UCLA MEMSA Graduate Student Conference:
Pedagogical Approaches to Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Pedagogical Approaches to Medieval and Early Modern Studies
· Methodological approaches that lend themselves to Medieval and Early Modern Studies
· Classroom conditions (ideological, practical, technological, social/cultural, financial, theoretical) that shape approaches and assumptions in literary study
· Accessibility of older material to today’s undergraduates
· Student-directed learning and the canon
· The learning goals of an historical curriculum
· Presentism and productive anachronism
· Reception history and the critical heritage
· Challenges and opportunities of teaching older material
· Textual criticism and the literary archive
· Digital approaches and 21st-century technology in the Medieval and Early Modern classroom
· Surveying the survey course
· Transformative pedagogy and Medieval and Early Modern studies
· Creating dialogues across the curriculum
· Performance studies
· Synthesizing research and reading with other undergraduate disciplines
· Seminar learning vs/and lecture learning
· Teaching writing in the Medieval and Early Modern studies
· Translation and multilingualism (teaching in translations vs. original languages)
· New Historicism and student learning
· Politics and pedagogy (teaching race, gender, ethnicity, class, and sexuality in Medieval and Early Modern studies)
· Theory in Medieval and Early Modern studies
We welcome abstracts from a variety of fields within or adjacent to Medieval and Early Modern studies. While specific teaching techniques are encouraged, we’d like papers that include a broader theoretical and pedagogical scope. Abstracts of less than 500 words for 20-minute papers should be emailed to memsa.ucla@gmail.com by March 15 with the subject line CONFERENCE ABSTRACT. Papers should be timed to less than 20 minutes.
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