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Call for Papers

"Magic: Frontiers and Boundaries"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Societas Magica
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, ON (Canada)
12-15 June 2008

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In the history of western culture, magic tends to be a term
by which accusations are made or intellectual territories
defended; like the terms ‘heresy’ or ‘perversion,’ it does
not have a stable or secure content. Any accusation that an
act, ritual, or mode of practice is magical will have a
formula that is peculiar to the time, place, institution,
race, class, or gender of the accuser. Conversely, arguments
that magic is a good thing, in a spiritual or material
sense, also vary according to context, particularly because
pro- and anti-magical arguments develop in relation to each
other, and cause changes in one another’s rhetorical and
conceptual strategies. Assertions that magic exists or does
not exist, has ceased to exist, is marginal, is flowering,
has just declined or just erupted, is religious or
non-religious, scientific or non-scientific, or develops
into religion or science are part of an ongoing argument.

This conference will explore the locations, in texts, bodies
of texts, or historical contexts, where magic becomes a
problem, a disputandum, or a frontier of knowing, from the
ancient to the modern period, including modern ritual magic
and contemporary magical religions. To put it another way,
it will examine specific examples of the relation of magic
to convention, to authority, to ‘religion’ and ‘science’
from a sociological or historical perspective.

We invite papers for sessions on topics including but not
limited to: magical theologies; magical epistemologies;
magical sciences; magic and the law; magic and the
universities; magic in art and literature; magic, sanctity
and inquisition; magic and Christianity, Judaism, Islam,
Paganism and new religious movements.

If you are interested in presenting a paper, please send
title and abstract along with a CV, to the organizers at:
[email protected]

Proposals must be received by September 1, 2007.


Contact:

David Porreca or Claire Fanger
Department of Classical Studies
University of Waterloo
200 University Avenue West
Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1
Canada
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://brindedcow.umd.edu/socmag/

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