10 September 2019

CALL FOR PAPERS: International Society for Intellectual History – Change and Exchange (Florence, 27-29 May 2020) (DEADLINE: 15 November 2019)


(Source: ISIH)

We learned of a call for papers for a conference organized by the International Society for Intellectual History. Here the call:

Keynotes: Giancarlo Casale (EUI), Emmanuelle de Champs (Cergy-Pontoise), Laszlò Kontler (CEU), Glenda Sluga (Sydney and EUI)

The suddenness of many recent changes has led to a widespread feeling of bewilderment and led many to retreat into what are seen as safe places and idealised pasts, rejection of difference and increasingly violent and intolerant social exchange. At the same time, the evidence of climate change is making people increasingly aware of the need to rethink our way of life. It therefore seems an appropriate moment to look at how change has been understood and conceptualised in the past, how changes in ways of thinking, concepts and paradigms have come about, the strength of resistance to change, and the role of exchange – intellectual and material – in this process. Change and Exchange proposes to explore historical, philosophical, cultural, material, social, environmental and scientific change, the varieties of social, intellectual, material, economic, etc. exchange and the interactions between the two. It will also look at change and exchange in the field of Intellectual History itself.

Call for Papers

The International Society for Intellectual History (ISIH) invites proposals for papers and panels. Papers (20 mins, followed by 10 mins of discussion), relating to the theme of change and exchange in intellectual history at large, can concentrate on any period, region, tradition or discipline, including the arts, humanities and sciences, 1450 to present. As well as individual papers, we welcome proposals for panels of up to three papers and a commentator. The range of subjects of investigation is extremely broad, and may include, but is not limited to:

  • thinking about change in intellectual history: epistemological breaks, paradigm change and intellectual traditions;
  • interdisciplinarity in intellectual history
  • debates on social, political, economic, scientific, technological, climate, etc. change;
  • writing the history of change; changes of scale in historical understanding
  • interactions between political, social, economic, technological, scientific and intellectual change;
  • promoting and resisting change;
  • informal and institutional exchanges between cultures and their role in bringing about change;
  • sociability and intellectual, scientific, commercial, institutional etc. networks;
  • the theory, practice, history and role of translation.
Proposals for papers and panels are due by 15 November 2019 and must be submitted through the Conference Submission Form.

Sponsor: Department of History and Civilisation, European University Institute.

For general inquiries, please email Francesca.Parenti@eui.eu.

Conference Committee: Ann Thomson, Thomas Ashby, Elisavet Papalexopoulou, Francesca Parent

More information here

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