ECDOTIQUE – Table-ronde et stage

ECDOTIQUE – Table-ronde et stage

Le prochain stage d’ECDOTIQUE aura lieu aux Sources Chrétiennes du 29 février au 4 mars 2016. La table-ronde aura lieu le jeudi 3 mars 2016 de 14h à 17h30.
Le stage suit les différentes étapes d’un livre-type de la collection « Sources Chrétiennes » ; il est utile aussi pour qui prépare l’édition d’un auteur classique (type « Budé ») : recension et lecture de manuscrits, collation, établissement du texte critique avec ses apparats, traduction, choix et rédaction des notes, index (exemples majoritairement empruntés à la littérature patristique grecque et latine) ; visite de la BM de Lyon (manuscrits et imprimés) ; initiation à différents outils informatiques et bases de données (TLG, LLT-A et B, VLD, Biblindex…) ; exemples d’éditions en XML-TEI.

http://www.sourceschretiennes.mom.fr/formation/stage-ecdotique-stage-2016
http://ecdotique.hypotheses.org/table-ronde

Appel à contribution pour la table-ronde ici.
ProgrammeAffiche

Appel à contribution – VIe édition du Festival de l’histoire de l’art, 3-5 juin 2016

Appel à contribution

VIe édition du Festival de l’histoire de l’art,

3-5 juin 2016

La VIe édition du Festival de l’histoire de l’art (du 3 au 5 juin 2016) est consacrée au thème Rire. Les candidats ont jusqu’au dimanche 22 novembre minuit pour nous proposer leur projet d’intervention en remplissant le formulaire en ligne sur notre site internet : http://festivaldelhistoiredelart.com/proposez-intervention/.

Colloque international – La Bible médiévale – du Roman au Gothique (XIIe – XIIIe siècle) textes et images, production et usage

Colloque international

La Bible médiévale – du Roman au Gothique
(XIIe – XIIIe siècle) textes et images, production et usage

Lisbonne, Bibliothèque Nationale du Portugal – 3-4 Novembre 2015

 

Comité d’organisation:
Luís Correia de Sousa (IEM–FCSH-UNL)
Maria Alessandra Bilotta (IEM-FCSH/UNL)

Programme du colloque ici.

Appel à contribution – OUBS’ 18th International Graduate Conference

Call for Papers

 Trends and Turning-Points: Constructing the Late Antique and Byzantine World (c. 300 – c. 1500)

 The Oxford University Byzantine Society’s 18th International Graduate Conference

26th – 27th February 2016, University of Oxford

Spanning more than a millennium in time, ranging from the Atlantic to Iran, and including a vast array of polities, social groups, and cultural moments, the Late Antique and Byzantine world is, if nothing else, complicated and varied. Despite Gibbon’s famous attempt to reduce it to a single trend, the Late Antique and Byzantine world refuses to be simplified.

This conference aims to provide a platform to identify, discuss and debate the major trends and turning-points in the Late Antique and Byzantine world. Postgraduate scholars might choose to examine trends and turning-points on their own terms or to reflect critically on the limitations and blind-spots of our discipline, questioning the ways in which medieval Romans, their contemporaries and modern scholars have gone about constructing this past. We are calling for papers which explore all types of trends and turning-points in all fields of Late Antique and Byzantine studies. Papers might address problems such as:

  • Trends in numismatic production and design
  • From Late Antiquity to Byzantium, turning-point or trend?
  • Complexity and new approaches to constructing the past
  • Archaeological trends in conflict with historical narratives
  • Economics with or without trends?
  • Religious discourse as turning-point or trend
  • Paradigmatic ‘trends’ of growth and decline
  • ‘Great’ battles or the deaths of emperors as turning-points
  • Constructing turning-points and trends in modern academic writing

Please send an abstract of no more than 250 words, along with a short academic biography in the third person, to the Oxford University Byzantine Society at byzantine.society@gmail.com by Friday, 27th November 2015. Papers should be 20 minutes in length, and should be delivered in English or French.

As with our previous conferences, there will be a publication of selected on-theme and inter-related papers, chosen and reviewed by specialist readers from the University of Oxford’s Late Antique and Byzantine Studies research centres. Any speakers wishing to have their papers considered for publication should try to be as on-theme as possible in their abstract and paper. Nevertheless, all submissions are warmly invited.

Further information will be made available on the appropriate page of the OUBS website.

Call for papers (.pdf).