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Call for Papers

"Cultural Encounters and Historical Practice"
International Conference
Nordic Network for Global Cultural History
Carlsberg Akademi
Copenhagen (Denmark)
7-9 November 2007

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With the third and final conference in the Nordic network
for Global Cultural History we wish to engage scholars
studying cultural encounters in the context of European
colonial expansion after 1500 by broaching questions of
theory and methodology.

The study of cultural encounters has been conducted in a
variety of ways, with multiple theoretical and
methodological approaches stretching from ethnohistory and
microhistory to new historicism and postcolonial
deconstruction, to mention but a few. In this conference we
hope to explore how the study of cultural encounters is
practiced by individual scholars and how individual
histories of specific encounters can be related to the
development of global economic, political, and cultural
structures.

During the conference we will discuss the limits and
possibilities of different methodological and theoretical
approaches to historical cultural encounters. We therefore
seek contributions from scholars who reflect on their own
practice: on the methods and theories they employ, the
sources they explore, the contexts they relate to
(pre-colonial, colonial, imperial, postcolonial and so on),
and/or the narratives they have constructed.

Some of the many questions that we want to approach are:
What is, or when is, a cultural encounter? What is the place
of cultural encounters in global history? How does it
influence our practice to adopt concepts like the Atlantic
world, globalization, colonialism, or empire? In what ways
is it useful to compare different cultural encounters like
mission, trade, colonial or intimate encounters in order to
establish the specificities of and similarities between
cultural encounters? What is the balance between internal
dynamics of specific encounters and the larger structures by
which they are shaped and to which they add? What are the
connections between specific encounters and the mapping of
the larger chronology of colonialism and capitalism? And how
does the history of people who did not produce written
documents differ from those who did and how do we ensure
that our analyses of the encounter deal with both sides?

Sessions may include (but are not limited to):

- The concept of cultural encounter
- Cultural encounters and structural change
- Violent clashes and cultural confrontations
- Pre-colonial, colonial, postcolonial cultural encounters
- Economic structures and cultural encounters
- Legal, intimate, and mission encounters in comparative
  perspective
- Writing encounters with multiple perspectives - the
  problem of asymmetric sources
- Strategies for writing the history of peoples without
  written documents
- Europeans abroad - non-Europeans in Europe
- Counting and quantification as a way of studying cultural
  encounters
- Material culture and cultural encounters
- Imperial ideologies as shaping or being shaped by concrete
  encounters

Please submit proposals for individual presentations or
panels to <[email protected]> by May 1, 2007.
We especially encourage proposals for panels.


Contact:

Camilla Abildtrup
Aarhus University
Department of History and Area Studies
bygn. 1328 lok. 130
Ndr. Ringgade
DK-8000 Aarhus
Denmark
Phone: +45 8942 2003
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.globalkulturhistorie.hum.au.dk

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