16 Gennaio 2019

CfP: «A great community»: John Ruskin’s Europe, Venice, 7-9 October 2019

CALL FOR PAPERS AN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE Ca’ Foscari University « A great community »: John Ruskin’s Europe Venice 7-9 October 2019 One of the last of John Ruskin’s books, a collection of articles written between 1834 and 1885, is entitled On the Old Road. From Calais, where the Ruskin family disembarked for the first time in 1833, at the start of their first contintental tour, the road leads south across France and Switzerland and into Italy, coming to its end in Venice where, in 1888, Ruskin wrote the last words in his diary. The route is marked by many milestones in the life of Ruskin, in his thinking and in his work, and crosses numerous frontiers – frontiers that are often barely noticed. In traversing this vast continent, Ruskin puts behind him the narrow confines of Victorian Britain; his work shapes one of the most important founding moments in the constitution of a distinctively European culture and spirit. This theme is a core concern of a series of recent historical and aesthetic studies which recognise the crucial importance of place, of myth, and of image in the construction of a common European fabric (see Carlo Ossola, Europa ritrovata. Geografie e miti del vecchio continente, Milan 2017; published in French as Fables d’identité. Pour retrouver l’Europe, Paris 2018; and L’Europe. Encyclopédie historique edited by Christophe Charle and Daniel Roche, Paris 2018), and of studies such as Salvatore Settis’s, Architettura e democrazia. Paesaggio, città, diritti civili (Turin 2017) which deal with key questions of cultural heritage in an interdisciplinary perspective and are driven by strong civic ethos. On the occasion of the bicenternary of the birth of John Ruskin we invite scholars from across the disciplines to re-read his works, from the Poetry of Architecture to the Stones of Venice, the Bible of Amiens, the Oxford Lectures, St Mark’s Rest and Fors Clavigera, works which refer repeatedly to the concept of a «a great European community» (A Joy For Ever, 1857). The conference will thus build on and develop a theme to which the conference John Ruskin and 19th Century Cultural Travel held in Venice in 2008 was dedicated. In carrying forward the work begun there, this new occasion will also offer an opportunity to explore more recent readings and critical editions which have thrown light on little known aspects of Ruskin’s work, focussing new attention on mobility, both intellectual and stylistic as well a geographic. It will we believe prove fruitful to take a view from outside the confines of the nation and time into which he was born, and look at his ideas in this broader, more modern context. This conference thus invites scholars to discover or rediscover a self-consciously European John Ruskin, and explore the multiple facets and levels – geographical, historical, critical, aesthetic, socio-political, and cultural – of an oeuvre which both deliberately challenges disciplinary boundaries and breaks through national frontiers. TOPICS MAY INCLUDE BUT ARE NOT CONFINED TO THE FOLLOWING: HISTORY – Ruskin’s European inheritance – Ways in which his works contribute to the construction of cultural identities both national (English, French, Italian etc) and European – Ruskin’s view of the roles of religions and Churches in the construction of cultural identity – Modes of circulation within Europe as evoked and described in his works – The idea of Europe as object of nostalgia, as utopia, as long-term project – Ruskin’s symbolic representations of European disgregation. – GEOGRAPHY AND LANDSCAPE – Travel diaries and sketchbooks – Maps – Europe in its extra-European relations – Physical geography: seas, rivers, mountain ranges and valley, forests, palins – Political geography – Migrations – Cultural geography (see Denis Cosgrove’s « John Ruskin’s European Visions », 2010). ARTS – The representation of pan-European movements (i.e. Gothic, Renaissance) and styles (Byzantine, Romanesque, Etruscan) – Re-reading medieval and renaissance painting – Ruskin’s reception of European literature, of the Bible, of Greek and Latin classics – Ruskin and his network of friends and contacts in Europe – Translation of Ruskin’s works, Ruskin and translation – The European debate on architectural restoration – The crafts as a model of economic development – Teaching as a means of transmitting common values. Organizers : Emma Sdegno, Martina Frank (Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia), Pierre-Henry Frangne (Université Rennes 2), Myriam Pilutti Namer (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa) Website : https://sites.google.com/a/unive.it/ruskin2019venezia/ Abstracts of 300-500 words are to be sent to ruskin2019venezia@unive.it They can be submitted either in English, French, German, or Italian Deadline for submission: 31 January 2019; Acceptance to be notified by 31 March 2019 For any questions, please contact the organizers at: ruskin2019venezia@unive.it. Scientific Committee Dinah Birch (University of Liverpool) Irene Favaretto (Università degli studi di Padova; Scuola Grande di San Rocco) Sandro G. Franchini (Istituto Veneto di Scienze, Lettere e Arti) Pierre-Henry Frangne (Université Rennes 2) Martina Frank (Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia) André Hélard (Classes préparatoires Rennes) Howard Hull (Brantwood Estate) Cédric Michon ((Université Rennes 2) Anna Ottani Cavina (Università di Bologna) Myriam Pilutti Namer (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa) Claude Reichler (Université de Lausanne) Emma Sdegno (Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia) Salvatore Settis (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa) Paul Tucker (Università degli studi di Firenze) Stephen Wildman (Lancaster University)

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Call for Applications: Up to 5 Grants (Travel and Accommodation) for Ph.D. students or post-docs for Participation in the Villa Vigoni Symposium: “Citizenship, Law and Literature”

Call for Applications: Up to 5 Grants (Travel and Accommodation) for Ph.D. students or post-docs for Participation in the Villa Vigoni Symposium: “Citizenship, Law and Literature,” Villa Vigoni, Loveno di Menaggio (CO), Italy, 25-28 March, 2019 Coordinators: Prof. Annalisa Oboe (Padua) and Prof. Klaus Stierstorfer (Muenster) Deadline: 8th February, 2019 Vigoni Talks, sponsored in cooperation with the Deutsche Forschungsgesellschaft (DFG), is a unique scholarly format promoting international, and especially Italian-German, collaboration in research, education and culture in a European spirit. Young scholars (doctoral or post-doctoral level) are invited to apply for participation in the upcoming Vigoni Talks on “Citizen-ship, Law and Literature,” which will explore current formations of European citizenship from an interdisciplinary law-and-literature perspective. The grants cover travel to and accommodation at Villa Vigoni for the duration of the workshop. Successful applicants are invited to present a paper draft (circa 2,000 words) during the Talks, and may be invited to submit a revised paper, based on the draft and the discussions at the workshop, later in summer 2019 for publication in an edited collection. Situated at the intersection of legal studies and literary studies, the “Citizenship, Law and Literature” Talks postulate that contemporary developments like globalization, mass migration and the rise of new social media have triggered radical reconfigurations of classic notions of citizenship. For a long time, modern citizenship denoted national belonging, legal equality and a set of rights and duties to be bestowed by a state on individual members of a society. Yet in recent decades, new forms of global mobility and transnational political participation have exposed the limits of such a paradigm. In Europe, this shift has become particularly evident in the new millennium under the impact of massive migration and refugee movements into the European South, and more recently into North-western countries like Austria and Germany. Following these developments, interdisciplinary scholarly investigations of citizenship are now called upon to explore a variety of interdependent issues ranging from (top-down) juridical prescriptions regarding political citizenship to the (bottom-up) cultural and literary performance of citizenship in local and global contexts. To apply for participation in the event and a travel and accommodation grant, please send a 300-word proposal in line with this scholarly and thematic outline as well as a short CV to Dr. Elisa Bordin (University of Padua) by 8th February, 2019: eli.bordin@unipd.it

Call for Applications: Up to 5 Grants (Travel and Accommodation) for Ph.D. students or post-docs for Participation in the Villa Vigoni Symposium: “Citizenship, Law and Literature” Read More »

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