The Afterlife of Cicero (Warburg Institute, 7–8 May 2015)

Call for Papers

The Warburg Institute, the Institute of Classical Studies and the Department of Greek and Latin at University College London will be hosting an international conference on the afterlife of Cicero in London on 7–8 May 2015, organised by Peter Mack, Gesine Manuwald, John North and Maria Wyke.

We invite 40-minute papers about the impact of Cicero’s writings and personality on intellectual and cultural history, on the visual arts, philosophy, politics, rhetoric and literature. Since so much of Cicero’s writings is extant, they cover a wide variety of genres and topics, and we are also able to get a glimpse of his personality from his letters, Cicero has had an enormous influence on western culture. By examining a diverse series of significant case studies, the conference aims to make a contribution to assessing Cicero’s impact more fully. Papers dealing with any period between late antiquity and 1900 will be especially welcome. Aspects of particular interest include Cicero’s role for early Christian writers, in the middle Ages, in the Ciceronian debate, for the American founding fathers and the French revolution, for the development of modern democracies and political rhetoric and in (early-)modern literature.
The conference will take place in the Warburg Institute; the proceedings will be jointly published by the two Institutes as Supplements to the Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. We shall ask the authors for publishable versions of the papers three months after the conference.

If you have a suggestion for a paper that you would like us to consider, please submit a title, an abstract (of up to 300 words) and a brief CV (up to one page) by 11 July 2014 to Jane Ferguson, The Warburg Institute, Woburn Square, London WC1H 0AB or warburg@sas.ac.uk.

Final Call for Papers “The Making of the Humanities IV”, Rome, 16-18 October 2014

http://makingofthehumanities.blogspot.com

The fourth conference on the history of the humanities, “The Making of the Humanities IV”, will take place in Rome from 16 till 18 October 2014.

Goal of the Conference

This is the fourth of a biennially organized conference that brings together scholars and historians interested in the comparative history of the humanities (philology, art history, historiography, linguistics, logic, literary studies, musicology, theatre studies, media studies, a.o.).

Theme of the 2014 Conference: Connecting Disciplines

We welcome papers and panels on the history of the humanities that focus on any period or region. The theme of the 2014 conference will be Connecting Disciplines, with a special interest in comparing methods and patterns across disciplines — both within and between regions (e.g. China and Europe).

Confirmed Invited Speakers

Fenrong Liu (Tsinghua University)

Hans-Jörg Rheinberger (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science)

Helen Small (University of Oxford)

Deadline for abstracts and panel proposals: 1 June 2014

For more information, see http://makingofthehumanities.blogspot.com

The Ján Stanislav Institute of Slavistics of the Slovak Academy of Sciences is pleased to announce this call for papers for a conference on

“Themes of Polemical Theology Across Early Modern Literary Genres”

to be held on 3–4 December 2014 in Bratislava, Slovakia.

 

The influence on Early-Modern science of Erasmus of Rotterdam and his legacy:  Call for papers for a special issue of the Journal of Interdisciplinary History of Ideas in collaboration with the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science – MPIWG, Berlin. Deadline: May 15, 2014.

The fourth conference on the history of the humanities, “The Making of the Humanities IV”, will take place in Rome from 16 till 18 October 2014.

http://makingofthehumanities.blogspot.com

Goal of the Conference

This is the fourth of a biennially organized conference that brings together scholars and historians interested in the cross-cultural history of the humanities (philology, art history, historiography, linguistics, logic, literary studies, musicology, theatre studies, media studies, a.o.).

Theme of the 2014 Conference: Connecting Disciplines

We welcome papers and panels on the history of the humanities that focus on any period or region. The theme of the 2014 conference will be Connecting Disciplines, with a special interest in comparing methods and patterns across disciplines — both within and between regions (e.g. China and Europe).

Confirmed Invited Speakers

Fenrong Liu (Tsinghua University)

Hans-Jörg Rheinberger (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science)

Helen Small (University of Oxford)

 

Deadline for abstracts and panel proposals: 1 June 2014

 

For more information, see http://makingofthehumanities.blogspot.com

 

Organization and Support

Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome

Institute for Logic, Language and Computation, University of Amsterdam

Huizinga Institute of Cultural History (Working Group History of the Humanities)

 

Rens Bod, Julia Kursell, Jaap Maat, Thijs Weststeijn

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