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ALL FOR PAPERS REMINDER (deadline 31 July 2010) The Global Dimensions of
European Knowledge, 1450-1700 Birkbeck, University of London, 24-5 June,
2011. An international conference organized with support from The Leverhulme
Trust, the Society for Renaissance Studies and Birkbeck, University of
London Confirmed speakers KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: Professor Felipe
Fernández-Armesto (Notre Dame), Professor Pamela Smith (Columbia), Dr
Joan-Pau Rubiés (London School of Economics) PLENARY SPEAKERS: Professor
Ricardo Padrón (Virginia), Professor Nicolás Wey- Gómez (Brown/Caltech), Dr
Michiel van Groesen (Amsterdam) AFTERWORD: Professor Peter Burke (Cambridge)
The period 1450-1700 saw the expansion of European seaborne reconnaissance
of Africa, Asia, the Americas and Oceania, which would lead to long-distance
European empires in these regions. It also witnessed changes in European
knowledge-making practices that heralded what is often termed the Scientific
Revolution. This conference will investigate the impact of European
exploration and travel on the structures, contents and sources of authority
of European knowledge c. 1450-1700. It seeks to explore connections between
the making of knowledge and a broad range of intellectual, political,
cultural, religious and mercantile encounters between Europe and the wider
world. It aims to bring together scholars from different disciplines working
on any aspect of European knowledge that included an extra-European
dimension. Forms of knowledge under consideration include ethnology, natural
history, botany, natural philosophy, geography, cartography, medicine and
chronology. Overarching questions * In what ways was European knowledge
re-shaped by exploration, imperialism and colonialism? * To what extent did
indigenous knowledge systems influence European ‘science’? * How did
information about distant places circulate, and how was it changed by
circulation? * What was the nature of the exchanges of information and
expertise between travellers, missionaries, colonial administrators,
indigenous informants, artisans, scholars, readers and other groups from
different countries? What challenges did these exchanges pose for testimony
and authority? * What was the impact of colonial rivalries on the ways in
which information was interpreted, used and disseminated? Possible panel
themes might include: first-hand testimony and authority; expectations and
observations; circulation networks; artisans and learned societies; cultural
encounters and indigenous knowledge; gender and knowledge; empire and
knowledge; commerce and collecting; classification and the structures of
knowledge; visual culture. Proposals are welcomed for full panels and
individual papers (25 mins). Individual submissions should comprise a paper
title, abstract (up to 300 words) and brief CV (max. one page) emphasizing
publications. For full panel proposals, please include an additional
300-word description of the panel itself. Submissions should be sent to the
conference organizer, Dr Surekha Davies (Birkbeck, University of London) at
[log in to unmask], and to Prof. Ricardo Padrón (University of Virginia) at
[log in to unmask] by 31 July 2010. A selection of papers will be published
as a peer-reviewed edited collection. The call for papers is online on a
number of web-pages, including:
http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hca/staff/surekhadavies(downloadable PdF poster)
http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hca/about/conferences/globaldimensionsofknowledge
http://www.rensoc.org.uk/SRSEvents%20(Conferences).html
http://www.history.ac.uk/events/event/1706 For further inquiries, please
contact Dr Surekha Davies ([log in to unmask]).