America, Europe, Japan, the states of the former Soviet Union, and elsewhere in the world. The successful candidate will be responsible for original and complex copy cataloging of monographs, serials, electronic resources and visual materials in all subjects, in Middle Eastern and other languages as necessary.
Working in the central Metadata Management Services Unit, and working closely with the Librarian for Middle Eastern Studies, the Metadata Librarian for Middle Eastern Languages will provide leadership and coordination for the metadata provision for the University of Chicago Library’s extensive collection of Middle Eastern resources that is responsive to the needs of the user community and supports the Library’s vision and goals.
The position reports to the Head of Metadata Management Services, a section of the Technical Services Department that provides leadership and expertise for the Library’s cataloging activities and creation and management of metadata. Metadata staff are involved in national and local activities related to implementation of BIBFRAME and linked data, and provide strategic direction on metadata standards for the Library’s resources and the University’s institutional repository.
The University of Chicago Library is a long-time member of the Library of Congress Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC) and contributes to BIBCO/NACO/SACO/CONSER programs. The Metadata Management Unit is also active in the Big Ten Academic Alliance Cooperative Cataloging Partnership (BTAA CCP), and the Library of Congress’ Electronic Cataloging in Publication Program (ECIP), which provides pre-publication metadata for the University of Chicago Press publications as well as those of other scholarly publishers.
The successful candidate is expected to combine a thorough understanding of cataloging and metadata standards, Middle Eastern resources, library user needs and behaviors with technical and interpersonal skills. As a member of the library’s professional staff, the Metadata Librarian for Middle Eastern Languages is expected to contribute to the library by serving on committees and by participating in library-wide programs and activities, and is expected to be active professionally both locally and nationally.
Responsibilities and Duties
- Performs metadata creation and management through original and complex copy cataloging with all associated authority work, according to the following standards:
- Resource Description and Access (RDA) via RDA Toolkit
- Library of Congress-PCC Policy Statements
- Library of Congress Program for Cooperative Cataloging (BIBCO/NACO/SACO/CONSER)
- Library of Congress classification via Classweb
- MARC 21 formats for Bibliographic and Authority data
- National standards pertaining to providing access to resources in non-Latin scripts
- Contributes to metadata activities related to Middle Eastern materials, such as digital library metadata development and remediation and enhancement of existing metadata
- Proposes and reviews workflows and policies around the metadata creation for Middle Eastern materials, and trains staff, as needed.
- Participates in departmental projects and initiatives experimenting with new forms of metadata creation
- Engages in professional service and research activities in areas appropriate to the position and to academic librarianship
- Participates in grant management, including in leadership roles, promoting improved access to hidden collections and digital access initiatives.
- Contributes to the development of local, national, and international metadata standards and applications.
Qualifications
Required:
- Library/Information Science degree from an ALA accredited institution OR advanced degree in Middle Eastern studies.
- Study of, or background in Middle Eastern Studies
- Demonstrated knowledge of current national cataloging/metadata standards, knowledge of subject analysis and classification systems.
- Advanced reading knowledge of Arabic and Persian
- Ability to communicate effectively in English
Preferred:
- Previous cataloging experience in an academic/research library, applying current standards and systems including MARC21, RDA, Library of Congress Classification, Library of Congress Subject Headings, OCLC Connexion, and library management and discovery systems
- Reading knowledge of Turkish, Ottoman Turkish or Hebrew
- Experience contributing to the Program for Cooperative Cataloging (BIBCO, NACO, SACO, CONSER)
- Knowledge of current trends, resources, and methodologies in cataloging and metadata as they relate to description and discovery of materials in Middle Eastern languages
- Experience applying non-MARC metadata standards (e.g., Dublin Core)
- Understanding of linked data principles, including RDF and ontologies as well as emerging metadata standards (e.g., BIBFRAME) and identity management systems (e.g., ISNI, VIAF, ORCID)
Application Instructions
To Apply: Submit cover letter, curriculum vitae, and reference contact information online through the University of Chicago’s Academic Recruiting website: apply.interfolio.com/126668. Review of applications will begin after July 9, 2023. Screening of applications will continue until the position is filled or the search is closed.
Salary and Benefits: Appointment salary based on qualifications and experience. Benefits include retirement plan, insurance, and paid time off.
Questions: Contact University of Chicago Library Human Resources, libraryhr@uchicago.edu
2. ASPIRANTUM, the Armenian School of Languages and Cultures, is delighted to present four exceptional online courses. Please take a look at the course descriptions below for more information.
1. Learn Persian through Early Classical Persian Prose
Three weeks, from Oct 30, 2023, to Nov 17, 2023
https://aspirantum.com/courses/learn-persian-through-early-classical-persian-prose
2. Learn Persian through Omar Khayyam’s Rubaiyat
Three weeks, from Oct 09, 2023, to Oct 27, 2023
https://aspirantum.com/courses/learn-persian-through-omar-khayyam-rubaiyat
3. Learn Persian Through the Shahname
Two weeks, from Sep 25, 2023, to Oct 06, 2023
https://aspirantum.com/courses/learn-persian-through-shahname
4. Middle Persian Online School
Three weeks, from Sep 04, 2023, to Sep 22, 2023
https://aspirantum.com/courses/middle-persian-pahlavi-school
3. Celebrating Journal of Abbasid Studies‘ 10th Volume
Brill is celebrating Journal of Abbasid Studies reaching its 10th volume. We are happy to share with you a selection of outstanding and remarkable articles published in the journal in recent years.
These articles were specially selected by the Editors-in-Chief and will be offered as free access until 31 December 2023. No need to sign up for an account.
4. CFP: Session at the 36th conference of the Comité International d’Histoire de l’Art (CIHA), Lyon, France, 23 to 26 June 2024
Dressing Bodies, Dressing Spaces: Challenges and New Approaches to Textiles and Adornment (300-1600) / Habiller le corps, Habiller l’espace: Enjeux et approches aux textiles et à l’adornement (300-1600)
Organizers: Patricia Blessing (Princeton University), Eiren Shea (Grinnell College), and
Elizabeth Dospel Williams (Dumbarton Oaks)
Chair: Maximilien Durand (Musée du Louvre)
To submit an abstract, please visit https://www.cihalyon2024.fr/fr/appel-a-communications and create a new submitter account.
Deadline for submissions: 15 September 2023.
With any questions about the session, please contact Elizabeth Dospel Williams, williamse@doaks.org
Holistic consideration of the interrelationships of pre- and early modern bodies and spaces across Eurasia (300—1600) has been limited by conceptual frameworks divided into geographic, temporal, and methodological specialization. Thus, work on dress has dealt with personal appearance, highlighting questions about identity through clothing, jewelry, and accessories. Likewise, scholarship on interior decoration has considered the relationship of ephemeral design elements to permanent architectural forms through function and placement. Further, scholarship on the body’s presence in space has tended to work with movement, placement, and perception of abstracted bodies, rather than concrete figures weighed down by clothing and jewels.
These approaches, divided largely by medium, reflect art historiographical biases and technical specializations which silo, on the one hand, experts in textiles (weaving), jewelry (metalwork), and sculpture (architecture), or of art historians, archaeologists, and architectural historians, on the other. Similar divisions of body and interior also occur in the broader perspective of material culture theory, while modernist aesthetics have further obscured the interrelatedness of human form and spatial environment. Museum contexts reinforce this divide: objects tend to be isolated within cases, leading to a view of these pieces as context-free, while the museumification of historical spaces means that attendant furnishings are often displayed in special exhibition spaces, whereas historical rooms lie empty.
The proposed panel considers adorned human bodies in their spatial environments to forge new theoretical frameworks drawn from decorative arts historiography, ornament studies, sensory archaeology, anthropology, and material spatiality. An intermedial approach is essential, such as advocated in Luke Lavan and Ellen Swift’s (2009) work on late antique dress and interior decoration and in Jonathan Hay’s (2010) explorations of the somatic experiences of surfaces in early modern Chinese decorative arts objects. Recent efforts to draw together diverse Eurasian experiences of dress and furnishing textiles include a conference on medieval wearables at the Bard Graduate Center (2022) and a panel on embodied movement and interior decoration at the ICMS-Kalamazoo (2023). We seek papers that:
- articulate new theoretical approaches that treat pre- and early modern dress and furnishings as coherent visual and material systems;
- consider the concept and metaphor of “dress,” viewing bodies as structures for adornment and decor, and buildings as immersive environments that respond to the embellished body;
- evaluate dress and furnishings in a cross-cultural or comparative global framework, particularly in terms of status, value, ritual, identity, and somatic experience;
- include contributions that draw from museum collections, given the history of textile research and collections in Lyon.
5. Graduate Study Day – “Egyptian Textiles and Medieval Indian Ocean Trade”, Dumbarton Oaks Museum – October 13
October 13, 2023 | In conjunction with the ongoing interdepartmental project “Passage Between Worlds: Exchanges Along the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean in the Middle Ages.”
Egyptian Textiles and Medieval Indian Ocean Trade
Friday, October 13, 2023
9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Applications due: July 17, 2023
In conjunction with the ongoing interdepartmental project “Passage Between Worlds: Exchanges Along the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean in the Middle Ages,” the 2023 Dumbarton Oaks Museum Graduate Study Day Egyptian Textiles and Medieval Indian Ocean Trade will consider Indian cotton textiles found in Egypt, India, and Indonesia and emblematic of a vibrant maritime trade network found east of the Mediterranean Sea in the late antique and medieval periods.
The workshop will be co-taught by Elizabeth Dospel Williams (Dumbarton Oaks), Anna Kelley (University of St. Andrews), Sumru Belger Krody (The George Washington Museum and The Textile Museum), and Arielle Winnik (Yale University), who will discuss the trade, manufacture, and use of textiles across the Indian Ocean in the premodern periods.
In the morning, these scholars will present their current research, with a particular focus on recent exhibitions featuring Indian textiles. After lunch, participants will spend the afternoon studying textiles from the Dumbarton Oaks Collection in object storage and the Cotsen Textiles Collection at the Textile Museum.
Funding
Dumbarton Oaks will reserve participants’ accommodation in its on-site Guest House for one night (October 12) and will arrange for Friday lunch in the Refectory. Participants should book their own travel to Washington, to be reimbursed up to $600 upon submission of receipts.
Applications
Currently enrolled graduate students in good standing are eligible to apply. Dumbarton Oaks does not sponsor J1 visas for Study Day attendees. We encourage applicants from graduate programs in art history, archaeology, history, classics, religious studies, and other fields who might benefit from close engagement with our collections and from training in material culture approaches.
To apply, please submit a CV and cover letter with a brief summary of the candidate’s research interests, plans for future research, and an explanation of why attendance is important to the candidate’s intellectual and professional development. All materials should be submitted as one pdf to museum@doaks.org . Applications are due July 17, 2023.
6. ‘Muslim Minorities and Application of Islamic Law in Europe’
Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 42/4, 2022
Asif Mohiuddin & Abd Hadi Bin Borham
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13602004.2023.2191911
7. ‘Do discriminatory laws have societal origins? The diffusion of anti-Ahmadiyah regulations in Indonesia’
Politics and Religion, online 8.6.23
M Buehler
8. CFP: Arts of the Indian Ocean
Toronto, Canada
May 2-4, 2024
Conveners: Sarah Fee (Royal Ontario Museum) – Zulfikar Hirji (York
University) – Ruba Kana’an (University of Toronto)
Keynote Speakers: Iftikhar Dadi (Cornell University) – Stephen Murphy
(SOAS) –
Yvonne Adhiambo Owuor (Fiction Author, Kenya) – Samira Sheikh (Vanderbilt University)
Collaborators: Deepali Dewan (Royal Ontario Museum) – Kajri Jain (University of Toronto) – Pedro Machado (Indiana University) – Chantal Radimilahy (University of Antananarivo) – Fahmida Suleman (Royal Ontario
Museum) – Nancy Um (Getty Research Institute) – Richard Vokes (University of Western Australia) – Aga Khan Museum – Centre for South Asian Critical Humanities (University of Toronto Mississauga)
Conference Call for Papers
The ‘global turn’ in academia brings a renewed focus on the Indian Ocean and its diverse histories of mobilities and interactions. The ocean’s unique climatic systems of seasonal monsoon winds and currents and its geographic contours whose littoral shapes the shorelines of Africa, Asia, Australia, and Antarctica have over millennia facilitated and sustained movements of human and non-human animals, plants, minerals, things, and ideas.
The historical formation of the Indian Ocean’s ecologies, mobilities, and economies have been regular subjects of scholarly enquiry and research, and the focus of numerous publications, conferences, and workshops. By contrast, there has been limited attention on the study of the Indian Ocean’s distinctive materialities and artistic expressions, both past and the present, and their roles in forging connections between the region’s peoples and generating new visual and expressive cultures. Additionally, scholarship on the Indian Ocean’s material and artistic worlds is often siloed by disciplinary approach, medium of production, periodization, ethnicity, religious affiliation, nationalism, or geographical demarcation.
Arts of the Indian Ocean will bring together knowledge producers from diverse backgrounds and scholarly arenas to present and discuss research and work on the materialities and artistic expressions in the Indian Ocean world, across geographies — from eastern and southern Africa, through the Gulf and Red Sea to South and Southeast Asia and the south China Sea — as well as across temporalities — from antiquity up until the present-day. The conference aims to gather emerging and established researchers from the fields of archaeology, art history, history, architecture, museum studies, anthropology, visual studies, material culture, and fashion studies, as well as practicing artists from around the Indian Ocean region.
Arts of the Indian Ocean seeks to open up new questions on the multiple pasts, presents, and futures of the Indian Ocean through the examination of the creation, production, and circulation of material culture in a wide range of forms including the visual arts, portable objects, manuscripts and maps, ships and navigational instruments, landscape, architecture, and the built environment, textiles and dress, photography and film, as well as the digital and plastic arts.
We welcome the submission of individual papers presenting case-based object studies as well as full panel proposals that engage in one or more of the following topics: production, materials, circulation, reception, transformation, connectivity, exchange, encounter, mobility, fluidity, transmediality, pilgrimage, ecology, faith and the spiritual, intimacy, materiality, heritage, imaginaries, (dis)placement, marginialities, resistance, violence, collecting and collections, decolonization, futurity, or the sensory.
The conference will be held in a hybrid format (virtual and in-person) to facilitate the participation of colleagues from around the world. The in-person gathering will be held in Toronto, Canada. Travel scholarships may be available for graduate students and colleagues working in the Indian Ocean region. Selected papers will be included in an edited volume.
Submissions of Individual Paper Abstracts and Panel Proposals
Individual Paper Submissions should include:
• Name, affiliation, and contact information • Abstract of 200-300 words • 1 to 2 images (related to proposed paper) • 100-word author bio
Panel Proposal Submissions should include:
• Names, affiliations, and contact information of panel organizer and panelists • Panel title and abstract of 100 words • Abstract of 200-300 words for each paper • 1 to 2 images (related to each proposed panel paper) • 100-word bio for each panelist
Send all Submissions by email attachment in a single pdf to:
ArtsOfTheIndianOcean@gmail.com
Deadline for Submissions: September 15, 2023
Notification of accepted Abstracts and Panel Proposals: October 5, 2023
Send all inquiries to: ArtsOfTheIndianOcean@gmail.com
9. CIHA 2024 Congress call for Papers
The Call for papers for the 36th Congress of the Comité international d’histoire de l’art (CIHA) is open!
- Deadline :15 September 2023
- Over 90 sessions with chairs from all over the world!
The CIHA conference is open to researchers from all professional backgrounds in the broad field of art history. Proposals from young researchers are welcome.
Submissions should be written in English or French. Papers may be presented in either language.
Proposals must be submitted on the submission platform only: find the access below.
Papers will be presented in person in Lyon at the Centre de Congrès – Cité internationale, from 23 to 28 June 2024.
Speakers are responsible for their own registration, travel and accommodation fees.
We invite you to get in touch with your institutions of affiliation to find out how to finance your participation in the Congress. The organising committee is actively seeking support for the mobility of researchers. Please check regularly the the “Call for Grants” section of the website.
The 36th CIHA Congress Lyon 2024 will host more than 90 parallel sessions over the 4 days of conferences, from 23 to 28 June 2024.
To submit your proposal, consult the texts of the calls for papers below. An index of the names of the session chairs is included at the end of the document.
Download the list of calls for papers
The submission of your proposals is only possible on the submission platform: find the access below.
Submit your paper proposal
To find out more, download the submission procedures below and visit our FAQ page.
10. Hybrid Conference – STUDIES IN INDO-PERSIAN CULTURAL EXCHANGES AND THE POZZI COLLECTION, Museum of Art and History in Geneva – June 29
Since the beginning of the 20th century, Switzerland, particularly Geneva, has been home to artistic treasures that witness rich cultural exchanges between peoples and regions. Among these treasures is the exceptional Pozzi Collection of Persian paintings housed at the Musée d’Art et d’Histoire in Geneva. This collection represents one of the most significant collections of Persian paintings assembled by European private collectors during the 20th century. It was bequeathed by Jean Pozzi (1884-1967) the French Plenipotentiary Minister to the museum.
Transmission of knowledge and exchange of expertise are notably discernible in the Indo-Persian world, where languages, religions and cultural materials have been shared over several centuries. Art amateurs from Europe, fascinated by Indo-Persian and more generally by Islamicate arts and material cultures, assembled rich collections from the end of the 19th century. To what extent have these exchanges and fascination been reciprocal, and in which domains are they more perceptible today? Moreover, while gender studies have received ample attention in several subfields of global studies in art and literature, they have been overlooked in Indo-Persian studies.
This hybrid international colloquium aims to show the importance of these exchanges and to offer a critical dialogue to contribute to the understanding, knowledge, preservation and respect of material and immaterial heritage.
For Zoom registration: https://www.mahmah.ch/colloque-international
Posted in: Academic items- June 17, 2023
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