I’ve just published a new blog post on writing and writing pedagogy over at Another Word: From the Writing Center at UW-Madison. Check it out here:
Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 76, fol. 126v.
I’ve just published a new blog post on writing and writing pedagogy over at Another Word: From the Writing Center at UW-Madison. Check it out here:
Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 76, fol. 126v.
[An individual with a bandaged leg with amputated foot on a small crutch, using a larger crutch with the opposing arm, and holding a sword in preparation to attack.]
Contributors will discuss the ways in which disability has informed approaches to instruction, how to unite disability pedagogy and scholarship, possible texts for inclusion in the classroom, and selected assignments and activities that involve the medieval disability perspective. Participants will share practical ideas for effective activities, assignments, and readings.
In this session, contributors will offer papers that explore the intersections between race and disability in the Middle Ages. We particularly seek approaches that consider non-Western, inter-disciplinary perspectives.
In this session, participants will discuss the responsibilities of medieval disability studies to engage in public scholarship, how we can share our own public scholarship, and the ways that we as medieval disability studies scholars can be more active in public scholarship in order to support the value of our research.
Please send 250-word abstracts along with completed Participant Information Form to Tory Pearman at pearmatv@miamioh.edu by September 15.