We invite you to attend the 2023 Clark Conference, The Fetish A(r)t Work: African Objects in the Making of European Art History 1500–1900.
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For the International Congress on Medieval Studies (May 9-11, 2024 Kalamazoo, MI) the Great Lakes Adiban Society seeks papers discussing the interconnected “lives of great languages” from across the Afro-Eurasian landmass before 1820.
We are delighted to announce the upcoming Hybrid Symposium on “Memories and ‘Negative History’: How to convey the 3.11 Disasters?”, to be held on September 23 at IRIDeS, Tohoku University. This symposium aims to bring together researchers and practitioners from various disciplines to present their papers and engage in a vibrant discussion of memories and story-telling associated with “negative” events.
Co-Sponsored by the Center for Ecological History, Renmin University of China, Beijing, and the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, Munich.
Unsettling Orthodoxies in Merchant Seafaring History (Post 1750)
An invitation to graduate and post-doctoral students, and early career faculty to participate in an online real-time discussion series hosted by Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 12 SEPTEMBER 2023 (infomarworkshops@gmail.com)
Our purpose: discussion of the sources, concepts, and methods that inform us about past maritime populations.
Call for Papers: The Long Twentieth Century of Kurds and Kurdistan
March 31 – April 1, 2024, Yale University
Dark Green Religion in Europe: History and Impacts, Dangers and Prospects
A Conference at the Leibniz-Institute of European History Mainz, 25-27 April 2024, co-organized by Bernhard Gissibl (IEG Mainz), Kate Rigby (MESH University of Cologne), & Bron Taylor (University of Florida)
The conference seeks to convene scholars interested in the emergence, spread, dangers, and future prospects of green spiritualities in European societies since the 18th century, in which nature is considered sacred and the living world due reverent care.
We are proposing a collected edition on the topic of gender, the urban space (especially its cis- heteronormativity) and the environment. We want to study this space from local and global perspectives to examine shared histories and presents, and reflect on intersections and differences to challenge and expand the existing conceptualizations of the gendered urban space.
Sound Faith: Religion and the Acoustic World, 1400-1800
The University of York
12-14 June 2024
Confirmed keynotes from:
Felipe Ledesma-Núñez (Harvard University)
Jan-Friedrich Missfelder (Universität Basel)
Lucía Martínez Valdivia (Reed College)
The Interdisciplinary “Journal for Religion and Transformation in Contemporary Society” (JRAT) is an interdisciplinary, international, online open-access journal with a double-blind peer-review process. It was established in 2015, since 2019 it is published with BRILL. Every issue has a distinct thematic focus which is approached from different disciplines.