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Call for Papers

"Islam and Enlightenment"
Interdisciplinary Workshop
Centre for Asian and Middle Eastern Architecture (CAMEA),
University of Adelaide
School of Historical Studies, University of Melbourne
Melbourne, VIC (Australia)
25-26 September 2008

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Traditional scholarship mapped the Enlightenment as a
uniquely European experience, but recent scholarship has
revealed the eighteenth century as a period of axial change
across the world. The relativisation of cultural systems,
the unseating of religious certainty, the development of
civic publics, and the rapid advance of technological
innovation marked the leading European societies of this
period. But these developments unfolded within, and were in
many ways dependent upon a context of global trade and
exchange. Expanding interest in non-European ideas,
religions and techniques, the increase in mobility, and
ultimately the colonization of societies outside Europe,
brought ever greater contact. Nowhere was this more evident
than in relation to the Muslim world which overlapped with
Europe at its borders and in many areas into which Europeans
were moving.

The great empires of Islam dominated much of the world at
the beginning of the century, and Europeans often built upon
long-established Muslim trading networks.

What was the nature of the exchange between these two worlds
in transformation? What did the Enlightenment mean to
Muslims of the period, and what did Islam mean to the
Enlightenment? This workshop will map out directions for
developing this rich area of study. Possible topics might
include (but are not limited to):

- Muslim travellers in Europe and European travellers in the
  Muslim world
- The role of intermediary groups and minorities
- Cultural, intellectual and technical borrowings
- Global trade and consumption
- Exchange in mixed and border societies
- Print culture and the public sphere
- The coffee house and secular urban culture
- Leisure gardens and the culture of urban recreation
- Postal systems and the culture of correspondence
- Gender issues in transforming urbanity
- Philosophical challenges and continuities
- Religious challenges and continuities
- Shared and parallel modernities

Deadlines:
14 March 2008: Short abstract: 250-word abstract together
with one-page CV
16 May 2008: Extended abstract (900-1000 word summary)
25 Sep. 2008: Full papers to be collected and reviewed for
post-workshop publication

For queries or submission of your 250 word proposal and
one-page CV, please contact:

Samer Akkach
[email protected]

Ian Coller
[email protected]

Website:
http://www.historical-studies.unimelb.edu.au/events/islamandenlightenment.html

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