The SIMS-CSMC Fellowship
The Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies and the Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures Collaborative Fellowship
The CSMC, in partnership with the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies (SIMS), is pleased to announce a call for applications for a collaborative research fellowship. The fellowship will allow the recipient to spend one month (minimum 4 weeks) at SIMS researching manuscript collections at Penn Libraries and other Philadelphia-area collections, then spend between one and three months at CSMC to study the same manuscript or group of manuscripts researched at SIMS, taking advantage of CSMC’s expertise in the Humanities, material analysis and Computer Science. The SIMS-CSMC Fellowship has been established to provide an opportunity to engage with the unique combinations of expertise offered by SIMS and CSMC and to encourage the cross-fertilisation of ideas and innovative approaches to the study of manuscripts championed by both institutions.
SIMS oversees an extensive collection of premodern manuscripts from around the world, with a special focus on the history of philosophy and science, and creates open-access digital content to support the study of its collections. SIMS research fellowships have been established to encourage research relating to the premodern manuscript collections at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries, including the Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection. Affiliated with the University of Pennsylvania, located near other manuscript-rich research collections (the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the Free Library of Philadelphia, the Science History Institute, and the Rosenbach Museum and Library, among many others), and linked to the local and international scholarly communities, SIMS offers fellows a network of resources and opportunities for collaboration. Fellows will be encouraged to interact with SIMS staff, Penn faculty, and other medieval and early modern scholars in the Philadelphia area.
The CSMC is a cross-disciplinary research institute at the University of Hamburg that brings together specialists working on all aspects of manuscripts and other written artefacts, including their material properties. Its global perspective with a particular focus on African and Asian writing cultures spans all historical periods from antiquity to the digital age and encompasses all forms of handwriting and related practices such as transmission, archiving, and preservation. The centre houses a vibrant research community that benefits from an infrastructure unique in the field. This includes an extensive in-house laboratory system, comprising a three-part Artefact Lab that develops and applies non-destructive analytical methods, as well as several computer science labs; a research library holding more than 17,000 volumes; and a Graduate School that trains early-career researchers from the humanities, natural sciences, and computer science. The Petra Kappert Fellowship, the guest professorship ‘African Manuscript Cultures’, and the J.P. Gumbert Award regularly attract outstanding researchers from around the world to pursue projects on the history of writing in Hamburg.
Fellows will also be expected to present their research in a hybrid lecture to be held in person at the University of Hamburg.