If the Republic of Letters occasionally meets for coffee or conferences, so too do intellectual historians often come together for talks, regular workshops, and summer schools. The editors at JHIBlog hope to increasingly encourage and promote these events with your help. We will soon have a calendar of events on the website, with readers encouraged to submit news of interesting happenings both in intellectual history as well as related fields. Here we certainly want to look further afield. If the discipline itself has ambitions to a global scope, intellectual history is being practiced globally as well. Here such organizations as the International Network for the Theory of History have begun paving the way for collaborations and contacts, particularly in their handy listing of conferences which will interest intellectual historians of all stripes. Yet not all traditions of doing intellectual history are converging—nor should they, necessarily. This makes for a variegated and exciting map which we hope readers from all over the world can help fill in over time. And hopefully we can do our part in fostering this community.
So without further ado, here are a few events, workshops, exhibitions, and programs which the editors look forward to participating in (or very much wish we could attend–would any readers like to contribute their impressions?):
Events, lectures, and conferences
- Hommage à Simon Leys (La Maison de la Chine, Paris; March 23)
- Anthony Grafton, “Books & Barrels: Readers and Reading in Colonial America” (New York Society Library; March 23)
- Jürgen Kaube, “America, Europe, and Russia: Max Weber’s Argument Reconsidered” (Deutsches Haus, NY; March 27)
- Transatlantic Theory Transfer – Missed Encounters? (Columbia University, NY; March 27-28)
- Wolf Lepenies, “Twenty-Five Years After the Fall of the Berlin Wall: Reflections on a United Germany in a Troubled Europe” (Deutsches Haus, NY; March 30)
- Abram de Swaan, “Genocidal regimes and their perpetrators” (CIRHUS, NY; March 30)
- Philip Nord, lecture on the 1956 Mémorial de la Shoah (Princeton, NJ: March 30)
- Fascism Across Borders (Columbia University, NY; April 1-2)
- Martin Ruehl, “The Dark Cradle of Modernity: Burckhardt, Nietzsche, and the Idea of the Renaissance” (Harvard University, MA; April 2)
- States of Division: Borders and Boundary-Formation in the Cold War and Beyond (Columbia University; April 7)
- Rens Bod, “On Method: The Longue Durée of Empiricism in the Humanities: Patterns versus Interpretations” (Columbia University, NY; April 8)
- Celebrating the 80th Anniversary of Social Research: An International Quarterly (The New School, NY; April 9)
- Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, “Hegel’s ‘Prose of the World’ and Diderot’s ‘Neveu de Rameau’: About An Epistemological Configuration at the Edge of Enlightenment, Today” (Princeton, NJ; April 15)
- Foucault’s Les mots et les choses at Year 50: An International Conference (Harvard University, MA; April 17-18)
- Image as Method (Columbia University; May 4-5)
- Barbara Hernstein Smith, “What Was ‘Close Reading’?” (Columbia University, NY; May 6)
- Religion and Irreligion in the History of Political Thought (Cambridge University; May 25)
- Globalized Classics Summer School and Conference (Humboldt University Berlin, August 24 – September 5)
- Comment penser l’Anthropocène ? (call for papers here; Paris; November 5-6)
- Catastrophe, Environnement et Propriété : Approches historiques, XIXe-XXe siècle (call for papers in English; EHESS, Paris; December 2-3)
Workshops
- The NYU Intellectual History Workshop (meeting through May, New York):
- Tomoko Masuzawa, “Adjudicating the Secular” (March 23)
- Udi Greenberg, “Protestant Thought and Europe’s Turn from Empire to Decolonization” (March 30)
- Giuseppe Bianco, “What is Intellectual Inheritance? The Case of Bergsonism” (April 13)
- Jean-Frédéric Schaub, “Two Scholarly Traditions Separated by a Common Word: Race and Race in France and the US” (April 20)
- Vanessa Ogle, “The Transformation of Muslim Spacetime: Telegraphy, the Islamic Calendar, and the Global History of Time Reform, 1880s-1930s” (April 27)
- Katrina Forrester, “Rules, Persons, and Society: John Rawls Before A Theory of Justice” (May 4)
Programs and exhibitions:
- Readers Make Their Mark (New York Society Library; February 5-August 15)
- François Ier, pouvoir et image (BnF, Paris; March 24-June 21)
- Philology Among the Disciplines (Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study, Rome; June 14-27)
- International Research School in Conceptual History and Political Thought (University of Copenhagen; August 9-15)
- Summer School in Comparative and Transnational History: Theories, Methodology and Case Studies (European University, Florence; September 14-17)
What have we missed? Please let us know in the comments!
March 20, 2015 at 2:31 pm
Here’s another workshop in the global vein, to take place in the usually very pleasant Berlin summer:
http://apaclassics.org/apa-blog/humboldt-university-summer-school-globalized-classics
March 21, 2015 at 9:18 am
Also, Scientiae 2015 (Disciplines of Knowing in the Early Modern World), at the University of Toronoto, May 27-29:
http://scientiae.co.uk/?page_id=740
March 21, 2015 at 10:03 am
Also, the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge is opening its new exhibit on early modern material culture on 24th March. “Treasured Possessions from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment”: http://www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/whatson/exhibitions/article.html?4884
March 21, 2015 at 11:11 am
Hi Emily!
Padraic Scanlan has organized a workshop on “New Histories of Paperwork” at Harvard on April 24 that may be of interest
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~histecon/paperwork/
-Asheesh
March 21, 2015 at 9:26 pm
Forgot to add the exhibit on Aldus Manutius at the Grolier Club (NYC through April 25th ) to the above:
http://www.grolierclub.org/Default.aspx?p=DynamicModule&pageid=289914&ssid=169184&vnf=1
I saw it today and it was exquisitely curated. (May need to write up a blog post about this ….) It also seems as through there’s a symposium for the exhibit on April 7.
March 21, 2015 at 9:28 pm
Thanks everyone for these great additions! And keep ’em coming; looks like the old Republic is busier than ever!
April 20, 2015 at 6:04 pm
The CRRS, the Dept of English and the CRC Program at the UofT are hosting the Tenth Canada Milton Seminar
http://crrs.ca/event/canada-milton-seminar-x/