Appel à contribution – ‘Between Lust and Chastity’, Buenos Aires, 28-29 August 2017

SECOND BYZANTINE COLLOQUIUM OF THE UNIVERSITY OF BUENOS AIRES

  “ Between Lust and Chastity: the Byzantines on Love and Sex”

 

Buenos Aires

28–29 August 2017

(see attachment or www.arts.kuleuven.be/byzantium)

 

Rivers of ink have flown since A. Kazhdan’s seminal contribution, “Byzantine Hagiography and Sex in the Fifth to Twelfth Century” (1990), including V. Burrus’ The Sex Lives of Saints (2004). Nevertheless, to the best of our knowledge no study to date covers in a comprehensive way divine and human love, the codification of the relation between sexes, the interaction between an avowed morality and the real practice of sexuality. This colloquium aims to put together a number of works tackling these and similar issues

 

A historical, anthropological or sociological perspective still has a fair job to do in this area. The UBA research team, with its focus on narratology, will pay special attention to love as a dynamic principle in Byzantine storytelling, either hagiographical, historical, or of other kind. Indeed, the centrality of love, which can take myriad forms (as a topos, as a target towards which a given plot aims, as a powerful tool towards meaningful characterization, as a social expectation horizon, etc.) should be evaluated in the framework of the evolution of narrative forms. We believe that a dynamic analysis of erotic motifs can be so productive for diachronic narrativity as the spatiality, temporality, or the studies of narrators and narratees.

 

At the same time, any other point of view is welcome: from a presentation on the Song of Songs, to a study of Byzantine marriage; from the love poetry in the Anthology to the apparent desacralization of erotism studied by H.-G. Beck in his Byzantinisches Erotikon; from the ever-lasting reading of the Greek novels to the erotic connotations – or not – of virginity and mystical experience. More metaphorical subjects such as the “love of learning” are also welcome.

 

Please send your abstract, no later than May 31st, 2017, to Tomas.Fernandez@conicet.gov.ar, pablo.a.cavallero@gmail.com. Any query or comment will also be more than welcome.

Affiche ici.

Séminaire de Mme Ioanna Rapti (EPHE) – Programme du 2e semestre

Histoire de l’art et archéologie et du monde byzantin et de l’Orient chrétien

Ioanna Rapti – directrice d’étude, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes

Programme 2 semestre

17 rue de la Sorbonne salle 59

 

22 février

9-10 Lilyana Yordanova

The Issues of Visual Narrative, Literary Patronage and Display of Virtues of a Bulgarian Tsar in the Fourteenth century

10-11 Manuscrits bilingues à l’époque byzantine tardive

 

1 mars

9-11h Le psautier Hamilton : aspects matériels

11-12h Byzantinische Elfenbeianarbeiten

 

8 mars

9-11h Ioanna Rapti

  • Psautier Hamilton question matérielles
  • Les tableaux de la phototèque Gabriel Millet : un enjeu scientifique et patrimonial
  • Regards sur l’art chrétien : l’enjeu de voir et de montrer (autour des expositions récentes)

 

15 Mars

Tassos Papacostas KCL

Chypre aux alentours de l’an 1300 : architecture et espace urbain

 

22 mars

9-10h Pierre Charrey

Mesure et imaginaire social à Byzance : les poids protobyzantins et leurs décors (IVe-VIIe siècle)

10-11h Camilla Musci Les collections d’art byzantin en Italie au début du XXe siècle et leur dispersion

11-12h Maria Chronopoulou Les homélies liturgiques de saint Grégoire de Nazianze. L’ouvrage de Galavaris et le manuscrit Par. gr. 550

 

29 mars

9-10 François Miran

Images de la Vierge dans la tradition syriaque médiévale

10-11h L’exaltation de la Vierge en images : culte marial et essor de l’Acathiste

11-12h Présentation des expositions réalisées dans le cadre du symposium Global Byzantium

 

26 avril 9h-12h

La culture des commanditaires au XIIIe siècle : trois thèses en cours

Geoffrey Meyer-Fernandez (Aix-Marseille) Portraits de donateurs en Chypre Lusignan

Véronique Deur-Petiteau (EPHE) Image et pouvoir en Serbie médiévale

Lilyana Yordanova (EPHE) Commande et donation pieuse en Bulgarie médiévale

 

 

3 mai 9-11h

Denis Stathakopoulos KCL

Identity, language and culture in the late Byzantine world

11-12h Présentation de mémoire : Le sacrifice d’Isaac

 

 

10 mai

9h-11h Manuela Studer (Fribourg)

Les préfigurations de la Vierge dans les programmes iconographiques byzantins

 

17 mai

Charbel Nassif Paris-Sorbonne

L’influence arabe sur les arts des chrétiens d’Orient (XVIIe-XIXe siècles) 

 

24 mai

9-10h Nina Iamanidzé UMR 6781

Art géorgien en transition : originalités, inspirations et décadence aux XIIIe-XIVe siècles.

11-12h Sipana Tchakerian Paris 1

Images de la Vierge sur les stèles arméniennes

Conférence de M. Dmitry Afigenov – 25 janvier 2017

 Conférence de M. Dmitry Afigenov – 25 janvier 2017

dans le cadre du séminaire de M. Constantin ZUCKERMAN

La régence de Théodora et le règne de Michel III

dans les chroniques byzantines

 
 

M. Dmitry AFINOGENOV

Professeur à l’Université d’Etat Lomonosov de Moscou

   donnera une conférence sur le thème


Théophane le Prêtre, un écrivain peu connu de l’entourage du patriarche Méthode*

 

   En Sorbonne, salle D064 (escalier E, 1er étage à droite)

mercredi le 25 janvier, de 16 h à 18 h

 

 

ÉCOLE PRATIQUE DES HAUTES ÉTUDES

Section des Sciences Historiques et Philologiques
45-47, rue des Écoles – 75005 Paris
(entrée par le 17, rue de la Sorbonne,  esc. E, 1er étage, à droite)

 

*La conférence aura lieu en anglais

 

Oxford University Byzantine Society’s 19th International Graduate Conference

Oxford University Byzantine Society’s 19th International Graduate Conference:

Transmitting and Circulating the Late Antique and Byzantine Worlds, 24-25th February, History Faculty, Oxford

Please find the full schedule on the website of the Oxford Byzantine Society: https://oxfordbyzantinesociety .wordpress.com/international-g raduate-conference-2017/

If you wish to register your interest in attending please fill out this form: https://goo.gl/forms/8nY9IzmIy 6f00pGI2

Call for papers – Medicine in the Bible and the Talmud

Call for papers

Society for Biblical Literature International Meeting/ European Association of Biblical Studies (ISBL/EABS), Berlin, 7-11 August 2017

Medicine in the Bible and the Talmud (EABS)

Final Submission Date for Proposals: 1 February 2017.

Call For Papers: (For the complete text of the 2017 CfP, see https://eabs.net/site/medicine-in-bible-and-talmud/.)

Papers are invited on the comparative theme “Literary and discursive framing and concepts of (medical) knowledge in (Late) Antiquity”, from biblical and apocryphal texts, into later Jewish, Rabbinic-Talmudic traditions and beyond. The organizers explicitly welcome papers by scholars working on these questions as in neighboring or adjacent traditions (ancient Babylonia or Egypt; Graeco-Roman culture(s); Iranian traditions, early Christianity; Syriac traditions; early Islam etc.). Recent studies into ancient scientific traditions have emphasized the craft and artifice of those texts. On the one hand, these works can be characterized by a rather astonishing degree of literary expertise, discursive versatility and rhetorical sophistication. Ancient scientific authors were well versed not only in their very field of expertise but deployed compositional techniques from their respective cultural milieu. On the other hand, one notices also the complex framing of scientific knowledge in texts whose primary focus was religious, poetic, historiographic, or literary. Based on this, we welcome presentations on the representation and embedding of medical (and other) knowledge in particular texts and contexts. Papers may address the special design of such knowledge discourses. How does the use of rhetoric strategies, literary structures, or genres in `scientific texts’ affect the ideas conveyed? Could a specific hermeneutic (Listenwissenschaft/ encyclopaedism/ linguocentrism) not only serve as a ‘container’ but also as a method for knowledge acquisition? One might ask further: who constructs this discourse for whom, and with which (implicit/explicit) intention? How can the adoption of certain textual strategies and compositional techniques be seen as a vital venue for (structural/discursive) knowledge transfer, rather than the actual content of the passage?

See more at: https://www.sbl-site.org/meetings/Congresses_CallForPaperDetails.aspx?MeetingId=30&VolunteerUnitId=720#sthash.ak1PmwrG.dpuf

Program Unit Chairs:

Markham Geller (mark.geller@fu-berlin.de)
Lennart Lehmhaus (lennart.lehmhaus@fu-berlin.de)

Propose a Paper for this Program Unit

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For all other persons wanting to propose a paper, you must communicate directly with the chair of the program unit to which you want to propose. Chairs have the responsibility to make waiver requests, and their email addresses are available above. SBL provides membership and meeting registration waivers only for scholars who are outside the disciplines covered by the SBL program, specifically most aspects of archaeological, biblical, religious, and theological studies.

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