Epistolary Cultures in the Early Modern World
Tags: Book History, Global, History of Scholarship, History of Science, Libraries, Networks, News, Seventeenth Century, Union Catalogue
Further to exciting events in 2010 and 2011, the Project’s third international conference, Communities of Knowledge: Epistolary Cultures in the Early Modern World, recently took place in the Faculty of English on 20–22 September 2012.
The event, organized by Rhodri Lewis and Noel Malcolm and attended by a record audience of over 100 delegates, assembled an all-star cast of eighteen international authorities on early modern letters, who over a three-day programme explored and celebrated the ways in which intellectual interests and activities of all kinds were pursued and propagated through correspondence during the long seventeenth century.
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Rhodri welcomes delegates and introduces the conference themes
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Our largest ever audience packs the lecture theatre
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Constance Blackwell, Philip Beeley, and Howard Hotson
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Sir Keith Thomas and Anthony Grafton at the Scaliger Reception
Particular attention was paid to the epistolary experiences of groups and networks rather than those of particular individuals – and the role of letters in constituting these communities of practice – and to the ways in which exchanges of letters coexisted with, supplemented, or competed with other kinds of knowledge production during the period. Delegates were also treated to a demonstration of our union catalogue of correspondence, Early Modern Letters Online (video now on our infrastructure page); no fewer than two publisher-sponsored drinks receptions toasting exciting new publications and partnerships (details here); and an array of quiches, sandwiches, and cakes of unusual deliciousness crafted by Trevor and Cristina from the Organic Deli Café.
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Miranda Lewis and Mordechai Feingold at the Scaliger Reception
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Leigh Penman, Alexander Farquhar, and Noel Malcolm
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A conference marches on its stomach: artisan quiches
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Sandwiches on home-made bread also exceeded scholarly expectations