Geography – Cultures of Knowledge: An Intellectual Geography of the Seventeenth-Century Republic of Letters http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk An Intellectual Geography of the Seventeenth-Century Republic of Letters Wed, 15 May 2013 14:54:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.4 Intellectual Geography Conference Videos Now Available http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-videos-now-available/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-videos-now-available/#respond Mon, 30 Jan 2012 21:01:16 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=7043 video_banner

Videos of twenty-one papers and keynotes from our 2011 conference Intellectual Geography: Comparative Studies, 1550-1700 (Oxford, 5-7 September 2011) are now available on the conference website or via our Vimeo channel (with more hopefully to come). Organised by Howard Hotson, the event introduced and tested the novel concept of ‘intellectual geography’ as a means of appreciating and understanding the organisation of intellectual activity and the dissemination of ideas within space and across time, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries. A taster – Miles Ogborn‘s keynote exploration of ‘What is Intellectual Geography?’ – is provided below. Happy viewing!

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Imaginative Geographies: Travels of the Mind in Early Modern Europe http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/imaginative-geographies-travels-of-the-mind-in-early-modern-europe/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/imaginative-geographies-travels-of-the-mind-in-early-modern-europe/#respond Tue, 13 Sep 2011 15:31:36 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=6379 brain_mapFurther to the spatial excitements of our own recent gathering, a one-day conference on Imaginative Geographies: Travels of the Mind in Early Modern Europe will take place at the University of Bristol on Wednesday 28 September 2011. According to the organisers, the event will ‘explore correspondences between geography [and] literary and historical fields of research, to enable varied… cross-disciplinary discourses between scholars and students of the arts and sciences, and to enrich renaissance and early modern research with methodological and thematic diversity’. Panels are devoted to spiritual geographies, cartographic spaces, mapping the other, and mapping the familiar. For the full programme and to sign up please visit the conference website.

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Intellectual Geography: Comparative Studies, 1550-1700 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-comparative-studies-1550-1700/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-comparative-studies-1550-1700/#respond Mon, 12 Sep 2011 14:27:26 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=6350 ig_ogborn

Miles Ogborn’s keynote.

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Simon Burrows from the FBTIEE project.

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Giovanna Ceserani’s keynote.

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Discussions continue over lunch.

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Testing the demonstrators.

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Mark Curran from the FBTIEE project.

The Project’s second international conference, International Geography: Comparative Studies, 1550-1700, took place at St Anne’s College last week on 5–7 September 2011. The event, which was attended by over sixty delegates, allowed twenty-seven emerging and established scholars to present conceptual papers and rich case studies – from Europe and the wider world – which both explored the organization of early modern intellectual activity across time and space, and attempted to implement and refine the concept of ‘intellectual geography’ as a new means of understanding and appreciating the spatial dimensions of intellectual exchange. On the final day, papers from several digital projects – including our good friends from CKCC (Huygens ING) and Mapping the Republic of Letters (Stanford) and new friends from The French Book Trade in Enlightenment Europe (Leeds) – shared some of the opportunities and challenges of capturing and visualizing intellectual geography electronically. Delegates were also treated to a drinks reception in the historic Museum of the History of Science (which incorporated a talk and tour of the intellectual geography of scientific objects), and enjoyed playing with software prototypes of the enormously impressive database of the STN archives prepared by the FBTIEE project, as well as of our own union catalogue of intellectual correspondence. Conference reports, videos, and other outputs will be available soon; in the meantime, for further information, including speaker profiles and abstracts, please visit the conference microsite. Details of our 2012 conference will be available soon.

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Intellectual Geography: Booking Now Open! http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-booking-now-open/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/intellectual-geography-booking-now-open/#respond Wed, 13 Jul 2011 10:09:32 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=6072 2011_conference_website

We are pleased to announce that booking is now open for Intellectual Geography: Comparative Studies, 1550-1700, the second Project conference, which will take place at St Anne’s College, Oxford, on 5-7 September 2010. Organised by Howard Hotson, the event brings together case studies and digital projects exploring the roots of local, regional, and national intellectual traditions and networks within concrete features of political, economic, confessional, and physical geography. For provisional programme information, a steadily growing lists of speaker profiles and abstracts, and to book online, please visit the conference website. The deadline for registrations is Wednesay 31 August.

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CofK at Mapping the Republic of Letters Conference http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/mapping-the-republic-of-letters-conference/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/mapping-the-republic-of-letters-conference/#respond Mon, 21 Mar 2011 17:49:35 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=5570 The Fondazione Giorgio Cini on San Maggiore.

The Fondazione Giorgio Cini on San Giorgio Maggiore, with the island of Guidecca visible in the distance.

Our panel at the conference, shared with Charles van den Heuvel from CKCC (Huygens Institute).

Our panel at the conference, shared with Charles van den Heuvel from CKCC (Huygens Institute).

Last week provided us with an opportunity to present the Project, specifically its union catalogue and associated editorial tools, at the international conference Mapping the Republic of Letters (Venice, 17–18 March 2011). Convened by the Stanford-based project of the same name (based at the Stanford Humanities Center), and held in and co-organised by the Fondazione Giorgio Cini on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore, the event showcased the work being undertaken by various individuals and projects worldwide to collate and represent digitally and spatially the early modern republic of letters. It also explored the research question of whether global exchanges of correspondences and other texts might be best conceived of as a state or as a network. While main sessions provided insights into the very wide range of approaches to this topic, associated meetings introduced the activities of the Milan-based research laboratory Density Design, and facilitated collaborative discussions amongst CofK, our hosts Mapping the Republic of Letters (Stanford), and CKCC (Huygens Institute), who also presented at the event. For further details, please see the conference webpage.

We will be presenting the Project at a wide range of correspondence-related events in 2011. For full details of our speaking schedule, please see the presentations page.

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Conference: The Global Dimensions of European Knowledge http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/conference-the-global-dimensions-of-european-knowledge/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/conference-the-global-dimensions-of-european-knowledge/#respond Mon, 14 Feb 2011 18:25:58 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=5444 gdek_newsFurther to the CFP (which is now closed), full details are now available for the conference The Global Dimensions of European Knowledge, 1450-1700, which will take place at Birkbeck, University of London on 24–25 June 2011. The conference will investigate the impact of European exploration and travel on the structures, contents and sources of authority of European knowledge c.1450-1700, seeking to explore connections between the making of knowledge and a broad range of intellectual, political, cultural, religious and mercantile encounters between Europe and the wider world. For keynotes, panels, abstracts, and speaker biographies, please visit the conference website.

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CFP: The Global Dimensions of European Knowledge http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/cfp-the-global-dimensions-of-european-knowledge-1450-1700/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/cfp-the-global-dimensions-of-european-knowledge-1450-1700/#respond Sun, 11 Jul 2010 14:45:03 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=3913

Updated to include confirmed speakers and link to full CFP

Papers are invited for a conference on ‘The Global Dimensions of European Knowledge, 1450-1700’, which will take place at Birkbeck, University of London on 24-5 June 2011. The conference will investigate the impact of European exploration and travel on the structures, contents and sources of authority of European knowledge c.1450-1700, seeking to explore connections between the making of knowledge and a broad range of intellectual, political, cultural, religious and mercantile encounters between Europe and the wider world. It aims to bring together scholars from different disciplines working on any aspect of European knowledge that included an extra-European dimension. Forms of knowledge under consideration include ethnology, natural history, botany, natural philosophy, geography, cartography, medicine and chronology. Confirmed speakers include Professor Felipe Fernández-Armesto (Notre Dame), Professor Pamela Smith (Columbia), Dr Joan-Pau Rubiés (London School of Economics), Professor Ricardo Padrón (Virginia), Professor Nicolás Wey-Gómez (Brown), Dr Michiel van Groesen (Amsterdam), and Professor Peter Burke (Cambridge). The deadline for proposals is 31 July 2010; for further details and submission instructions, see the full call for papers.

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Circulating Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Europe http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/conference-circulating-ideas-in-seventeenth-century-europe/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/conference-circulating-ideas-in-seventeenth-century-europe/#respond Tue, 29 Jun 2010 11:36:48 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=4612 zodiacFurther to the CFP, registration is still open for the international conference Circulating Ideas in Seventeenth-Century Europe: Networks, Knowledge and Forms, which will take place at the Royal Society (London) on 8–10 July 2010. The conference will explore the dynamic intellectual economies brought into being by wars, revolution, and international exploration (with particular reference to the forms in which ideas circulated), and features plenary talks from Margaret Ezell, Richard Serjeantson, and Mark Greengrass and Howard Hotson (who will jointly present some of the aims and ambitions of Cultures of Knowledge). For the schedule, abstracts, and a registration form, please see the conference webpage.

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Call for Applications: International PhD Programme http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/call-for-applications-international-phd-programme/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/call-for-applications-international-phd-programme/#respond Fri, 21 May 2010 13:17:13 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=4370 Applications are invited for an international PhD programme The Traditions of the Mediterranean Humanism and Challenges of our Times: The Frontiers of Humanity. Co-funded by the European Union, the programme is organised by the Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies ‘Artes Liberales’ at the University of Warsaw, and offers forty-eight months of paid fellowships across over a dozen thematic strands, including 12-18 months in Austria, the Czech Republic, France, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Macedonia, Russia, Spain, or the USA (at a stipend of about 770 euros per month, increased to 1,150 euros when abroad). Applicants to the strand Universal Reformation: Intellectual Networks in Early Modern Central Europe will explore major intellectual movements in early modern central Europe in the post-Reformation period, including correspondence networks and the transfer of knowledge due to the displacement of scholars and shifting local intellectual and religious traditions. As well as stays at the Centre for Early Modern Studies at the University of Aberdeen and the Institute of Philosophy at the Czech Academy of Sciences, this will comprise a six-month stay at the University of Oxford, where, via the Modern European History Research Centre, candidates will benefit from synergies with Cultures of Knowledge and be co-supervised by Project Director Professor Howard Hotson. The deadline for applications is 17 July 2010. For full details, please see the programme website.

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Encyclopaedism, Pansophia, and Universal Communication http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/encyclopaedism-pansophia-and-universal-communication/ http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/encyclopaedism-pansophia-and-universal-communication/#respond Mon, 17 May 2010 10:38:33 +0000 http://cofk.history.ox.ac.uk/?p=4349

Workshop participants in discussion. © SOM

The third and final workshop in our extremely successful east-central European series took place last month in Budapest on the theme of ‘Encyclopaedism, Pansophia, and Universal Communication, 1560-1670′. The workshop was generously hosted and co-sponsored by Central European University and the Semmelweis Museum, Library, and Archives of the History of Medicine (with additional financial support from the Institute of Literary Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and the Institute for Literary Studies and Lingusitics of the University of Miskolc), and was organised by Márton Szentpéteri, Gábor Kecskeméti, Benedek Varga, and Márton Zászkaliczky. It allowed eighteen emerging and established scholars to converge on the related seventeenth-century ideas of collecting all knowledge into a single coherent system and of teaching all things to all men, as well as the networks and communicative strategies by which these universalist philosophies were disseminated across the fragmented geographical and political canvas of east-central Europe. For full details of the workshop, including abstracts and photographs, please see the workshop webpage. Themes addressed in the course of the workshop series will be drawn together in the international conference Universal Reformation: Intellectual Networks in Central and Western Europe, 1560-1670 (St Anne’s College, University of Oxford, 21-23 September).

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