Secrets and Discovery in the Middle Ages. 5th European Congress of Medieval Studies
20/12/12 .- http://fidem.org.pt/2013_congress
Secrets and Discovery in the Middle Ages
5th European Congress of Medieval Studies
Secret et découverte au Moyen Âge
V.e Congrès Européen d'Études Médévales
Segredo e descoberta na Idade Média
Vº Congreso Europeu de Estudos Medievais
25-29.06.2013
Porto (Portugal), Faculdade de Letras
The 5th European Congress of Medieval Studies of the Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales (FIDEM) is organized by the Gabinete de Filosofia Medieval, Universidade do Porto, Portugal.
FOCUS
Fascination with secrets traverses the Middle Ages. A secret is shared by few and coveted by many, requiring a lot of those who have to keep it, or those who want to disclose it. A secret is power, hence the eagerness to discover it. But as curiosity can lead to the abyss and punishment, discovering secrets also requires prudence and caution.
The relationship between secret and discovery expresses itself in the Middle Ages, as in all times, through many other dynamic dualities: mystery and revelation, arcane and evidence, unknown and sought, ignorance and knowledge, esoteric and exoteric, private message and edict, hidden and manifest, conspiracy and complaint. The secret is in the nature, which does everything to hide itself, while he reveals itself in many ways, but only to those who know how to interpret it. So in the Middle Ages there are sciences for all secrets: of God, of elements and things, of the stars, of physiognomy, of women, of happiness, of the delights of paradise, of relics, of holiness, of the inner life, of sin, of power, of distant peoples and lost places, and of countless other things. The secret is itself a big secret. The secret is everywhere, in the narratives of search and discovery, in public or private action, in sciences, in books or encyclopedias. One of the most popular medieval texts, the Secretum secretorum, which collects the secrets of health, politics, nature, astrology, magic, alchemy, becomes a model for the many of the literary works composed to uncover secrets, that thus, paradoxically, cease to be. The secret holds dangerous and valuable knowledge ranging from counterfeiting, to the illusions of the imagination, or the triumph of reason and wisdom.
The secret and its avatars were a silent yet strong driving force in almost all aspects of the Middle Ages. The “Secrets and Discovery” Congress proposes to discuss their presence and importance in the imagination, culture, thinking, sciences, politics, religion, and life during the Middle Ages (from the beginning of the 6th to the end of the 15th century).
Congress Sessions are designed to promote discussion on secrets and discovery from all Medieval Studies domains, in every medieval language, and in different subjects:
Confession and Intimacy
Conspiracy and Betrayal
Government and Diplomacy
Health and Life
Hermeticism and Transmutation
Holiness and Relics
Knowledge and Scepticism
Mysticisms and Kabbalah
Nature and Supernatural
Past and Future
Planets and Harmony
Prophecy and Divination
Sermons and Preaching
Symbols and Dreams
Truth and Fake
Unknown Worlds and Lost Places
Warfare and Strategy
Keynote Speakers
Catarina Belo (American University in Cairo), Theories of Prophecy and the Faculties of the Soul in Medieval Islamic Philosophy
Enrique Montero Cartelle (Universidad de Valladolid), El tratado Secreta mulierum, liber minor y el De secretis mulierum atribuido a Alberto Magno
Harvey Hames (Ben Gurion University, Beersheva), Discovering the Secrets of God: Kabbalah as an alternative Theology of Judaism in the Thirteenth Century
Luís Miguel Duarte (Universidade do Porto), Secrets and Portuguese Geographical Discoveries
Pascale Bourgain (École des Chartes, Paris), “Non sine Mysterio”
Patricia Stirnemann (IRHT – Paris, France), Le secret et l'art dans les manuscrits
Pete Biller (The University of York), Medieval heretics: secrets, secrecy and the Secretum
Call for papers (until 15th February)
The congress is open to all individual members of FIDEM and to all affiliates of institutional effective members of FIDEM. Proposals must be electronically submitted in the Congress webpage
All European languages are official languages of the Congress, as is the tradition in FIDEM meetings. Presentations: 20 minutes + 10 minutes discussion.
Special sessions: if you want to organize a special session (up to 3 presentations each one), a round table, a project presentation, or books discussion or presentation, please send a proposal to the Director of the Congress (secrets@letras.up.pt).
Online registration and Abstracts submission: --> here
Fees payable up to 15th February (after 15th February and March: + 30 %; in April to June + 50%):
€ 50 (with paper); € 70 (without paper); € 25 (students with paper); € 30 (students without paper).
Congress Banquet: € 30
Excursion: tba
Electronic Payment only : https://www.letras.up.pt/gi/eventos/registo.asp?tt=fa
Participation scholarships
FIDEM will provide scholarships for young participants (under 35) presenting their research, if they are individual members or belong to a member institution of FIDEM, in order to encourage their participation in the Congress. Application letter (accompanied by curriculum vitae and a letter of recommendation signed by a faculty member) must be sent by e-mail, after online registration in the Congress (see above), by 31s January 2013. They should be sent to Prof. José Meirinhos, secretary of FIDEM, at fidem@letras.up.pt. Candidates will be notified of the outcome on 31 March. No application will be accepted without previous complete registration, including an abstract.
Congress Facilities
Venue: Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto / Via Panorâmica sn / 4150-564 Porto / Portugal.
Facilities available to the participants include: eduroam wireless network, meeting room projectors, computer’s room, Library, photocopier, etc.
The campus cafeteria will be open to all participants for lunch and dinner at very reasonable prices (3.50€, 2012 price).
A book fair will be open for the period of the congress, featuring the major publishers in all fields of Medieval Studies.
Information on accommodation is provided on the Congress website. Hotel prices are reasonable, but it is advisable to book accommodation in advance. To be done directly by participants.
Excursions on Medieval subjects will be organized for Saturday 29 June. You can book and pay for whichever you prefer at the Congress: 1) Medieval Braga-Guimarães; 2) Renaissance and Baroque Coimbra; 3) Medieval Porto and Douro River.
PROCEEDINGS
After double blind review, the Congress proceedings will be published in FIDEM’s series “Textes et études du Moyen Âge”, distributed by Brepols Publishers.
Organizing Committee (GFM - Porto)
José Meirinhos (Director)
Ana Lima
Gonçalo Figueiredo
João Rebalde
Marco Toste
Patrícia Calvário
Advisory Committee (FIDEM’s Bureau)
Adriano Oliva (Paris)
Greti Dinkova Bruun (Toronto)
Jacqueline Hamesse (Louvain-la-Neuve) – Chair
José Meirinhos (Porto)
Louis Holtz (Paris)
María José Muñoz Jiménez (Madrid)
Olivia Remie Constable (Notre Dame)
Oronzo Pecere (Cassino)
Outi Merisalo (Jyväskylä)
SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE
Faculdade de Letras Medieval Studies:
Ana Sofia Laranjinha (Romance Literature) *
Armando Luís Carvalho Homem (Medieval Political History) *
Clara Barros (Medieval Romance Linguistics) *
Eleonora Lombardo (Medieval Hagiography) ***
João Carlos Garcia (Medieval Geography and cartography) *
John Greenfield (Medieval German Literature) *
José Augusto Pizarro (Medieval Social and Political History; Genealogy) *
José Carlos Miranda (Medieval Arthurian Literature; Romance Philology) *
José Meirinhos (Medieval Philosophy; Natural Sciences) [Chair] *
Lidia Lanza (Medieval Philosophy; Text edition) ***
Lúcia Rosas (Medieval Art History) *
Luís Amaral (Medieval Administration and Ecclesiastical Institutions) *
Luís Miguel Duarte (Medieval History of Culture; Medieval Sources) *
Manuel Lázaro Pulido (Medieval Philosophy; Theology) **
Manuel Francisco Ramos (Medieval Latin; Rhetoric) *
Maria Cristina Cunha (Medieval History; Diplomatics) *
Mário Barroca (Mediaeval Archaeology) *
Paula Oliveira e Silva (Medieval Philosophy; Patristic Medieval tradition) **
Paula Pinto Costa (Medieval Social and Economic History) *
Vera Rodrigues (Medieval Philosophy; Trivium and Quadrivium) ***
* FLUP Professor; ** FLUP Researcher (Ciencia2008); *** FCT post doc GFM
CONTACTS
Congress email : secrets@letras.up.pt
Congress Registration and Call: https://ocs.letras.up.pt/index.php/secrets/secrets/announcement/view/24
FIDEM’s email: fidem@letras.up.pt
ORGANIZATION
Gabinete de Filosofia Medieval – Instituto de Filosofia da Universidade do Porto
FUNDING
Fundação para a Ciênica e a Tecnologia (Compete; QREN, UE)
Instituto de Filosofia da Universidade do Porto
Universidade do Porto
Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto
Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales
SUPPORT
Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar «Cultura, Espaço e Memória» (CITCEM) - Universidade do Porto
More information: http://fidem.org.pt/2013_congress
5th European Congress of Medieval Studies
Secret et découverte au Moyen Âge
V.e Congrès Européen d'Études Médévales
Segredo e descoberta na Idade Média
Vº Congreso Europeu de Estudos Medievais
25-29.06.2013
Porto (Portugal), Faculdade de Letras
The 5th European Congress of Medieval Studies of the Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales (FIDEM) is organized by the Gabinete de Filosofia Medieval, Universidade do Porto, Portugal.
FOCUS
Fascination with secrets traverses the Middle Ages. A secret is shared by few and coveted by many, requiring a lot of those who have to keep it, or those who want to disclose it. A secret is power, hence the eagerness to discover it. But as curiosity can lead to the abyss and punishment, discovering secrets also requires prudence and caution.
The relationship between secret and discovery expresses itself in the Middle Ages, as in all times, through many other dynamic dualities: mystery and revelation, arcane and evidence, unknown and sought, ignorance and knowledge, esoteric and exoteric, private message and edict, hidden and manifest, conspiracy and complaint. The secret is in the nature, which does everything to hide itself, while he reveals itself in many ways, but only to those who know how to interpret it. So in the Middle Ages there are sciences for all secrets: of God, of elements and things, of the stars, of physiognomy, of women, of happiness, of the delights of paradise, of relics, of holiness, of the inner life, of sin, of power, of distant peoples and lost places, and of countless other things. The secret is itself a big secret. The secret is everywhere, in the narratives of search and discovery, in public or private action, in sciences, in books or encyclopedias. One of the most popular medieval texts, the Secretum secretorum, which collects the secrets of health, politics, nature, astrology, magic, alchemy, becomes a model for the many of the literary works composed to uncover secrets, that thus, paradoxically, cease to be. The secret holds dangerous and valuable knowledge ranging from counterfeiting, to the illusions of the imagination, or the triumph of reason and wisdom.
The secret and its avatars were a silent yet strong driving force in almost all aspects of the Middle Ages. The “Secrets and Discovery” Congress proposes to discuss their presence and importance in the imagination, culture, thinking, sciences, politics, religion, and life during the Middle Ages (from the beginning of the 6th to the end of the 15th century).
Congress Sessions are designed to promote discussion on secrets and discovery from all Medieval Studies domains, in every medieval language, and in different subjects:
Confession and Intimacy
Conspiracy and Betrayal
Government and Diplomacy
Health and Life
Hermeticism and Transmutation
Holiness and Relics
Knowledge and Scepticism
Mysticisms and Kabbalah
Nature and Supernatural
Past and Future
Planets and Harmony
Prophecy and Divination
Sermons and Preaching
Symbols and Dreams
Truth and Fake
Unknown Worlds and Lost Places
Warfare and Strategy
Keynote Speakers
Catarina Belo (American University in Cairo), Theories of Prophecy and the Faculties of the Soul in Medieval Islamic Philosophy
Enrique Montero Cartelle (Universidad de Valladolid), El tratado Secreta mulierum, liber minor y el De secretis mulierum atribuido a Alberto Magno
Harvey Hames (Ben Gurion University, Beersheva), Discovering the Secrets of God: Kabbalah as an alternative Theology of Judaism in the Thirteenth Century
Luís Miguel Duarte (Universidade do Porto), Secrets and Portuguese Geographical Discoveries
Pascale Bourgain (École des Chartes, Paris), “Non sine Mysterio”
Patricia Stirnemann (IRHT – Paris, France), Le secret et l'art dans les manuscrits
Pete Biller (The University of York), Medieval heretics: secrets, secrecy and the Secretum
Call for papers (until 15th February)
The congress is open to all individual members of FIDEM and to all affiliates of institutional effective members of FIDEM. Proposals must be electronically submitted in the Congress webpage
All European languages are official languages of the Congress, as is the tradition in FIDEM meetings. Presentations: 20 minutes + 10 minutes discussion.
Special sessions: if you want to organize a special session (up to 3 presentations each one), a round table, a project presentation, or books discussion or presentation, please send a proposal to the Director of the Congress (secrets@letras.up.pt).
Online registration and Abstracts submission: --> here
Fees payable up to 15th February (after 15th February and March: + 30 %; in April to June + 50%):
€ 50 (with paper); € 70 (without paper); € 25 (students with paper); € 30 (students without paper).
Congress Banquet: € 30
Excursion: tba
Electronic Payment only : https://www.letras.up.pt/gi/eventos/registo.asp?tt=fa
Participation scholarships
FIDEM will provide scholarships for young participants (under 35) presenting their research, if they are individual members or belong to a member institution of FIDEM, in order to encourage their participation in the Congress. Application letter (accompanied by curriculum vitae and a letter of recommendation signed by a faculty member) must be sent by e-mail, after online registration in the Congress (see above), by 31s January 2013. They should be sent to Prof. José Meirinhos, secretary of FIDEM, at fidem@letras.up.pt. Candidates will be notified of the outcome on 31 March. No application will be accepted without previous complete registration, including an abstract.
Congress Facilities
Venue: Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto / Via Panorâmica sn / 4150-564 Porto / Portugal.
Facilities available to the participants include: eduroam wireless network, meeting room projectors, computer’s room, Library, photocopier, etc.
The campus cafeteria will be open to all participants for lunch and dinner at very reasonable prices (3.50€, 2012 price).
A book fair will be open for the period of the congress, featuring the major publishers in all fields of Medieval Studies.
Information on accommodation is provided on the Congress website. Hotel prices are reasonable, but it is advisable to book accommodation in advance. To be done directly by participants.
Excursions on Medieval subjects will be organized for Saturday 29 June. You can book and pay for whichever you prefer at the Congress: 1) Medieval Braga-Guimarães; 2) Renaissance and Baroque Coimbra; 3) Medieval Porto and Douro River.
PROCEEDINGS
After double blind review, the Congress proceedings will be published in FIDEM’s series “Textes et études du Moyen Âge”, distributed by Brepols Publishers.
Organizing Committee (GFM - Porto)
José Meirinhos (Director)
Ana Lima
Gonçalo Figueiredo
João Rebalde
Marco Toste
Patrícia Calvário
Advisory Committee (FIDEM’s Bureau)
Adriano Oliva (Paris)
Greti Dinkova Bruun (Toronto)
Jacqueline Hamesse (Louvain-la-Neuve) – Chair
José Meirinhos (Porto)
Louis Holtz (Paris)
María José Muñoz Jiménez (Madrid)
Olivia Remie Constable (Notre Dame)
Oronzo Pecere (Cassino)
Outi Merisalo (Jyväskylä)
SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE
Faculdade de Letras Medieval Studies:
Ana Sofia Laranjinha (Romance Literature) *
Armando Luís Carvalho Homem (Medieval Political History) *
Clara Barros (Medieval Romance Linguistics) *
Eleonora Lombardo (Medieval Hagiography) ***
João Carlos Garcia (Medieval Geography and cartography) *
John Greenfield (Medieval German Literature) *
José Augusto Pizarro (Medieval Social and Political History; Genealogy) *
José Carlos Miranda (Medieval Arthurian Literature; Romance Philology) *
José Meirinhos (Medieval Philosophy; Natural Sciences) [Chair] *
Lidia Lanza (Medieval Philosophy; Text edition) ***
Lúcia Rosas (Medieval Art History) *
Luís Amaral (Medieval Administration and Ecclesiastical Institutions) *
Luís Miguel Duarte (Medieval History of Culture; Medieval Sources) *
Manuel Lázaro Pulido (Medieval Philosophy; Theology) **
Manuel Francisco Ramos (Medieval Latin; Rhetoric) *
Maria Cristina Cunha (Medieval History; Diplomatics) *
Mário Barroca (Mediaeval Archaeology) *
Paula Oliveira e Silva (Medieval Philosophy; Patristic Medieval tradition) **
Paula Pinto Costa (Medieval Social and Economic History) *
Vera Rodrigues (Medieval Philosophy; Trivium and Quadrivium) ***
* FLUP Professor; ** FLUP Researcher (Ciencia2008); *** FCT post doc GFM
CONTACTS
Congress email : secrets@letras.up.pt
Congress Registration and Call: https://ocs.letras.up.pt/index.php/secrets/secrets/announcement/view/24
FIDEM’s email: fidem@letras.up.pt
ORGANIZATION
Gabinete de Filosofia Medieval – Instituto de Filosofia da Universidade do Porto
FUNDING
Fundação para a Ciênica e a Tecnologia (Compete; QREN, UE)
Instituto de Filosofia da Universidade do Porto
Universidade do Porto
Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto
Fédération Internationale des Instituts d'Études Médiévales
SUPPORT
Centro de Investigação Transdisciplinar «Cultura, Espaço e Memória» (CITCEM) - Universidade do Porto
More information: http://fidem.org.pt/2013_congress
Noticias relacionadas
- Congress "Secrets and Discovery in the Middle Ages" (25-29 junio, Porto, Portugal)
- International Congress of the European Middle Ages (c. 300-1500)
- Call for papers: I International congress of Middle Ages for predoctoral researchers
- Call for papers 48th International Congress on Medieval Studies (Mayo 2013)
- The unhealthy lives of the rich in the Middle Ages
Comenta la noticia desde Facebook
Comentarios
No hay comentarios.
Para escribir un comentario es necesario entrar (si ya es usuario registrado) o registrarse