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Call for Papers

Theme: From Christianisations and Islamisations to
(Hetero)Europeanisations
Subtitle: Transformations of Cultural-Historical Heritage on the
European Margins
Type: Multidisciplinary Conference
Institution: Institute for Literature, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
   Dipartimento di Studi sull'Asia e sull'Africa Mediterranea,
Ca'Foscari University of Venice
   Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (INALCO)
Location: Sofia (Bulgaria)
Date: 31.3.–2.4.2016
Deadline: 1.11.2015

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Outline

This proposition departs from the apparent yet often neglected fact
that Christianity was, and still is, wider a world than (Christian or
post-Christian) Europe. We are aware that ‘Europe’ has been a project
or projection of the Catholic-Protestant part of what has been
becoming ‘Europe’, which part then selectively assimilated and
integrated communities and heritage which have been neither Catholic
nor Protestant and in at least one case even non-Christian (Turkey).
That, consequently, in a number of (proto)national communities, the
nowadays heirs of which are considered more or less ‘European’,
secularisation meant Europeanisation, or relocation not only through
cultural time but also through cultural space; not only
‘modernisation’ but also ‘westernisation’. And that, consequently,
the notion of ‘(non-, other) Europeanness’ of a number of societies
and cultures has to be de-essentialised – that is, (re)considered as
a historical construct – if we agree that we have to contribute to
self-reflectiveness of societies and to self-aware reflexivity of
scholarly communities. As far as the latter is concerned, we welcome
analysis of those contemporary social and intellectual conditions
which instigate scholars from the ‘margins’ to question
‘Europeanness’ or, on the opposite, prevent them from doing this. We
suggest examining whether such conditions correlate (not only with
the process of European ‘hyper-nation’ building but also) with
‘post-secularisation’ (understood as shift to autonomous religious
commitment (in the sense of Bernhardt Giesen)). 

Choosing to speak of ‘margins’ instead of ‘periphery’ we insist on
the plurality of experiences and, more important, make use of the
difference between a ‘periphery’ and ‘margin’. In our understanding
‘margin(ality)’, unlike ‘periphery’, implies the potentiality of
gravitating to more than one ‘centre’. Some national elites like the
Balkan ones, Russian, and Spanish experienced the appeal of
super-national cultural universes other than ‘Europe’: ‘Byzantium
after Byzantium’, ‘Eurasia’, ‘Hispanidad’. Inasmuch as the mentioned
universes were designed in a kind of dependency on the symbolic
appeal of ‘Europe’, they could be called ‘Hetero-Europes’. In order
to differentiate between these cases, we would make use of one more
(loose) synonym of ‘margin’: ‘borderline’. In our use, the former
term would designate a meditative and the latter a performative
gravitating to more than one ‘centre’.

Aims and their justification 

We aim, or we hope to be able, to gather relevant insights for
drafting typologies and chronologies of: 1) the Europeanisation of a
number of national collective identities from (what have been or have
become) the European margins, through analysing a number of
indicative cases of transformation, (re)use and oblivion of
cultural-historical heritage in the artistic, scholarly and two more
kinds of discourses (see hereafter), since the 18th century till our
days; 2) phenomena that can be considered re-active towards
Europeanisation; 3) contacts and mutual (non)interest and
preconceptions between cultures from the margins.

An important aspect of ‘Europeanisation’ to us is the post factum
characterisation of artefacts as ‘European’; unlike ‘nationalisation’
of pre-modern artefacts and values, their ‘Europeanisation’ was rare
an object of interest. Reactions to and, moreover, critical
reconsiderations of Europeanisation are a valuable object of interest
to us inasmuch as they probably reconsidered (and could help us
reconsider) the premises of modernity and recognise as ‘culture’
entities previously conceived of as ‘nature’ or ‘barbarity’. The
proposition to explore identity shifts through focus on
transformation, (re)use and oblivion of heritage would help to
conceive better  the performative but also the visionary (i.e.,
non-descriptive and non-prescriptive) aspects of art and scholarship.
Then, it will provide an interesting perspective on
trans-localisation and impersonalisation of culture that is losing
Christ as its centre of reference: consider, for example, the
‘Christ-centric’ character of such ‘item’ of par excellence
cultural-historical heritage as the relics of a Christian saint. And,
more important, it would help to view collective identity shifts as
(either polyphonic or just innerly discordant) attempts at
position-taking(s) in a potentially global cultural/ political/
economical field whereby heritage is introduced as symbolic capital.

Synopsis

To summarise, we welcome paper proposals on any of the following
subjects:

- Re-orientation of identity and Europeanisation of heritage on the
  prospective European margins;
- ‘Heteroeuropean’ / alternative super-national projects on the
  margins;
- (Non)correlativity between ‘heteroeuropeanisation’ and
  post-secularisation;
- Scholarly communities on/ along/ across the margins: conditions for
  (un)willingness and (un)capability to articulate ‘heteroeuropean’
  visions.

A full version of this argumentation is available at:
https://sites.google.com/site/heteroeuropeanisations/argumentation

Language(s) of communication: English; upon agreement with the
organisers, French, German and Russian shall also be possible.

Confirmed keynote speakers:

Raymond Detrez (Catholic University of Leuven)
Sibel Irzik (Sabanchi University, Istanbul)
Paola Pizzo (D’Annuncio University of Chieti-Pescara)

Organising committee:

Yordan Lyutskanov, Gaga Shurgaia, Timour Muhidine, Todor Hristov
(Faculty of Slavic Philologies, Sofia University)
Goran Sekulovsky (St. Sergius Theological Orthodox Institute, Paris)
Teodora Tzankova (Institute for Literature, BAS, Sofia)

Submission guidelines:

300-500 word abstracts (to include 3-10 references) for 20-25 minute
presentations are to be sent to [email protected],
with copies to [email protected] (Yordan Lyutskanov),
[email protected] (Gaga Shurgaia) and [email protected]
(Timour Muhidine), till 1 November 2015.

Authors shall be notified whether their proposal is accepted before 1
December 2015.

Financial terms and conditions:

Registration fee of 90 EUR has to be paid via bank transfer or via
Western Union (details shall be delivered later) till 1 February
2016. Early bird payers (till 1 January) shall be charged 70 EUR.

Applicants from the following countries shall be charged a reduced
registration fee, of 60 EUR: Albania, Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Egypt, Georgia, Republic of Macedonia,
Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia, Ukraine and West Bank and Gaza. (The
reduced fee shall be applied to applicants from all countries with
GDP per capita lower than that of Bulgaria.)

A limited number of successful applicants shall be able to benefit
from travel grants (details shall be delivered later). Those applying
for a grant are invited to send a 1-page CV and list of publications.

Important dates:

Deadline for submitting paper proposals: 1 November 2015
Notification of acceptance: 1 December
Deadline for early-bird payment: 1 January 2016
Deadline for registration fee payment: 1 February
Notification of travel subsidy: 10 February

Publication:

We are planning to publish a selection of papers as an issue of
Annali di Ca’Foscari (Seria Orientale) (ISSN 2385-3042).


Contact:

Yordan Lyutskanov
Institute for Literature
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
1113 Sofia
Bulgaria
Phone: +359 2 971-70-56
Fax:   +359 2-971-70-56
Email: [email protected]




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