Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Upcoming conference: "Imagining Alternative Modernities"

SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS

ABSTRACT DEADLINE: MARCH 17
 
We are excited to announce the interdisciplinary conference, "Imagining Alternative Modernities: Interventions from the Balkans and South Asia", which will take place at The Ohio State University, Columbus, October 9-11, 2014. The conference completes and complements a series of interdisciplinary activities in 2013-14, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation through the John E. Sawyer Seminars on the Comparative Study of Cultures grant program. For more information on the seminar, please visit: sawyer.osu.edu.
 

Keynote Speakers:

Tomislav Longinović, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Kalyanakrishnan Sivaramakrishnan, Yale University
 

On the surface, the Balkans and South Asia might seem to have little in common. However, despite many specific differences, they share similar dilemmas of linguistic, religious, cultural, and ethno-national complexity, similar turbulent political developments associated with imperial, post-colonial, and Cold War legacies, and a similar diversity of responses to these historical and contemporary challenges. Both areas have seen a mixing of people through migratory settlement, conquest, contact, and trade. But both have also experienced periods of reaction to cultural hybridity: a radical unmixing of people through partition and population exchange. The impact of these upheavals is seen in the direct violence of war and devastation, but also through crises on the levels of language, religion, and other modes of culture and human creative activity. The unique yet similar issues within each region compel us
towards a comparative approach that will offer a transnational perspective on the intersection of language, religion, culture, and nationalism.

 
We thus invite proposals for paper presentations from any disciplinary or interdisciplinary perspective within the humanities and social sciences addressing one or more of the following themes in the Balkans or in South Asia, or comparatively between the two regions:


1.Violence, Gender, and Human Rights

2.Nation, Religion, Language, and Secularism

3. Minorities, State, Language, and Citizenship

4. Postcolonial and Postsocialist Perspectives on Neoliberalism
 

Additionally, selected papers will be included in a collection of essays resulting from the conference.

Graduate students are encouraged to participate. Limited funding is available for student lodging.

Please send a 350-word abstract in PDF format and brief (one paragraph maximum) bio to sawyerseminar@osu.edu by Monday March 17, 2014 (11:59pm).

Notifications of acceptance will be sent by May 1, 2014 and the program will be announced by June 1, 2014. 

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Imagining Alternative Modernities: Interventions from the Balkans and South Asia

We are excited to announce the interdisciplinary conference, "Imagining Alternative Modernities: Interventions from the Balkans and South Asia", which will take place at The Ohio State University, Columbus, October 9-11, 2014. The conference completes and complements a series of interdisciplinary activities in 2013-14, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation through the John E. Sawyer Seminars on the Comparative Study of Cultures grant program. For more information on the seminar, please visit: sawyer.osu.edu.

On the surface, the Balkans and South Asia might seem to have little in common. However, despite many specific differences, they share similar dilemmas of linguistic, religious, cultural, and ethno-national complexity, similar turbulent political developments associated with imperial, post-colonial, and Cold War legacies, and a similar diversity of responses to these historical and contemporary challenges. Both areas have seen a mixing of people through migratory settlement, conquest, contact, and trade. But both have also experienced periods of reaction to cultural hybridity: a radical unmixing of people through partition and population exchange. The impact of these upheavals is seen in the direct violence of war and devastation, but also through crises on the levels of language, religion, and other modes of culture and human creative activity. The unique yet similar issues within each region compel us towards a comparative approach that will offer a transnational perspective on the intersection of language, religion, culture, and nationalism.

We thus invite proposals for paper presentations from any disciplinary or interdisciplinary perspective within the humanities and social sciences addressing one or more of the following themes in the Balkans or in South Asia, or comparatively between the two regions: 

1. Violence, Gender, and Human Rights 

2. Nation, Religion, Language, and Secularism 

3. Minorities, State, Language, and Citizenship 

4. Postcolonial and Postsocialist Perspectives on Neoliberalism

Additionally, selected papers will be included in a collection of essays resulting from the conference.

Graduate students are encouraged to participate. Limited funding is available for student lodging.

Please send a 350-word abstract in PDF format and brief (one paragraph maximum) bio to sawyerseminar@osu.edu by Monday March 17, 2014 (11:59pm). Notifications of acceptance will be sent by May 1, 2014 and the program will be announced by June 1, 2014. 

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Цветница, Diela e lulevet, Duminica florilor, Βαγιοτσυριατσή…

Posted on behalf of Irina Sedakova, Head of BALCANICA

A roundtable devoted to the vegetative code of Palm Sunday in the Balkan, Baltic and Slavic regions took place on 30 March 2010 at the Center for Linguistic and Cultural Studies BALCANICA of the Institute for Slavic Studies (Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow). Sixteen scholars from the Institute for Slavic Studies, the Moscow State University, the Russian State University for the Humanities, the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, the Kunstkamera (Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography in St. Petersburg) and the Folk Culture Center in Vilnius took part in the roundtable. Participants were distributed ahead of time questionnaires to focus the discussion on the most important linguistic and cultural issues such as the origins of the Palm Sunday terminology, the plant specimens associated with the festival, the correlation between church and laic rituals and the evolution of ideas about the plants consecrated on Palm Sunday in the Slavic, Baltic and Balkan traditions. The proceedings of the roundtable will be published in the journal Традиционная культура ‘Traditional Culture’.

Program of the roundtable:

И.А. Седакова. Вступительное слово
Л.И. Акимова. Погребальный убор царицы Шубад в контексте "Вербного воскресенья"
Е.В. Пчелов. "Чудо-дерево" Московского царства: верба в церемонии шествия на осляти в XVI - XVII вв.
О.В. Трефилова. Оппозиция молодой-старый resp. новый-ветхий в древнейших славянских переводах "Слов" на Вербное воскресенье
Т.В. Цивьян. Вербная тема в русской литературе ХХ в.: мерцающая мифология
Р. Балкуте, М.В. Завьялова. Традиции Вербного воскресенья в Литве: визуально-антропологический материал и комментарии
В.В. Усачева. Вербноe воскресеньe в польской народной традиции
М.М. Валенцова. Вербное воскресенье в чешской и словацкой традиции
В.Л. Кляус. Верба как символ "русского" дома в Трехречье (КНР)
Н.В. Злыднева. Процветшая плоть в балканской изобразительной традиции: к проблеме контаминации кодов
Н.Г. Голант. Duminica Floriilor и мифологические представления румын, связанные с растениями
М.М. Макарцев. Растительный код в «Балладе о мертвом брате»
А.А. Плотникова. Вербная (Лазарева) суббота: особенности девических обходов у балканских славян
С.А. Сиднева. "Statue vegetali" в калабрийских обрядах Вербного воскресенья
К.А. Климова. Τα βάγια νικητήτρια (пальма, лавр и другие растения) в греческой народной традиции
О.А. Кифишина. К вопросу об иве в древнегреческом ритуале и мифе

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Divine Intervention in South-East Europe: A Longue Durée Perspective

The special thematic issue Ethnographies of “Divine Interventions” in Europe of History and Anthropology (Volume 20, Issue 3, 2009) contains a subsection dealing with the southeast of Europe:

Katerina Seraidari "Objects of Cult, Objects of Confrontation: Divine Interventions through Greek History" (289-307)

Bernard Lory "The Vizier's Dream: 'Seeing St. Dimitar' in Ottoman Bitola" (309-316)

Vihra Baeva & Galia Valtchinova "A Women's Religious Organization in Southern Bulgaria: From Miracle Stories to History" (317-338)

Margarita Karamihova & Galia Valtchinova "Talking War, 'Seeing" Peace: Approaching the PIlgrimage of Krastova Gora (Bulgaria)" (339-362)


See informaworld for abstracts and further details.