The Future of Premodern Studies: A View from the Newberry

IF 0.1 N/A MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES I Tatti Studies Pub Date : 2019-09-01 DOI:10.1086/705399
Lia Markey
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Abstract

THE CENTER FOR RENAISSANCE STUDIES (CRS) at the Newberry Library in Chicago is celebrating its fortieth anniversary in 2019. The center was founded in 1979 by Counter-Reformation historian John Tedeschi in order to promote research and scholarly activities at the library, whose rich holdings in medieval and Renaissance studies had already been inspiring scholars since the arrival on staff in 1949 of noted historian Hans Baron. The CRS has always aimed to provide a place for students and faculty to take classes, work with sources, and enjoy collaborations that would not have been possible at their institutions or on an individual basis. Over the years and thanks to subsequent directors and acting directors (Mary Beth Rose, Clark Hulse, Raymond Clemens, Carla Zecher, and Karen Christianson), the center grew to include some fifty universities in its consortium throughout the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland. Each year the center now hosts three or four symposia, a graduate student conference, numerous workshops and courses, lectures, scholarly seminars, and vernacular paleography institutes. The center also develops and supports digital humanities projects and the Newberry’s fellowship program. What the CRS has accomplished over the years is largely due to the Newberry’s enthusiastic community and the growth of its other research centers, now under the umbrella of the Newberry’s Institute for Research and Education. As I enter my fourth year as director of the center, I am poised to reflect on the future of the field of Renaissance studies as seen through the activities at the library and the center. I should note that by “Renaissance studies” I mean “premodern studies,” since our center encompasses medieval, Renaissance, baroque, colonial, and early
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前现代研究的未来:来自纽贝里的观点
芝加哥纽伯里图书馆的文艺复兴研究中心(CRS)将于2019年庆祝成立40周年。该中心于1979年由反宗教改革历史学家约翰·特德斯基(John Tedeschi)创立,目的是促进图书馆的研究和学术活动。自1949年著名历史学家汉斯·巴伦(Hans Baron)加入图书馆以来,图书馆丰富的中世纪和文艺复兴研究藏书已经激励了许多学者。CRS一直致力于为学生和教师提供一个上课的地方,与资源合作,并享受在他们的机构或个人基础上不可能实现的合作。多年来,多亏了后来的主任和代理主任(玛丽·贝丝·罗斯、克拉克·赫尔斯、雷蒙德·克莱门斯、卡拉·泽彻和凯伦·克里斯蒂安森),该中心发展到包括美国、加拿大、英国和瑞士的大约50所大学。现在,该中心每年都会举办三到四次专题讨论会、一次研究生会议、无数的讲习班和课程、讲座、学术研讨会以及白话文研究所。该中心还开发和支持数字人文项目和纽伯里奖学金项目。CRS多年来所取得的成就很大程度上归功于纽伯里热情的社区和其他研究中心的发展,这些研究中心现在在纽伯里研究与教育研究所的保护伞下。在我担任中心主任的第四年,我准备通过图书馆和中心的活动来反思文艺复兴研究领域的未来。我应该指出,我所说的“文艺复兴研究”指的是“前现代研究”,因为我们的研究中心包括中世纪、文艺复兴、巴洛克、殖民和早期
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I Tatti Studies MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES-
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