Voces 2021: Latin Middle Ages through Key Words On-line & Campus Condorcet Paris, France, September 29-30, 2021 |
Conference website | https://glossaria.eu/voces |
Submission link | https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=voces21 |
Abstract registration deadline | May 31, 2021 |
Submission deadline | May 31, 2021 |
Notice of acceptance | June 30, 2021 |
Submission for publication | December 15, 2021 |
About the conference
Medieval society is inseparable from both the written and spoken words that brought it to life. It is through those words that the people of the Middle Ages shared their beliefs, their ideas and their experiences. Words were used to share knowledge, spread the Gospel, but also to stigmatize the Other, exclude heterodoxy, and call for war. Controlling word senses was one of the major means to sustain power, to take possession of goods and to control access to knowledge. That could lead to verbal jousting or even real conflicts.
Modern scholars that are trying to reconstruct the meaning of medieval words in their relationship with historical, social or psychological reality, are facing multiple problems. Firstly, they have to handle the inherent vagueness and ambiguity of the Latin language that prevent them from pinpointing the exact meaning of most frequent words. Secondly, they have to measure the pragmatic functions of those terms, which served not only to talk about objects but also to make things. Finally, they have to establish the link between words and cultural, social or political reality.
The I Conference Voces. Latin Middle Ages through Key Words, co-organised by the IRHT (CNRS) and the Institute of Polish Language (PAS) aims to take a closer look at Latin words that have played an important role in the medieval culture. Every two years we propose to focus on a different major medieval concept and its linguistic expressions.
The conference aims to bring together historians, linguists, philosophers and philologists coming from various theoretical backgrounds (historical semantics, Begriffsgeschichte, cognitive semantics, histoire des mentalités etc.) and employing a wide range of methods (corpus studies, lexical analysis etc.). Papers dealing with medieval key words or concepts in a broad context of social, political and religious life are particularly encouraged.
Voces 2021. Feast, Holiday, Celebration
This year’s edition concurs with the 100th anniversary of the Medieval Latin Dictionary, a project ofthe International Academic Union which was to bring together the post-war European scientific community around the impossible task of describing medieval Latin vocabulary. Originally scheduled for 2020, the conference was to focus on the concepts of FEAST, CELEBRATION and HOLIDAY and their vocabulary. Despite the current health crisis, the organizers have decided to stick to this topic. Depending on circumstances, the conference will be held either in hybrid mode with the in-person event at the Campus Condorcet, Paris-Aubervilliers, or fully online
As still today, the feasts deeply structured social and private life of medieval people. The recurring religious holidays reminded believers of their relationship to the Absolute and gave meaning to the medieval sense of time. Private celebrations, limited to friends and family, were used to underline the events of people’s lives. Public holidays, on the other hand, created and sustained social coherence, by highlighting common values and cultural norms that are usually implicit.
Keynote Speakers
Agnieszka Bartoszewicz (Uniwersytet Warszawski), The Social Perception of the Church Calendar in Late Medieval Poland: City – (Small) Town – Countryside.
Bruno Laurioux (Université de Tours), Le banquet médiéval par ses mots.
Jean-Claude Schmitt (École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales), Les rythmes de la fête au Moyen âge.
Suggested topics
We invite papers that discuss a chosen term or concept, to illustrate how they were understood and represented in medieval cultural, religious, social and political life:
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The concepts of FEAST, CELEBRATION and HOLIDAY and their linguistic representations: festum, sollemnitas, feria etc.; Latin vs. vernacular terms; the metaphors of FEASTING etc.; the vocabulary and social the reality of FEASTING etc.
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Religious holidays: Church holidays, ceremonies, saints day; was there boundary between religious and political, social or individual celebrations?
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Structuring lives of individuals: birth, wedding and funeral; celebrating individual experience.
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Celebration as social practice: urban vs. rural vs. courtly celebrations; bonding through celebration; carnival and social hierarchy.
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The materiality of celebration: drinking and eating; games and activities; loca celebrandi.
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Theoretical issues:
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Latin vocabulary and categories of medieval thought: a simple link?
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lexical borrowing and semantic change: new words = new worlds?
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medieval Latin and individuals: cognition, experience, emotions
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scientific vs. folk knowledge
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ideology, power, violence, memory
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negotiating meaning in interpretative communities
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Submission Guidelines
We welcome two forms of submissions:
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Long papers (30 minutes, 15 minutes discussion), that go beyond a single text or author, and provide either wider (historical, social, cultural etc.) context for the discussion or pose important theoretical and methodological questions (historical change, methodological issues etc.);
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Short papers (15 minutes, 5 minutes discussion), which are more limited in scope, but still bring forward links between vocabulary, conceptualization and socio-cultural reality of the Middle Ages.
Conference languages: English, French, German, Spanish.
Abstracts should be submitted via EasyChair (https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=voces21) by 15 May 31 May 2021 (23:59 CEST):
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long papers: 500 words (without references)
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short papers: 250 words (without references)
Submissions should clearly state the paper topic, briefly discuss existing research and explain why the analysis of the suggested term or field is important to our understanding of medieval social practices.
Committees
Program Committee
- Agnieszka Bartoszewicz (University of Warsaw)
- François Bougard (IRHT-CNRS)
- Carmen Cardelle de Hartmann (Seminar für Griechische und Lateinische Philologie – Univ. Zürich)
- François Dolbeau (EPHE)
- Helena Leithe-Jasper (Mittellateinisches Wörterbuch, Bayerische Akad. der Wissenschaften)
- Maria Selig (Institut für Romanistik – Univ. Regensburg)
- Anne-Marie Turcan-Verkerk (EPHE-PSL)
- Elżbieta Witkowska-Zaremba (IS-PAN)
Organizing committee
- Bruno Bon (IRHT-CNRS)
- Anita Guerreau-Jalabert (IRHT-CNRS)
- Krzysztof Nowak (IJP-PAN)
- Nathalie Picque (IRHT-CNRS)
Publication
The proceedings of the conference will be published in a special issue of the Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi (Bulletin Du Cange).
Venue
Depending on circumstances, the conference will be held either in hybrid mode with the in-person event at the Campus Condorcet (Paris-Aubervilliers), or fully online.
Contact
All inquiries should be sent to: section.lexicographie@irht.cnrs.fr
Sponsors
- Agence Nationale de la Recherche (France) - Velum : Towards Innovative Ways of Visualising, Exploring and Linking Resources for Medieval Latin
- Polish Ministry of Science (Poland) - eFontes. Electronic corpus of Polish Medieval Latin