ИНФОРМАЦИОННЫЙ БЮЛЛЕТЕНЬ # 438
ЦЕНТРА ИЗУЧЕНИЯ ПРАВОСЛАВИЯ И
ДРЕВНЕРУССКОЙ КУЛЬТУРЫ
Адрес для переписки:
drevnerus@gmail.com, drevnerus@narod.ru
Мы будем рады любой
информации
Мы не редактируем тексты
информационных сообщений.
При перепечатке ссылка на
рассылку Центра изучения православия и древнерусской культуры обязательна
Редактор бюллетеня Т.В.
Чумакова
В блоге архив с 2007 года и
информация о том, по каким адресам Вы можете подписаться на наш бюллетень
Popular Culture and
Post-Socialist Societies (Prague ,
18-19 Oct 13)
Deadline: May 15, 2013
We would like to invite you to a
conference "Listening to the Wind of
Change": Popular Culture and
Post-Socialist Societies in East-Central
held 18 – 19 October 2013 in Prague , Czech Republic .
We invite researchers to share
their papers and panel proposals related
to the conference theme,
including but not limited to such topics as:
Culture Transfer: Westernization
and Commodification of the "East",
Culture of the Post-Socialist New
Rich: Continuities with Late State
Socialism and Neoliberalism,
Re-traditionalization,
Nationalism, Exclusion and Mobilization in
Popular Culture,
Fostering Free-market Ideology
through Popular Culture,
Conflicting Memories of Anti-/Post-communism
in Popular Culture,
Reflections of Sexuality and
Gender in Popular Culture,
Exploitation Culture as Reply to
Fast Changes in Post-Socialist
Societies,
Visual Culture of Post-Socialist Societies of East-Central
Europe ,
Popular Culture in East-Central Europe as Commodity,
Travelling Cultural Theory (East
West).
Deadline for abstracts is 15 May
2013. Deadline for panel proposals is
15 April 2013.
You may find further information
here enclosed or at the conference
website: http://pop-postsoc.webnode.cz/
Reference / Quellennachweis:
CFP: Popular Culture and
Post-Socialist Societies (Prague ,
18-19 Oct
13). In: H-ArtHist, Feb 8, 2013.
<http://arthist.net/archive/4679>.
=====================
Reimagining the Sacred
Buildings of Jerusalem (London , 15-16 Mar 13)
Kenneth Clark Lecture Theatre, The Courtauld Institute of Art, Somerset
House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN, March 15 - 16, 2013
Kenneth Clark Lecture Theatre,
The Courtauld Institute of Art,
Strand, London
WC2R 0RN
13.00 – 18.10, Friday 15 March
(with registration from 12.30)
09.30 – 17.40, Saturday 16 March
(with registration from 09.00)
God and humankind had been at one
in paradise. The sanctuary of
thought the navel of the world,
the intersection of heaven and earth.
The Temple was destroyed in 70 CE. The Christian
Melito was already
writing of Golgotha
as the world’s centre by 160 CE. Many more of the
artefacts – would be transferred
to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
built by Constantine and completed in the construction
of its Rotunda.
Justinian and his panegyrists
spoke in their turn of Hagia Sophia as
the new Temple .
The Dome of the Rock was probably
designed to counter and surpass the
Holy Sepulchre of the ‘Christian
polytheists’. The Crusaders spoke of
Al-Aqsa Mosque as the Temple or Palace
of Solomon , and the Dome
of the
Rock as the Temple of the Lord in which the infant Jesus
had been
presented to God.
The sanctity and significance of Jerusalem were recreated
throughout
Christendom in centrally planned
churches and architectural motifs, in
liturgical forms and in civic
myths. In this Forum we study the
expressions of the Temple and the Sepulchre
in Christian architecture,
and medieval devotion – both
Christian and Muslim – to the holy places.
The Courtauld Institute of Art and
the Temple Church are coming
together for their second
joint-conference in March 2013. We will again
spend time in the Temple ’s Round
Church , itself one of the
grandest
recreations of Jerusalem to survive in the West.
To book a place: £26 (£16 students,
Courtauld staff/students and
concessions)
BOOK ONLINE:
http://courtauld-institute.digitalmuseum.co.uk
Or send a
cheque made payable to ‘Courtauld
Institute of Art’ to: Research Forum
Events Co-ordinator, Research
Forum, The Courtauld Institute of Art,
Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN, stating
the event title
‘Temple and Tomb’.
For further information, email
ResearchForumEvents@courtauld.ac.uk or
call: 07834 521471
Organised by The Rev’d Robin
Griffith-Jones (Master of The Temple; and
senior lecturer in Theology,
King's College London), Professor Eric
Fernie (The Courtauld Institute
of Art) and Professor David Park (The
Courtauld Institute of Art.
Download programme here:
http://www.courtauld.ac.uk/researchforum/events/2013/spring/mar15_TempleandTomb.shtml
========================
НАЦИОНАЛЬНЫЙ
КИЕВО-ПЕЧЕРСКИЙ ИСТОРИКО-КУЛЬТУРНЫЙ ЗАПОВЕДНИК
ЦЕНТР АРХЕОЛОГИИ КИЕВА
ИНСТИТУТА АРХЕОЛОГИИ НАН УКРАИНЫ
ЦЕНТР ПАМЯТКОВЕДЕНИЯ НАН
УКРАИНЫ И УООПИК
КИЕВСКАЯ ДУХОВНАЯ АКАДЕМИЯ И
СЕМИНАРИЯ УПЦ
Одиннадцатая Международная научная конференция
“Церковь – наука – общество: вопросы взаимодействия”
Посвящается памяти митрополита Евгения
(Болховитинова)
Вопросы, которые выносятся на
рассмотрение:
1. Историографические,
источниковедческие и методологические проблемы изучения истории Церкви
2. Актуальные вопросы истории Церкви
3. Личность и Церковь:
историко-биографические разыскания
4. Археологические исследования
церковных памятников
5. Проблемы исследования и сохранения
памятников материальной культуры религиозного предназначения
6. Историко-правовые аспекты
деятельности Церкви.
Конференция пройдет с
29 по 31 мая 2013 г . (3 дня):
·
первый день (29 мая) –
пленарное заседание и работа секций “Древняя и средневековая Церковь:
исторические, источниковедческие и методологические исследования”, “Исследование и сохранение памятников
материальной культуры религиозного предназначения”
·
второй день (30 мая) – работа секций “Археологические исследования памятников
церковной древности”, “Церковь нового
и новейшего времени: источники, история, историография”
·
третий день (31 мая) – заседание круглого стола.
Окончательная
дата подачи заявок и материалов – 24 апреля
2013 г .
Материалы планируется опубликовать отдельным сборником к началу работы
конференции.
Принимаются
доклады в
электронном варианте в формате Word doc или rtf объемом до 10 тыс. знаков (5
страниц формата А-4, 14 кегль, интервал 1,5), шрифт – Times New Roman. Ссылки
подаются в квадратных скобках со сквозной нумерацией (напр.: [3, 17], где 3 – порядковый
номер в списке использованных источников, 17 – номер страницы). Отдельно
прилагается заявка с информацией о себе.
Оргкомитет конференции оставляет
за собой право на редактирование материалов и их выборочную публикацию в
зависимости от научной значимости.
Проезд
и проживание –
за собственный счет.
Телефон для справок: (044) 254-52-65. E-mail:
bolhovitinov@ukr.net
================
Call for Papers
Theme: Emmanuel Levinas and
Interreligious Dialogue
Type: 8th Annual Conference and
Meeting
Institution: North American
Levinas Society
Location: Pittsburgh ,
PA (USA )
Date: 28.–31.7.2013
Deadline: 31.3.2013
The North American Levinas Society is excited to announce that our
eighth annual meeting and
conference will take place July 28-July 31,
2013 at Duquesne University
on the theme, “Emmanuel Levinas and
Interreligious Dialogue.”
As “culture wars” and regional
conflicts around the world continue to
enlist various religious traditions
and worldviews, it seems timely
to open robust, deliberative
meditations on how Emmanuel Levinas’
“ethics as first philosophy”
might help shape edifying interreligious
dialogue for building peace and
justice. For our 2013 conference, we
invite you to bring your
questions and concerns on these matters to
Levinas studies in North America , in order to open a number of
discussions concerning, but not
limited to, issues such as:
- Developing concepts and
practices for interreligious and interfaith
dialogue
- The influence of religion in
war zones, from stoking conflict to
building peace
- The interreligious dimensions
of post-conflict resolution and
reparation
- The role of religion in
educating for social activism and
responsibility
- The voices of women in building
interreligious dialogue
- The postsecular intersections
of religion and critical theory
- The environmental aspects of
interreligious dialogue
- The affect of interreligious
dialogue on indigenous rights and
postcolonial struggles
- The possibilities of
postsecular and interreligious responses to
poverty and economic inequality
- The existential dimensions of
interreligious dialogue and
reparative justice
We hope that scholars use this
conference to take part in the ongoing
conversation about the
ramifications of Levinas’ thought for various
faith and non-faith traditions.
Although preference will be given to
papers that address the
conference theme, it is Society custom to
consider papers and panels on any
topic related to the work of
Emmanuel Levinas.
Our eight annual conference
program will continue to include
important Society traditions such
as our annual Talmudic Reading from
Georges Hansel, a pedagogy
session, Society banquet, a film
screening, and provocative
plenary presentations from James Marsh,
Leah Kalmanson, and others.
Submission Instructions
Please prepare materials for
blind review and send them via email
attachment to cfp@levinas-society.org:
- Individual paper proposals
should be 200-300 words for a 20-minute
presentation.
- Panel proposals should be 500
words for 75-minute sessions. Please
include on separate cover the
session title and name of organizer or
chair, along with participant’s
names, institutional affiliations,
disciplines or departments, and
brief abstracts detailing the focus
of each paper.
The deadline for submissions is
March 31, 2013.
Contact and Information
Please direct all inquires
concerning the conference to the
organizers:
- Erik Garret, Duquesne University
(garrette@duq.edu)
- Rick Sadlier, Duquesne University
(sadlierr@duq.edu)
- Sol Neely, University of Alaska
Southeast (sjneely@uas.alaska.edu)
General questions regarding the
Society should be directed to:
- Sol Neely, NALS President
(sjneely@uas.alaska.edu)
- Michael Paradiso-Michau, NALS
Executive Secretary
(secretary@levinas-society.org)
Information on conference
registration, accommodations, and program
information will be made
available by mid-April at:
============================
Subject: Sixth International
Hilandar Conference: Call for Papers extended deadline
The Sixth International Hilandar
Conference, July 19-21, 2013
Deadline for receipt of
application: 28 February 2013
The Sixth International Hilandar
Conference will be held at The Ohio State University in Columbus , Ohio ,
July 19-21, 2013. The conference theme is Medieval Slavic Text and Image in the
Cultures of Orthodoxy. Abstracts (not to exceed 500 words in length) of
proposed presentations should be sent as Word.doc attachments to
hilandar@osu.edu <mailto:hilandar@osu.edu> prior to February 28, 2013.
For more information, see:
www.go.osu.edu/Hilandar <http://www.go.osu.edu/Hilandar
=============
Scenes from the History of the
Image (Research Triangle
Park, 28 Jul-9 Aug 13)
July 28 - August 9, 2013
Deadline: Feb 22, 2013
Summer Seminar
Scenes from the History of the
Image: Reading Two Millennia of Conflict
Seminar Leaders:
Thomas Pfau, Alice Mary Baldwin
Professor of English & Professor of
Germanic Languages and
Literatures, Duke
University .
David Womersley, Thomas Warton
Professor of English Literature, St.
Catherine's College, Oxford .
The purpose of this seminar is to
explore primary and critical writings
related to the history of the
image. It should be said at the outset
that this discussion is not an
attempt to run a seminar in art history.
Rather, the objective is to trace
how, in the course of Western
history, images have functioned
(and how their role has been
conceptualized), first in
religious practice and philosophical
theology, and more recently in
literature, philosophy, aesthetic
theory, and phenomenology.
At this time in history, Western
culture is arguably awash in images to
a degree never before
experienced. Digital culture has made every image
and visual artifact virtually
accessible to a vast number of
individuals in the developed and
developing worlds. Elaborate databases
such as ArtStor and Oxford Art
Online, as well as general-purpose
search engines (Google Images)
facilitate the retrieval of visual
materials with very little
censorship or accountability interposing
itself on the part of the
provider or end-user, respectively. At the
same time, the capacity of images
(cartoons, photographs, paintings) to
unleash public controversy by
tapping into otherwise submerged
religious, political, or cultural
energies and antagonisms seems
undiminished. More than most
textual forms—whose impact is typically
attenuated by the hermeneutic
demands that their linear and
propositional presentation makes
on readers—images seem uniquely
capable of bypassing or
suspending a more guarded and reflexive
interpretive appraisal.
The traumatic force with which
the images of the falling Twin
Towers on
September 11, 2001 impacted and
shaped the political imaginary of an
entire generation of people in
the United States
and the Western world,
or similarly iconic moments such
as Robert Capra's famous photo of a
soldier's death during the
Spanish Civil War, Nick Ut's photo of a
young Vietnamese child burned by
napalm, Charlie Cole's 1989 snapshot
of a young man in a white shirt
blocking the advance of tanks in
Mohammed—all attest to the
image's undiminished capacity for
concentrating and unleashing vast
reservoirs of moral and political
energy. It thus does not surprise
us to find political and religious
establishments from around the
world that are far more preoccupied with
controlling (or even expunging)
images than with articulating a
coherent message or rationally
engaging their perceived opponents.
Among the more egregious
instances of such practice might be the Afghan
Taliban's March 2001 decision to
detonate the early sixth-century
Buddhas of Bamiyan, or the G. W.
Bush administration's ban on releasing
photos of the coffins of dead
soldiers flown back from Iraq .
So as to understand the deeper
histories that resonate in such
controversies, and indeed set the
formal and moral parameters for them,
this seminar will seek to
undertake an archeology of the image in its
various dimensions: viz., as
material object, as a medium (often in
close competition with text), as
formal-aesthetic artifact, and as the
correlate of a distinctive kind
of human intentionality. To that end,
the 2013 SIAS seminar will
successively explore five historical and/or
formal ways of considering the
image—each time through a mix of primary
and secondary literature.
Application Deadline: February
22, 2013
================
Call for Book Proposals
Folklore Studies in a
Multicultural World
The University
of Illinois Press , the University Press
of Mississippi, and the University
of Wisconsin Press , in
cooperation with the American Folklore Society and with the support of the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, are collaborating to host an author's workshop at
the 2013 conference of the American Folklore Society for authors working on
their first book. Up to six authors will be selected to participate in a full
day of intensive activities devoted to critiquing and developing their
individual projects. Workshop activities will include one-on-one mentoring
sessions with editors and senior scholars and group discussions of revision and
editing strategies, publishing processes, and project critiques. A modest
stipend will be provided to participants to help defray the costs of attending
the workshop.
This opportunity is open only to
authors preparing their first books. Projects must be single-authored,
nonfiction books based on folklore research. Edited volumes, photography
collections with minimal text, and memoirs will not be considered.
Projects selected for the
workshop will be candidates for publication in the Presses' new collaborative
series, Folklore Studies in a Multicultural World, which aims to publish
exceptional first books that emphasize the interdisciplinary and/or
international nature of the field of folklore. Within the series, each Press
will focus on specific aspects of folklore studies related to its areas of
expertise: Illinois on gender and queer studies, world folk cultures, and
multiculturalism as manifested in forms of vernacular expression such as music,
dance, and foodways; Mississippi in folk art, American folk music, African
American studies, popular culture, and Southern folklife; and Wisconsin in
folklore studies that intersect with Upper Midwest cultures, Irish/Irish-American
studies, Jewish studies, Southeast Asian studies, gay/lesbian studies,
foodways, and travel. Applicants may indicate in their proposal whether they
have a preference of publisher.
Books in the series include
Squeeze This! A Cultural History of the Accordion in
America<http://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/catalog/47bqd8bm9780252036750.html>
by Marion Jacobson and The Jumbies' Playing Ground: Old
World Influences on Afro-Creole Masquerades in the Eastern
Caribbean<http://www.upress.state.ms.us/books/1524> by Robert Wyndham
Nicholls.
Proposals should be submitted via
e-mail at any time until the deadline of April 1, 2013, to
fsmw@uillinois.edu<blocked::mailto:fsmw@uillinois.edu>. For submission
guidelines, please see http://folklorestudies.press.illinois.edu/guidelines.html<blocked::http://folklorestudies.press.illinois.edu/guidelines.html>.
--------------------------
Call For Paper
Philosophy and Public Issues
A Journal of Moral, Political,
Legal and Social Philosophy
Symposium: The Church and The
State.
With a discussion of Robert
Audi’s Democratic Authority and the Separation
of Church and State (OUP 2011)
Guest Editor: Domenico Melidoro
Submission Deadline
- Long Abstract (1,000 words
max): May 15, 2013
- Full paper (10,000 words max,
upon acceptance): September 1, 2013
Invited Contributors
Mario De Caro (Rome Tre University ), Jocelyn Maclure (Université
Laval),
Michael Perry (Emory University ),
Paul Weithman (University
of Notre Dame)
and Robert Audi (University of Notre Dame).
Aims and Background
The relation between politics and
religions should not necessarily be seen
as a problem or reason of
conflicts, but it could be understood within the
broader issue of what attitude
liberal-democratic states should show
towards religious and cultural
diversity. This problem is particularly
important in contemporary
societies characterized by a plurality of moral,
political, and religious views.
Separating ‘the church’ from ‘the state’
does not rule out the
accommodation of some religious claims. However, the
limits of and the justification
for such an accommodation are extremely
divisive matters, especially when
religious minorities seem to be a threat
for the liberal-democratic
institutions.
In this special volume of
Philosophy and Public Issues we are looking for
papers that explore the
relationship between religion and politics from
moral, political, or legal
perspective.
We expect original contributions
discussing problems such as:
- the separation of church and
state;
- the issue of the accommodations
religious claims in pluralist societies;
- liberal theories of toleration;
- the question of liberal
neutrality and the place of religions in public
places
- political secularism:
principles and applications
… or any other relevant topic subject to the Editors’ approval.
The special issue will include a
discussion on Robert Audi’s Democratic
Authority and the Separation of
Church and State (OUP 2011), with
commentaries by Mario De Caro,
Jocelyn Maclure, Domenico Melidoro, Michael
Perry, Paul Weithman, followed by
Robert Audi’s replies.
Submission Details
Please send a (.rtf, .doc or
.docx) file containing a long abstract (1,000
words max) and a title, prepared
for blind review with all revealing
references to the author removed.
All personal information (name,
affiliation, and contact) must be
submitted separately, along with a short
abstract (200 words max).
Deadline for abstract submission is May 15,
2013. Decisions will be made
within a month.
Upon notification of acceptance,
you will be invited to submit the full
paper (10,000 words max) no later
than September 1, 2013. The volume will
be published in December 2013.
Contributions that do not make it
to the volume may be considered for
subsequent publication in one of
the regular volumes of Philosophy and
Public Issues.
All material should be submitted
to submissionppi@luiss.it.
Further Inquiries
Please direct any queries about
this call for papers to PPI’s Editors at
(editorppi@luiss.it). More
information on Philosophy and Public Issues can
be found at http://ppi.luiss.edu.
=============
New materials on Ukrainian folklore in Kazakhstan available online
Dear Fellow list members,
I want to draw your attention to
some new materials. We have indexed and
posted the materials that I collected in Kazakhstan . Ukrainians arrived to
the area northeast of Pavlodar
at the turn of the 20th century. They came in response to the Stolypin reforms
and were pioneers who established villages. Later waves of immigration came
with the Khrushchev Virgin Lands policy and in the 1970s. All in all an
interesting group who have developed their own language (khokhliatskii) and
their own version of rituals.
Find an indexed and searchable
version of the sound files at
<http://ra.tapor.ualberta.ca/KazakhstanAudio/>
Selected photographs are at
<http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/uvp/pages/media/kazakhstan/index.htm?menu=8-2:0>
Please note that the pull-down
menu on top of the box to the right goes by village – so photos from individual
villages are here.
We have also posted some songs on
<http://research.artsrn.ualberta.ca/ukrfolklore/categoryclips.html?category_id=4&filter=all>
This is a site where volunteers
can transcribe and translate recordings. Would love to have you try working
with these. The songs are in Ukrainian, even though the people themselves speak
a Ukrainian/Russian mix they call khokhliatskii. Would welcome your feedback
about these songs. Are they familiar? Are they similar to or different from the
songs you know?
H-FOLK
=================================
Centre for Typological and
Semiotic Folklore Studies
On April 26th – May 5th 2013 the
Centre for Typological and Semiotic Folklore Studies at the Russian State
University for the Humanities (Moscow) will host the 13th International School
and Conference aimed at young researches working in the field of folkloristics,
ethnolinguistics and cultural anthropology entitled “Visual and verbal in folk
culture”.
The program of the School
includes conference-format papers (20 min.), lectures (50 min.), seminars,
master-classes, round tables, problem solving workshops, and screenings of
ethnographic films. The following topics are going to be covered:
— visual and verbal sign systems
in contemporary and traditional folk culture;
— communicative peculiarities of
visual, actional, and verbal messages in folklore and ritual;
— visuality of texts and texts in
visual images.
During the School master-classes
on quantitative and qualitative methods, data-bases and indexes in anthropology
and folkloristics, round tables on visual anthropology, seminars on gesture
languages and gesture communication, semiotics of costume and ritual masks,
lectures on the evolution of sign behavior will be organized.
Specialists in these fields
willing to participate in the activities of the School should send their
proposals for lectures or seminars (400 words) to folkloreschool2013@gmail.com
before February 1, 2013 accompanied by a CV (not exceeding 3 pages).
Young researches (under 35) interested
in folkloristics, ethnolinguistics and bordering disciplines and willing to
attend the sessions of the School should send their abstracts (500-700 words)
to folkloreschool2013@gmail.com or solve the competition task.
The selection process will take
place till February 10th, 2013. To participate in the problem-solving
competition and/or abstracts competition (see the details on
http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore/ls13.htm) you should register on-line at
https://sites.google.com/site/folkloreschool/ before January 30th, 2013.
The opening ceremony of the
School will take place in Moscow ,
and the main sessions, in Pereslavl’-Zalessky.
Working languages: Russian and
English.
All the information concerning
the School can be found on http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore
The e-mail of the organising
committee: folkloreschool2013@gmail.com, telephone: +74999734354.
Head of the project: D.habil.
Prof. S. Yu. Neklyudov,
Coordinator of the project:
D.phil. A. S. Arkhipova