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Call for Applications

Theme: World Scripts
Subtitle: Concepts and Practices of Writing from a Comparative
Perspective
Type: International Summer Academy
Institution: Research Program Zukunftsphilologie: Revisiting the
Canons of Textual Scholarship, Forum Transregionale Studien
   Max Weber Stiftung – German Humanities Institutes Abroad
   French Institute South Africa
   University of Cape Town
Location: Cape Town (South Africa)
Date: 4.–14.9.2015
Deadline: 31.1.2015

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In the framework of the research program Zukunftsphilologie:
Revisiting the Canons of Textual Scholarship, the Forum
Transregionale Studien and the Max Weber Stiftung – German Humanities
Institutes Abroad in cooperation with the University of Cape Town and
the French Institute South Africa invite applications for an
international Summer Academy to take place at the University of Cape
Town, September 4—14, 2015, entitled "World Scripts: Concepts and
Practices of Writing from a Comparative Perspective."

This Summer Academy will explore, from a comparative and global
perspective, the vocabularies and typologies of writing in various
philological traditions and the role of script as a technology in the
production, diffusion, archiving and exchange of knowledge. Hosted at
the University of Cape Town, the Summer Academy will focus on the
experience of writing and the technologies of script on the African
continent, and will especially explore comparative cases and
entangled histories that connect Africa to the Arabophone world, the
Mediterranean region and through the Indian Ocean to South and
Southeast Asia.

In recent decades, the notion of script has been at the centre of
philosophical analysis (e.g., Derrida’s De la grammatologie), while
continuing to underpin such “classical” textual disciplines
specialising in written traditions such as textual criticism,
palaeography, epigraphy and codicology. Indeed, the multiplicity of
meanings attached to the term ‘script’, both in theory and in
practice, raises numerous questions about the concrete function, the
material conditions and the political cultures in which this
technology comes to exist. The instantiations of al-khatt (Arabic) or
scriptūra (Latin) could refer to a broad family of meanings from
leaving a mark, a form of written expression, a mode of
representation in transcribing a language, or in a broader sense,
written culture in all of its dimensions. While recent developments
of book history and critical bibliography have managed to augment our
knowledge of the past through renewed consideration of the
materiality of texts, the Summer Academy aims to direct attention to
manuscript cultures towards a better understanding of their contexts.

What can the study of the actual form and style of script tell us
about its wider context, and the broader political and cultural
aspects that it reflects? For a scribe or a copyist, a script is a
model to be imitated, an ideal and a reference. As a mode of
representation, it has aesthetic dimensions, as highlighted by the
practice of calligraphy, as well as social and political functions.
The encounter and competition between scripts as bearers of culture
also generates powerful affective impacts ranging from nostalgia and
melancholia to aspiration and exhilaration.

What kind of history can a consideration of the notion of script lead
us to write? The Summer Academy will consider cases of script
circulation. What is it that circulates exactly? Texts? Practices?
Writing tools? Models? Emotions and values? Sanctity? Traditions?
Epistemes? Irrespective of what a script conveys (or what conveys a
script), it is an exceptional marker in establishing not only the
circulation of texts, but also that of ideas and people –
circulations made visible by all the intermediaries and facets
involved in the circulation of scripts: scribes, tools, techniques,
practices and reading communities.

The Summer Academy will also explore the concept of global script so
as to encompass phenomena such as the spread of Arabic and its script
across diverse regions as either the representation of Arabic
language or distinct other languages – or even hybridizations such as
the representation of Melayu or Bangla or Sindhi in Arabic script.
How do we characterise histories entangled through script? What
relationships connect scriptural spread to political or ideological
or economic relationships among communities? How do appropriation
processes complicate our view of scriptural hegemony? Related to this
issue of scriptural hegemony, we also seek to consider local scripts
and minor practices of writing. The Summer Academy will encourage
examination of the politics of script transformation and
implementation. Why do some scripts travel far and are completely
adopted while others are confronted with resistance and rejection?
Why were and are certain scripts viewed as markers of cultural
progress while others are considered decadent and un-modern? How and
why have script forms become the site on which ideological debates
about progress, reform and modernity have been fought? What are the
consequences of the replacement of one script by another? Can the
invention of new script forms or the adoption of foreign forms
contribute to cultural loss or political emancipation and progress?
The Summer Academy encourages contributions that look at the
political, social, and deeper affective aspects of such philological
debates.

While the disciplines dedicated thus far to textual and linguistic
knowledge have tended artificially to compartmentalise scripts and
remain blind to their interactions, we find numerous situations of
scripts in contact. How can we characterise this coexistence? Are
there competing and conflicting spaces? Or are we looking at cases of
syncretism and hybridization? Finally, the Summer Academy will seek
to rethink approaches to non- European manuscript traditions, which
have been at best understudied and at worst neglected for too long
since the invention of the printing press.

Application

The International Summer Academy is open to postdoctoral researchers
(within 7 years of completion) and advanced doctoral students from
the fields of language studies, history and cultural studies, whose
philological work promotes a comparative and global perspective.
Particular preference will be given to applicants whose proposals
exemplify a conscious dovetailing of comparative methodology and
historiographical reflection. Before submitting an application,
interested applicants are strongly advised to visit the
Zukunftsphilologie website for a description of the research program
and a list of previous events, including reports of the previous
Cairo and Delhi Winter Schools.

Participants receive a stipend covering travel and accommodation.
They will be expected to give at least one presentation of their
research, actively participate in discussion groups and seminars, and
assist in chairing sessions. In order to create common intellectual
ground and to ensure fruitful conversations, participants will
receive a collection of preparatory essential readings in the form of
an online reader, which they will be required to read carefully prior
to their arrival in Cape Town. These readings will be discussed
extensively during the Summer Academy. Unlike similar events where
the burden is on a team of tutors, the ultimate success of the Cape
Town Summer Academy depends to a great extent on the engagement and
contribution of all its participating members.

Requirements

- A curriculum vitae, including a short biography (max. 100 words).
- A research expose of no more than 5 pages, which includes an
  outline of your project, and states clearly why you think the Cape
  Town Summer Academy is pertinent to your research, with a brief
  summary thereof (max. 200 words).
- ‘Relevant readings’: please name one or two academic articles or
  works you find relevant to the overall themes and objectives of the
  Summer Academy, which you would propose discussing at the Summer
  Academy.
- The names of two university faculty members who can serve as
  referees (no letters of recommendation required)

While we do not require official proof of English fluency, applicants
whose native tongue is not English are expected to have a strong
command of the language.

Applications should be submitted in English by January 31, 2015 and
must be sent by email as one PDF file to:
[email protected]

All queries relating to the aims of the Summer Academy as well as
questions relating to eligibility can be addressed to:

Dr. Islam Dayeh
Zukunftsphilologie
c/o Forum Transregionale Studien
Wallotstrasse 14
14193 Berlin
Germany
Email: [email protected]

Please find more information in the Call for Applications:
http://www.forum-transregionale-studien.de/en/revisiting-the-canons-of-textual-scholarship/call-for-applications.html




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